Showing posts with label Cloud computing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cloud computing. Show all posts

Thursday, 10 February 2011

The Friday Analysis

Started Friday 11th February 2011 0521 GMT
Words 379
S.I. = 75.8%

Going beyond the Seventh Wave

The Seventh Wave is a concept that some may be aware of from the natural world and mythology.  The seventh wave hitting a beach is supposedly the strongest, a phenomenon familiar to some surfers but debunked by scientists. Some Irish traditional stories talk about beyond the seventh year or  going beyond the seventh wave.  Today is day seven of the new adventure into self-employment.

An interesting journey this week has been and for the most part coped with.  The fragility of the net as a virtual factory and office space has been underlined by trojan horse and connectivity issues this week.  The need for backups and alternative workspaces be they internet cafes or a teleworking centre becomes critical  for small businesses as they attempt to maintain their own sustainability.

Change is a constant theme that has been apparent through out the week in the news and talking to retired people in the local pub. A sense of reductionism listening to older members of society suggests that a lot of the change we are seeing has been experienced before often called by a different name.  The repetition of certain events suggests at best a disregard or lack of comprehension for historical cycles at worst cynicism towards the majority of the population that some leaders choose to show ( a bit woolly and sitting on the fence here but I am sure you will identify many stories that fit your own internet surfing).

So more of the same to follow next week.  Continuity planning has already kicked in for Monday.  My Victorian cottage will be taken back to 1896 when it was biult.  The local electricity supply company is servcing or replacing the local transformer between 10 and 4 pm.  Finding non-scented candles just in case they do not replace or repair the fault before dark  has been quite a challenge.  My local Cooperative store was the only place  I could find them. Which brings me to the final thought for this blog today.  I found a very good BBC Wales (probably therefore not available outside the UK) programme on BBC iPlayer about the founding of the Cooperative movement.  Thought provoking as we move further into the Silicon Age and the era of the social networker.


Wednesday, 9 February 2011

Wellbeing on a Thursday

Started Thursday 10th February 2011 0503 GMT
Words 472
S.I. = 94.4%

We are going to the Gym, escaping the Zoo, are you journeying too?

Pausing and reflecting is always a good way of assessing your own personal Wellbeing.  The start of a new business or becoming self-employed is potentially a very stressful occasion.  So pausing and reflecting.

On Monday I blogged about a personal target of  making sure I attended a gym on a regular basis.  This is incredibly important from the point of view arranging your work/homelife balance when working as a home-based worker and business person.

Reflecting on the week is usually a Friday experience.  However, a trojan horse virus on Monday, the first ever that had managed to get past my Firewalls and McAfee programmes.  The holes in Microsoft Windows were  apparent.  Couple this event with BT having an upgrade on Monday night and no broadband until Wednesday morning I could have been in a position of not having an IT using business after only 3 days.

Luckily I have the skills myself to be able to allow business continuity so had back ups of data and alternative strategies of working via the cloud.  Thursday morning and I am just cleaning off the last Trojan off the main system.  The diversified (almost a farming term here) systems  were able to cope although at points my own coping systems  were running at almost 100% capacity.  Having a good work life balance allows the capacity to cope remain  greater than the demand caused .



So planning ahead to arrive safely at Saturday Evening is a good exercise considering the bouncers that have already been bowled. I can cope with these on the Cricket field having opened the batting and kept wicket for a number of sides when I was younger. Sport is definitely a good training for life as I am constantly being reminded.


The gym that I had my induction in on Monday has a very simple system where they encourage the exerciser to be their own personal trainer. The roll back of the general nanny state attitude that pervades British Society? Maybe. A simple colour chart on the wall matched to general time based workout cards educate you to judge what your body is telling you about your physical state while exercising. Inductions to gym where the trainer takes you the edge of your pain envelope have been the norm, but this would appear to not be necessary. Eight o'clock is a good time for me today to take a break and go to the gym,


On the dipity calendar you will see one event I am attending next week that fits very well with some of the IT experiences, This event is being run by Menta and Business Continuity experts. I am always willing to listen to others just in case I have missed the Elephant in the room.So planning ahead to arrive safely at Saturday Evening is a good exercise considering the bouncers hat have already been bowled. I can cope with these on the Cricket field having opened the batting and kept wicket for a number of sides when I was younger. Sport is definitely a good training for life as I am constantly being reminded.




On the dipity timeline you will see one event I am attending next week that fits very well with some of the IT experiences. This event is being run by Menta and Business Continuity experts. I am always willing to listen to others just in case I have missed the Elephant in the room.  


Monday, 31 January 2011

Web 2.0 for educators - Part 5

Started Tuesday 1st February 2011  Started 0636 GMT
Words 323
S.I. =  64.6%

Web 2.0 mirrors village life?


The Village preservation society featured in a previous blog. As I have been watching the news over the last two months parallels between village life and social networking activities.  The world has started to become a village again.

A very sweeping statement but I am of the opinion it has some anthropological basis.  A number of stories over the last few days have re-inforced the fact as people we have lived in village or small communities far longer than we have in cities.  We still have the same networking skills since they are I believe innate.

I read today about research reported in the Daily Telegraph that women of 40 or older using Facebook have more friends (up to 4 times more) than other users.  This seems to mirror the sort of informal networking groups traditionally associated with ladies that lunch or dare I say it the Women's Institute.  I  was constantly aware when I was growing up of my own mother's contacts with others and how well informed she could potentially be of what others (possibly even myself) had been up to.

The use of mobile phones and their replacement of the traditional role of  bike sheds for elicit knowledge (reported in Kindle edition of Telegraph but not website as far as I can find) by  Dr Emma Bond from University Campus Suffolk equally applies to all Web 2.0 technologies including Facebook.  Conversations I have had with friends whose children are wanting to use Facebook all centre around safety and knowing what their children are doing.  Most come to the conclusion that they also need to be a friend on the Facebook account of their child and able to see all posts.

More of  Web 2.0 and the impact of Cloud Computing for not only Educators but small business will appear on the two blogs included in the bar next to the title.

Tuesday, 25 January 2011

Web 2.0 for Educators - Part 4

Started Tuesday 25th January 2011   0913 GMT   Location Liverpool Street Station
Words 274
S.I. = 54.8 %

In the footsteps of Isaak Walton, trying not to become the Complete Tangler.


In the very circuitous route today I have been to London and back to meet with some very forward thinking people called the Teleworking Association.  This is a Nationally operating not for profit group that promotes and propagates smart solutions to today working environment.   Previous blogs have outlined some of my opinions on the way that Teleworking can transform peoples overall Wellbeing and be of benefit both to worker and the person who buys their services.  Over the coming weeks the Teleworking Association will be working towards explaining new ways that people can access Web 2.0  Technologies.

It has been a long day so this will only be a short post.  I boarded a bus at 5.50 am this morning to Cambridge Railway Station.  I then took the train along the route of the River Lee.  This was made famous by Isaak Walton in the Compleat Angler.  In the subsequent centuries the unimportance of this valley saw a canal and later a railway  built along the same course.  In some places the canal actually runs almost under the railway.  Even then there were problems securing land for infrastructure from landowners.

Well I am going to end here (it is now 1848 GMT) since Ipswich are playing Arsenal in the Football League Cup .  As I returned to Cambridge on the train from King's Cross Station I passed the Emirates stadium.  Unfortunately not having a ticket and the need to return to see my cat (arrangements had been made for someone to go and check on her during the day) means that I will watch it on a TV screen on BBC 2.





Thursday, 13 January 2011

A TGI Friday feeling!

Started Friday 14th January 2011  At 6.00 am GMT
Word Count =    432 Word Limit = 500
Success Index  S.I.  = 87%
S.I. Between 80 and 90 % thorough attempt at fulfilling Aspirational Target has been made
S.I. Between 90 and 100% means reader able to add their interpretation and take part ownership
S.I. Between 50 and 101% Aspirational Target has been met
S.I Less than 50% means wrong Aspirational Targets set as started with wrong premise

Friday review time.  Early morning Friday I find is the best time to review the week's progress against those aspirational targets I set myself on Monday.  If I have become distracted by the trivia of the process or experienced a systems failure I can at least have a fighting chance of  putting the working week to bed by lunchtime.  Then have a Friday become a  POETS day  (push off early tomorrow’s Saturday).  But it depends on how detailed or how long I consider what my aspirational targets should be on Monday.   It also depends if I am trusted to set the targets. Too many ingredients and too little  time means I won't be able to finish the plan in 5 days time. 


I have revisited as to why I started this personal blog on the 2nd December 2010.  The plan was to reclaim my second age of man. I now a have a clearer picture against the background of public sector cuts my personal goals.
   

My definition of what the word Education means has been revisited and clarified. I have told myself what it is once and written it in lemon juice so I will not have to repeat it to myself a second and third time.

I have reflected on why I have a dislike of the service economy (two links). I think I now have a 6 year plan to enhance my own Wellbeing.

My Wellbeing was enhanced further this week by an event that had parrallels to an event pre-1979. Ipswich Town (my local Suffolk team) beat Arsenal by one goal.  This is the first FA Cup final I can remember watching on TV because of it's relevance to me.   A good result but it is only the first leg of the League cup tie.

So the next step. I have decided to add to my mission statement that I am going to aspire to work in a Business Civilisation as opposed to a Business Empire. A book that I bought for the title and not the name of the author  contains some of the threads of my personal business ethos.

And finally I tried to avoid being a little cynical in this blog as a critical friend observed this trait. I had already observed this trend before he mentioned it. Since somebody else is aware and I would not want my intent to be misinterpreted I had better change the tone..  So at the risk of being a little catty I include this final link for today.


For more posts visit Blog 2pointfiveageofman.net

For more posts visit Blog kritirecharge.co.uk

Tuesday, 4 January 2011

Web 2.0 for educators part 1

The visible bit is the fruiting body,  but the mycelia
occupies a greater volume in space underground than
what you actually notice above ground

Started Tuesday 4th January 2010 at 11.08 am
Words 774

Web 2.0 is a topic finally coming to the fore in the British psyche.  They might not know it as Web 2.0  but they recognise some of the components by the brand name, for example Facebook.   There are similar parrells with green fuels.  Most people are aware that bio fuels exist. They do not often recognise that when they fill up their car they are using bio fuel.  Shell use it as an admixture to their range of pumped fuel. 

So I think I have established a couple of examples of the principle "now you've explained the jargon I do that or a bit of it already, so what's so new about that?"  So what is Web 2.0 actually all about?

In my former employ a few years ago I was sitting in the staff room waiting for morning briefing near the beginning of term.  The Head opened the briefing with a question to see how many of us were awake.  "Who knows what Web 2.0 is?"  My hand shot up (after all it was a school and our Head at times did make you feel a bit like a pupil).   She probably experienced one of the few times in her recent teaching career when only one listener could answer the question.  She seemed a little disappointed and as it was one of those ideas she'd obviously heard of at a conference or head's briefing by a snake oil salesman  of the advisory persuasion.


In preparation for writing this posting I found the article that I PDFed (scanned and converted to a PDF) to her that day.   The little person inside me that was waving their hand on tip-toe at her had to be let out.   I did have a slight advantage over everybody else in the room as I had been the Head of ICT for four years.   An acknowledgement of the concept was received back and nothing else was heard.  We had more important Ofsted Inspectors to fry.  That email was on 27th September 2008. 

So now why is it becoming again so important.   Firstly the technology is mature enough now to be useful.  Broadband connections have become faster  and more reliable so streaming content should not freeze (E2BN coming of age).  Secondly,  Web 2.0 and cloud computing  are being embraced by business making IT a very cheap tool as opposed to being a millstone to small business operation and growth.

Web 2.0 can serve a number of different purposes that aren't necessarily the same for pupils,parents and staff.   Web 2.0 uses fall in to five broad categories:  Information, Productivity, Visualization, Assessment and Simulation.  It also has to be remembered that Web 2.0 is not just restricted to just computers, mobile phones, kindles and game consoles with a bit of imagination can be used.  Even the parents are in on the experience with the dreaded  text message from SIMS informing them of the non arrival of their little William or Katherine at school.

So the five areas

Information:  Already I have hinted at the capacity for SIMS to inform parents.  Monitoring of pupil progress by making available instantly accessible reports  is an area offered.   This might seem  scary to teachers and open up the potential for continual dialogue.   


A lot of parents themselves are more scared of entering school and discussing their William and Kate their children may of going to school. So if they could  have a non-eyeballing experience themselves so much the better.  The "pushy" parent would also be a little deflated if they could see the information rather than have the martyring experience of trying to get past the front desk to get an appointment.  There are bigger fish to fry at the moment than experiencing confrontation over what is in essence an opening line to a conversation about how William and Kate can do better (even if they are already doing well).   

For pupils the Wiki and Google searches are the beginning of all those well intentioned death by 
PowerPoint exercises.  The use of Blogs and Bebo can be used for encouraging reflective practice. it wasn't so daft the GCSE in Bebo.  Equally so this can be applied to staff.  These obviously have to have safe surfing standards.   

A slight pause here as I break for lunch.  The self-imposed blog limit for the day has been reached.  Next week I will fill in a few more details of how I think Cloud Computing can be used effectively by Educators.  The following week I will apply these principles to the relatively new field of small businesses and micro-entrepreneurs.  

In part two I will continue the four parts and explain the significance of the Mushroom.

Thursday, 30 December 2010

Micro entrepreneurship and 2pointfive_age_of_man

Started Thursday 30th December 2010:  6.20 pm.     Word count: 357

Micro Coral Reef - the artificial aquarium
 Since I last blogged today I have spent time linking up  a few parts of my own coral reef.   You may remember I commented on the interdependence of business activities being analogous to the life of a coral reef. 

As you will notice I have made links to websites that promote my interests in micro entrepreneurship.  I like the story about Kenyan farmers using mobile phone technology to find the best paid market to take their produce to.  This demonstrates the utilisation of 21st Century technology to move goods and services.  For which you can charge added value.

There is a danger that I spend a lot of time on the sites that I have, evangelising about the new way of working.  That is what we employ Professors in Public bodies such as Business schools to do.  The continuum between cutting edge and hard cash does take a long time.  My experiences with the Telecottage Association (tuesday-and-2pointfiveageofman)  demonstrates that a  17 years cycle has had to take place before the technology is able to deliver what it claimed.

So how am I going to move forward along the continuum of innovation to sustainable income?  An approach is to develop the websites as independent areas focusiing either on more social entrepreneurial activities or micro-entrepreneurship.  The personal blog,  should be almost a reflective diary of what I feel interests me.  They say everybody has a book inside them  However, you  have got to be interested in what you are writing about. 

So being a life scientist/chemist I will write about food on a Sunday.  Monday up and coming trends that interest me for the next week.  Tuesday cloud computing and Web 2.0.  Wednesday job markets and trends I am interested in.  Thursday those work-life balance issues.  Friday what has worked well  that week for me.  Saturday the day of leisure and reading all the Saturday supplements, Sunday supplements don't really do it for me.  After all Rome wasn't built in a day, slowly slowly catchee Monkey.   


   

Tuesday, 28 December 2010

Tuesday and 2pointfive_age_of_man contemplates the New Year

Aiming to be looking over this view by mid June 2011,
Crete, Hersonissoss
Started Tuesday 28th December 2010.  Evening about 7.30 pm

Today has been a quick thaw outside.  The diary of Samuel Pepys' for the 27th December 1667, hints at the economic crisis of his day.  The government unable to carry out the King';s wishes.  Defence budget arguments between Pepys and the Guards supporters echo defence review stories of today.  Bankers are broke and everybody is keeping their money, no different to bail out and non-lending of today.  

Another day looking through the past year's plus and minuses.  The year 2010 for me as for a lot of people has been one of change.  A desire for work-life balance is still one of those goals.  Two major realisations are wanting to work smarter and the fact I might have outgrown certain ways of working.  So how am I going to move forward in personal affluence or should I aiming for that happiness that the King of Bhutan has been on about ?  I'd like to be greedy and have both.

So, economic outlook around  me reference to Kindle.  I am encouraged by Harvard Business Review (HBR 28/12/10) article "Investing in the Post-Recession World" that the recession is officially over, but agree with the sentiment it's difficult to see the wood for the trees and the way forward.  I am also in agreement with article "Learning how the economy really works" (HBR  28/12/10).

I have a fundamental problem with economic theory and policy.  I can't understand how growth can be used as a measure of the health of an economy which relies on finite markets and resources.  The premise ultimately drives boom and bust since ultimately I cannot see sustainable infinite growth.   As a life scientist, complex ecological relationships I find relatively easy to understand.


The analogy of a Coral reef to economies in that it produces a stable ecosystem based on the available resources and inputs.   It has  internal economy based on carbon exchange  ie simplistically big fish eat little fish, little fish eat big fish when the big  fish dies and become big fish and so on.  When the requirements of life are satisfied the organisms involved reproduce and crucially survive.  If there is not enough resources in the coral reef it remains static in size at best. The coral's plankton are constantly being released another site and another colony starts in isolation.

The ancient Greeks  practiced something similar.  The understanding of the finite limitation of resources sprouted colonies across the Mediterranean.   Modern day Marseilles (Masillia) the largest port in modern France. Syracuse the home of Archimedes the greatest ancient technologist, who was killed by a Roman soldier unaware of his asset value. How lucky Werner Von Braun was and how much the American economy has benefited from NASA's direction.  My favourite colony name, Emporium is in  Spain.  Literary meaning trading place and also echoed in the Victorian Emporiums.  Woe betide anybody that attempted to return and upset the mother colony.  They were greeted with slingers-out whose job was literally to sling stones at anybody that attempted to return .  They also had a very non-Roman aversion to "luxuria".

Globalisation resulting in the interdependence of all markets I find a very worrying factor for my personal wealth.  President Obama has already stated his belief that the American economy is so important that it drives the world and the world needs to work to make America successful.  We seem to have created the equivalent of a super-organism in our economies.  There will always be the potential that the super-organism deadly plague or virus, real or .  The economic effects of an actual plague in the middle ages restricted "growth" for centuries.  The Gaea hypothesis does not necessarily give humans any greater value than other organisms.  It all depends which direction your looking, where your chair happens to be placed in the universe in order and when you choose to  blink.  Unfortunately I may have opened my eyes at the wrong time.

The British Empire had it's own problems with a globalisation as a concept.  The Dundee was essentially a one trick pony with it's reliance on the Jute Industry in the 19th Century.  Outsourcing to India virtually put economic development into a slump and on hold until it re-discovered it's civic pride and confidence and called itself the City of Discovery.

Britain has itself on a macro level been hit by a similar bout of outsourcing. The decision to turn ourselves into a service economy by Mrs Thatcher's advisers was fundamentally flawed as it did not take into account historical examples and cycles.  I can speak from personal experience as my father was one of the small business men who became entrepreneurs more through necessity than choice as companies rationalised and made redundancies.  He finally retired a few years ago after 25 years of working for the bank's profits as they "helped" small businesses.

So my mission and trick for the next year is to try and decouple myself from the super organism.  I like the coral reef analogy for business.  It is one that  I pondered two years ago when I was holidaying in Crete.  when I arrived back I ran out paper trying to come up with a A4 plan of action.  I ended up painting the dining room wall white (12 foot by 12 foot) and then proceeded to produce my largest "food" web of ideas to  date.  I went as far as investigating the costs of setting up a limited company.  I purchased some web-domains with a view to e-commerce.  However, I could not at that time see a viable business idea,  although I could write a business model.

In the 90's when again there was a crisis in the economy.  I was finishing a period of research in agriculture sponsored initially by ICI then Norsk Hydro into the use of foliar fertilisers and their potential to reduce nitrates in  groundwater.  This was perceived to be a big problem as Nitrate Sensitive Areas were being designated and farmers potentially could be fined if the groundwater limits were exceeded.  The cost fertiliser was a major input and should have been enough encouragement to modify farming practice.  This was an interesting time as  water companies were starting to be privatised.  The legislation stipulated that they owned every form of water that fell out the sky or was fossilised in the ground.  Private boreholes were no longer private.  If,  however, the water turned up in the wrong place (ie flooded your house) it was not the fault of the water company.  Environment consultancy was in it infancy since there was no legislative or company morality/citizenship imperative to do this.

I stopped after a few months as it was personally not sustainable at the time, although I did have the benefit of a Business-link training day from a "retired"/resting businessman.  I found I could write a business plan and spreadsheet just as easily as the business guru, turning it into hard cash was the hurdle.  Now it is dominated by very large consultancies. That was in the days when sustainable and development were not bedfellows.

I even became a founder member of the Telecottage association.    After a journey across country to the National Agricultural Centre at Stoneleigh I met my fellow new frontiers people. After a morning of listening to the group founders I felt a sense of depression.  This was in the days of dial up modems, the Internet hadn't been officially invented.  This was essentially a Business club/Breakfast network.  You agreed to buy your office supplies from A who sold you the computer that you dialled up C, with who spoke and  then used the  envelopes to send you the invoice for the time spent talking to you.  The money did not seem  to be be coming from outside the closed group and the circle seemed to rely on pyramid principles.
this was supposed to give a route to resuscitate dying rural economies.  A Google search now turns up an address in Devon with no website.

Is this time to try the teleworking route again? Are the costs involved now cheap enough to make IT  just a business tool and not an end in itself?  Is the hammer cheap enough to bang the nail in to stop the house falling down?  Maybe.

The Portfolio career (multiple job or income stream) may finally come of age.  In order to make this work for the small business person who may have to work also part time, radical tax arrangements may be needed.

The idea of a monthly personal PAYE account for small businesses has been considered.  Tax credits banked in  a virtual account that could be drawn to smooth earnings streams throughout the year would be useful.

If you are going to fine banks, fine them on the length of the trading cycle over which they judge small businesses' cashflow.  They need  to take some of the risk rather than have their cake and eat it when they bankrupt a business.  After all there are 300,000 bank account holders who will need employment over the next five years.

Remove the disclaimer to any blame from the front of accounts prepared by qualified accountants and make them liable for any sins of omission and policing sharp practice especially by large companies who pay small ones on 90 days or when they choose or never.

This would be very simple if ..... we have a Tax IT system fit for purpose.  Oh to be a manager of a PFI!    

So back to the picture at the head of the blog.  If I am sitting in that cafe on the beach front the momentum of two years planning and thinking may have come to some workable conclusion.

Yes, I will be sitting in that cafe!  I already have the logo and philosophy!


I sketched this as I  sat in a Taverna
I had gone to Crete to
recharge my batteries.  However, I
seemed to be rushing
about when I should have let
the wind blow
and recharge my batteries
Simple? 





          

Sunday, 26 December 2010

Boxing Day prompts memories of a decade of digital imagery

Looking forward again to views
 that aren't ice tinged
Boxing Day.  A day for reflection and contemplation.  The BBC iPlayer is playing a few comedy sketches from Radio 7.  The next tab is keeping me informed of the latest Boxing Day football.  We do not have a Premier League team convenient to my part of Suffolk, even if felt like spending an exorbitant amount to see a game.  ESPN has shown some very unseasonal Beach Football featuring a  Brazil team versus the rest of the World.  So with these distractions in the background I thought I would use this afternoon to organise my thoughts on Web 2.0 and find some of those very old photographs that have been sitting on a hard drive.

I was put in mind of doing this by the gift of a photo frame that my father received for Christmas.  My sister had preloaded a set of family photographs onto the flash USB card (also XD card) can be used so starting to be quite use able. I bought one myself several years ago when they first started to appear. I have to admit to admit the novelty had worn off a little with the frame now gathering dust.  As I was watching the slide show I started thinking of how many images I must have taken over the years or used personally or as part of  my role as a head of science and also ICT in a school.

The number of ways of capturing images that were cheap and to greater or lesser effective has been interesting to chart over the years.  I have used scanners that started off as almost the size of a couple of  reams of A4 down to what is now a almost a thin A4 book in size.  The usability of these scanners was normally determined by the sophistication of the software.  I was using Paperport  in the late  1990s and early 2000s as a means of trying to keep my house paper free from the avalanche of documents that were produced as part of the National Curriculum.  I certainly didn't have time to read everything as the department I started managing at the time was in a school on the dreaded special measures.  This was was also before the widespread use of PDF format that appeared with the Literacy and Numeracy initiatives.  At the time I was using Epsom scanners, but was rapidly converted to Canon 660 (later LiDE range)  and Canoscan software technology as their portable scanners appeared.  PDF technology made life easier and I rapidly started to become  paper-free.

The ability to show and record a piece of work produced by a pupil at the time it was produced via a scanner and projector was a favourite of pupils as they could share their work with the rest of the class.  The digital classroom in action rather than endless multimedia productions that seemed to be the norm when computers invaded the classroom.  The use of digital tablets also enhanced the experience.  Needless to say these were not provided by my bosses at the time but I took the view that these were tools that fitted in with the drive to a 21st Century classroom so I purchased them myself.  I took the view this was no different to what countless other colleagues were doing when they bought pens, pencils etc to lend out.  Plus I was educating myself in the new technology often ahead of the ideas that county advisors were advocating.  It does make me feel a little bewildered that ICT is still only used for endless searches and often as pointless typing up of written work.

Sport and drama certainly should have been leading the use of computing time with the use of video technology.  I purchased 8 years ago as an ICT department expense for our PE department a video analysis (Dartfish) package.  We were the only the school for a quite a few years that had this in the East England.  A great piece of software akin to the type golf professionals now use to coach people o their swing.  We did not use this effectively because of the demands placed on the time slots in ICT where core subjects had to demonstrate use of ICT as part of the National Curriculum.

The top down development nature of the national curriculum missed a great opportunity of embedding ICT not as subject but a tool.  Teaching people ICT skills is not an end in itself but a means to enhance the basic communication skills of what you already do.  The literacy skills of many pupils might have undergone greater development if the rush to provide very expensive ICT equipment with a short lifespan had been resisted.   Often the equipment was overpriced as it was being supplied to a local authority body by preferred tenderer.  But, we will be asking the question for many years to come of what advantage ICT give the under nines in the acquisition of literacy and numeracy skills.  Here endeth the whinge about National Curriculum and missed ICT opportunities.

I am waiting to see an application of the sports coaching potential of the new Xbox kinetic.  I can see great potential for the coaching of squash and also fencing as the variables involved compared a team a team sport would be less complicated as these sports are usually played in fewer axes of movement.  As a former qualified fencing coach I can see the potential for the spatial recognition technology to be applied to these sports.  The techie approach might also keep the interest of beginners as they acquire the discipline and skill to have an effective bout.  Virtual coaching and opponents not a great step away?  How good would it be to knock the French off the premier spot in fencing in the next European championships?


Returning back to the subject of digital photography. My father has become quite a digital photography buff.  Since his retirement he has been snapping anything and everything of interest.  As he is a very active member of the University of the Third Age (u3a) history and art/painting groups he has accumulated thousands of images.  I have spent many a Sunday morning instructing him in the arts of folders and photo-editing software.  Just before my nephew and niece arrived I downloaded Picasa.  I have previously used of and on over the last 8 years or so the yahoo owned photo storage facility that has become Flickr, primarily as a I am a BT customer.  As I am now using Blogger I decided to give Picasa a try. The Picasa technology downloaded quickly and began scanning the pictures. It was surprising how many pictures in the relatively short time of a few years my father has taken. I have been using a digital camera for the past 10 years so I dread to think how many images I might hae on various different drives and older computers languishing in dark cupboards.  What intrigued me was the facial recognition software.  Family resemblances even seemed to be recognised as I started naming the various faces that my father had snapped.  The tagging and indexing will allow a huge reduction in the time spent looking for that elusive photograph.

I just now have to teach my father to use the programme!!

I have blogged enough for this post I will have to save a few ideas for other post of what is now becoming habit forming.  My own computers are staring to mine the folders of images with Picasa and I am already finding nearly 10000 images from the last few years of holidays, air displays, cricket, plants and walking clubs.  Many years ago I used organise a social rambling club on a Sunday that met at one pub and then walked to another couple in a circuitous route.  Our post-Boxing Day walk involved over thirty people dressed in Santa hats with assorted dogs in tow.  I have yet to find the photographs but there could be a few for the Blog.  

Well I am now going to listen to the highlights of yesterdays Cricket and then maybe find my Wisden to compare a few performances

Sunday, 12 December 2010

2pointfiveman plays Robinson Crusoe in a Digital ocean

Shot of andvanced technology
 site circa. 3000 B.C.   Grimes Graves modern
addition of ladder for tourists 
Swimming or drowning in the digital ocean

Saturday morning: This is being written offline. As a Broadband customer I have used BT in England for the past 12 and a half years. At every new innovation I have taken early upgrade and  have taken the leap of faith and curiosity as the web has developed in the UK.

There have been teething problems over the years involving upgrades. It used to be don't try to do anything sensible in August as major system and software "updates" were being implemented. The internet services of banks were also prime sources of annoyance and frustration. Bank staff were to a person often very unhelpful where technical problems were encountered, especially in August. The banks saved and will continue to save millions as we have become our own DIY banker employees. So why the visitation to old sores?

Well I have been cut off from my own personal digital ocean since Tuesday morning owing to a technical fault at the exchange (along with 64 other customers).   I won't call it a personal digital cloud because clouds have a nasty habit of turning up in the wrong place and raining on you, sometimes heavily. The appearance of the term “to the cloud” in a certain software manufacturers advert emphasises the comic book nature of digital change that discourages me from using this term. (Grumpy mid-age man syndrome. Possibly?)


The service I am using is a domestic service. It is equally as important as a Business service since I engage in e-commerce when I buy from Amazon or check my local supermarkets for the availability of bargains. So why is the service desk for technical problems only open from 8.00 am in the morning? A lot of us are early risers and work during the week. I certainly would have been driving the hamster wheel of the British economy if I could only have accessed those stores. Quite important if you are twenty miles from anywhere with major high street multiples (no small independent shops any more down you high street) or happen to be a silver surfer.

I will continue to use BT though as the problem as described by the remote call centre, not Inverness this time but Chennai, would not have been any different with another ISP. The main exchange card was not working according to the local visit Engineer. It took 72 hours to establish this fact. The nature of services that use the unbundled exchanges means all ISPs are using the exchange.

This is one of the disadvantages of the “competitive market” that has evolved in this country. Providers are still basically playing with the toys provided by the British Tax payer pre-BT privatisation and still owned by BT. All that is different is the front end changes of who you pay your bill to and what add-ons you achieve in your service. Cable has not reached West Suffolk, operates in Cambridge very well although the original provider did go bust. Pity since we have a cable manufacturer in the town.

Suffolk is the home to BT's Research Institute. Just visited by the Indian Telecoms industry as reported in the East Anglian Daily Times. They appear to have an important role in the digital express to world class service promised by the coalition government. A plea to BT, please could you try to get it right in your own backyard of Suffolk a relatively unpopulated county that is surprising close to major sites of population where Suffolk residents practise innovation. Impressions now can influence future business choices. The relationship of public opinion and this coalition is a good example of influence so far as making noises and then changing their mind as negative opinion rise. Good to see this government doesn't use pollsters as much as the last. Spaniels, vicars and Brussels Sprouts spring to mind. I would be happy to explain this last comment for anybody not familiar with spaniels.

Final thoughts for this blog as I wait for the digital tide to come back in. Did we the British tax payer sell the Goose that apparently is and is going to, lay the Golden Egg? Still this was before the term sovereign wealth funds became the elephant in the room that could be the way forward for UK PLC. Norway used their oil revenue to set up a form of sovereign wealth fund. Chinese banks are effectively in the same league, the long sightedness of the deal to buy Pireaus harbour in Greece for the next 35 years shows an understanding of relatively long cycles. Most of the big construction projects in London, Middle East and Singapore seem to be underpinned by Sovereign wealth funds . In my adult earning life I have experienced at least two major recession, I might have been unaware of a couple. These on average seem to have a fifteen year cycle so 35 years would appear to be a long enough business plan. Words of chairman Mao to Nixon about longevity of civilisations driving this?. Athens could return to the centre of the world again, or is it beware of Chinese bearing gifts? That will get the conspiracy theorists going.

We are potentially in another bonanza time as the World is Turned Upside Down, yet again. It has to be remembered we didn't “abolish Boom and Bust” in the last parliamentary session of the “socialists”. We could even start a fund off with that great piece of service economy business of borrowing money as a government and then lending it to another government at a higher rate. Sorry Ireland, this isn't BandAid. As we get paid back to pay Peter, a 1% diversion of the profits into a sovereign wealth fund would start the ball rolling. Social Enterprise potentially at a national level. We could even have the big players donate their time for free. Could this be Big Society. A bit feudal but if transparent worth considering as it could actually line the British tax payers pockets rather than that of the PFI partners'.

8.00 still a little time away. I have listened to the Farming programme on Radio 4 and the tales of Fat Ducks (not the restaurant) or lack of. Apparently in the cold snap we have the wrong type of ducks. Shooting of ducks has been banned for the next weeks and the RSPB has asked walkers and dog owners not to disturb the birds. Don't make the ducks quackers! Hopefully, I won't be driven crackers with my dealing with BT.