December 3rd, 10:10am 0 comments

T -50 minutes. I'm on my way to #bcuhack

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Sent from my iPhone

Posted by Jon Hickman
December 1st, 1:17am 0 comments

Ideas are my co-pilot

At the end of the day, it's all about ideas.

"That's a good idea." "That's a bad idea." "Do you have any idea what you're letting yourself in for?" "I had no idea she was your wife, your honour"

If ideas are so important to us, especially as creatives, then why does it always seem that they come to us just before we fall asleep? Or in the bath? Or in the pub (when quitting your job and starting a metal band is the BEST idea you've ever come up with)? What we need is a system to come up with ideas, both good and bad, and we can then filter them.

In a recent class session we tried to do this with our "50 ideas in 50 minutes" experiment. All we did was think about some of the relevant technologies that we had discussed previously (HTML5, Augmented reality, API, The cloud...), and also about things in everyday life that annoy us. Then all we had to do was come up with ideas, "I wish this existed" kind of ideas, and then tweet them with the hashtag #50x50. Tweeting the ideas forced us to keep them short, because the enemy of an idea is overthinking. Once you start to think too much about it then you start to analyse whether it is a good or bad idea. For now, this was not our concern, the ideas can be filtered at a later date.

In the end we came up with 60 ideas in 42 minutes. Not bad going. Some of these included: An augmented reality Tony Hawk skate game, paying for petrol using a QR code, a virtual "when I'm at home" schedule for the postman, an ebook printing service, a social network for academic writing.

Some ideas were good, some were jokes, some were a bit of fun, some were terrible, and some actually could work. I'd say at least half of the ideas warranted further exploration. As a method of idea creation, this was a success.

You can read Jon's full account of how we carried out this class, and the full list of ideas here

Posted by Nick Moreton
Posted by Jon Hickman
November 29th, 12:39pm 0 comments

But I'm not a techie / creative / whatever...

So you fancy coming along on Friday but you're worried that you get AJAX confused with CIF (one's a toilet cleaner the other is also a toilet cleaner) and you got embarrassed that time you called Python "Anaconda".

OR...

You fancy coming along but you're design skills end with "comic sans"

OR...

You're a shit hot coder but you've never had a good business idea in your life

These are all reasons to attend...

We're all about matching up folk into teams. If you're a business brain, you'll get a coder to work with, if you're a hardcore hacker, we'll give you someone to make your work look good.

Beginners in all fields are also welcome. We're coming together to learn from one another, and hopefully make some magic happen.
Posted by Jon Hickman
November 29th, 12:33pm 0 comments

hack the poster

Feel free to print this off and pin it up - we still have room for more hackers.

Click here to download:
HACKDAY.pdf (3.11 MB)
(download)

Posted by Jon Hickman
November 20th, 5:21am 0 comments

The first hackday - ready to go

The first BCU hackday is ready to go. And it's coming up soon, so you best be ready for it.

Who's it for?

BCU students who are interested in web / new media and multimedia work.

What's it for?

Several of our faculties and courses give students the chance to learn about web stuff, and they all take very different approaches. We thought it would be interesting to get those folk in a room together, to share their ideas and skills.

So we're going to put teams together to work on projects for one weekend. Take the hardcore coders of TEE and the content creators from Media, and some aesthetic wonder from VisComm and sprinkle it all in some Business School magic. That's pretty cool. That's like the Power Rangers  becoming a new megazord or something

When is it?

The event runs over a weekend. We meet on Friday 3rd December at 7pm, and it runs until Sunday at 9pm.

How does it work?

We will work through until 9pm on the first night, getting you into teams that span the faculties. You then have Friday night to work on ideas and maybe go to the pub for some team bonding exercises. Do get some sleep though, you'll need it.

We then reconvene on Saturday, working again til 9pm, before giving you the night to either keep hacking or do more of that important team bonding. The same thing on Sunday, except that by 9pm we'll have presented our work to date to the group.

We will have a few folk from industry coming in over the weekend to help you shape the project. Some of your lecturers might show up too. There will be plenty of chance to get feedback as you go.

Sign me up!

Sure thing! Just pop to Eventbrite and tell us who you are. We'll be in touch to find out what your skills are so we can plan the teams. We'll see you on the 3rd. 

What else?

It'd be cool if you spread the word for us. Tell your course mates about the event, and send them to: http://bcuhackday.eventbrite.com/

PS - who organised this?
This event is being run as a SAP project between Nick Moreton, yr 3 BA Media & Comms, and Jon Hickman, a lecturer in the School of Media.
Posted by Jon Hickman
July 12th, 8:11am 0 comments

Ideas for doers | Created in Birmingham

I saw this when @daveharte tweeted it and though it was a great idea. Chris makes the connection to hackitude and Launch 48, both of which are reference projects for us. Maybe we could realise Chris's ideas through our event?

NB – There’s no conclusions drawn at the end of this post – I’m just linking a bunch of vaguely related stuff together.

Daden, the serious games people, have put a list of potential student projects online. Daden’s David Burden explains:

In meetings with Universities the topic would often turn to ideas for student projects. We’d always have our ideas when the students were already committed, and the Universities would always be searching for ideas just when we couldn’t think of any

Which made me think of this from D’Log:

Just an idea. How about a website called WorkGang, which links together unemployed graduates and the growing number of public-sector unemployed, who want to find people near them with the same interests and skills — with a view to forming an autonomous self-managed group to do a short-term “socially useful project”, on their own terms and in their own time?

It also put me in mind of things like Hackitude and Launch48, where people with various sets of skills get together to do stuff together in quite a short period of time.

If you Google ‘ideas bank’ you’ll come up with any number of databases of half-baked ideas – that’s fairly well-trodden ground. Is there room for something a bit more nuanced/locally focussed?

 

Posted by Jon Hickman
July 5th, 5:50am 0 comments

Music Hack Day - London 2010

Music Hack Day - London 2010

A full weekend of music hacking. Software + hardware + art + the web. Come build the future of music.

Music Hack Day returns to London, where it all began, to explore and build the next generation of music applications. It's a full weekend of hacking in which participants will conceptualize, create and present their projects. Music + software + mobile + hardware + art + the web. Anything goes as long as it's music related.

More details will be going up soon. In the meantime you can register your initial interest.

Posted by Nick Moreton
July 2nd, 6:50am 0 comments

Announcing the Birmingham Hacks & Hackers day | Online Journalism Blog

If you are a journalist, blogger or developer interested in the possibilities of public data I’d be very happy if you came to a Hack Day I’m involved in, here in Birmingham on Friday July 23.

The idea is very simple: we get a bunch of public data, and either find stories in it, or ways to help others find stories.

You don’t need technical expertise because that’s why the hackers are there; and you don’t need journalistic expertise because that’s why the hacks are there.

What I’m particularly excited about in Birmingham is that we’ve got a real mix of people coming – from press and broadcast, and local bloggers, and hopefully a mix of people with backgrounds in various programming languages and even gaming.

And apart from all that there should be free beer and pizza. Which is the important thing.

So come.

The day is being organised by Scraperwiki and we’ve already got a whole bunch of interesting people signed up.

You can register for the day here.

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Something a little closer to home...

Posted by Nick Moreton
June 30th, 4:50am 0 comments

First thoughts on how we can get this done.

From looking at the other events we have drawn up a rough structure and a manifesto of the event:

  • The event will be time limited - any "web" project that goes on too long runs the risk of becoming the grindstone of an obsessive perfectionist, we would like to avoid that. 48 hours is what we are thinking
  • The event will be local - Global events are great, but from small acorns and all that - this event will be based at BCU and involve BCU people
  • The event must inspire creativity - teams can write their own briefs and bring in their own interests to the projects
  • The products of the event must be licensed under the creative commons
  • The event will interact with industry professionals - we want Birmingham's media professionals to get involved and help mentor the teams. If you want to be one of these professionals, please get in touch

That's about it for now - feel free to share any thoughts in the comments

Posted by Nick Moreton