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Archives for November 2007

Bob Young on the future of books

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Chris Vallance | 13:47 UK time, Wednesday, 28 November 2007

lulu.jpgAn experiment. I've recorded an interview with on the future of the publishing business. It strikes me that many of the issues that face the music, film and television industries in the digital era might also apply at some point to the publishing industry - particularly if e-books like . Will bitTorrenting for books replace Borders? How will authors make money if readers share pdf's of novels online?

A is below and we'll play it towards the end of December. But it's far from the finished radio piece; ideally I'd like to include some responses from readers from this blog. If you've something to say on the issue why not upload a response to your podcast/favourite video/audio hosting site and send me a link and I'll consider including it in the finished broadcast.

  • Click to listen to the interview on

After Our Time: Radio Extended

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Chris Vallance | 15:12 UK time, Tuesday, 27 November 2007

afterourtime.jpgI'm very excited about , a truly excellent fan blog for Radio 4's In Our Time. It's great to see a conversation started by a really good radio programme continued online. You can almost detect an element of convergent evolution in its similarity with

After Our Time is in the the group blog which fillets the best of Radio 4 and offers it repackaged with commentary in podcast form. If, like me, you long for your radio reviews to come with audio attached - Speechification is a blessing.

Speechification is in many ways a hand crafted version for talk radio of the excellent profiled on Backstage (a graduate of Hackday). Now why not do that with speech and news? Prototypes like this from show the rich content that can be pulled in from news - and hence talk radio - text.

It's the kind of development the folks at the new 麻豆官网首页入口 Radio Labs blog will doubtless be pondering. As a broadcaster I'd like to see us making it easier for people to remix our content in inventive ways that enhance what we do, "in house". Lets help out our fans. Associating feeds and tags with our content is surely now more important than giving out the frequency or the station ident. It also acknowledges the truth that we are no longer working in a linear medium.

So in that spirit what should we do to make Pods and Blogs content more accessible online? I'm conscious that the 7-day podcast limit is an irritation. Leaving that to one side (as unfortunately we must) what could we do. How should we increase the tag-ability and searchability of what we produce?

UPDATE: Over on points back to a post on . That post btw was written in 2004. I'd only add that in the meantime I've think we've learned that as well as "ripples" we also get echoes - issues, ideas, comments inspired by our content that suggest new programming opportunities.

Podcast Notes: War and Peace in Games, Mind the Gap and inside Basra

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Chris Vallance | 03:19 UK time, Tuesday, 27 November 2007

somali_bypermission_davidax.jpg
If you'd like to subscribe to the podcast, by far the easiest way to get it, click here: This week we featured:


  • Following a post we spoke about the the Peacemaker Game. Talking to us was

  • From Peace to War Noah Schactman of "

  • Some moving sounds of the aid crisis in Somalia thanks to David Axe who also writes at Dangerroom and has his

  • The founder of explores the controversy surrounding it. A longer version of that interview is available here.

  • The Anyone who may have lost some human ashes in the vicinity of Islington should probably

  • Dan Hardie let us record two conversations he had with Iraqi former employees of British Forces in Basra and Syria about the grave practical difficulties they have trying to leave the country.

  • who does voices for the Tube on the media firestorm surrounding her (and thanks to her also for the wonderful ident at the start - Emma is a voiceover artist). Thanks for providing a blog perspective

  • Finally huge controversy in the world of . Viral marketting expert Matt Smith who is the co-founder of The Viral Factory gave us an ethical marketeers perspective on the whole row.

You can suscribe to the podcast via iTunes: MyYahoo: Googlereader It's always available in itunes first thing in Tuesday morning. Ideal for the Web2.0 commuter.









Blog Reaction to 25million Lost Records

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Chris Vallance | 17:37 UK time, Tuesday, 20 November 2007

From : Two computer discs holding the personal details of all families in the UK with a child under 16 have gone missing. The Child Benefit data on them include name, address, date of birth, National Insurance number and, where relevant, bank details of 25m people.

Reaction from blogs has been swift and mostly unforgiving. Professor Ross Anderson a leading security expert writing in the says:

It鈥檚 surely clear by now that the whole public-sector computer-security establishment is no longer fit for purpose. The next government should replace CESG with a civilian agency staffed by competent people. Ministers need much better advice than they鈥檙e currently getting.

The :

Why was one junior civil servant allowed to have access to download the full database, when the National Audit Office didn't even request all of that data, only a small sample for audit purposes e.g. a dozen records ?

of the consequences:

UK banks could be forced to close the accounts of all child benefit claimants affected by an HMRC 鈥渙perational failure鈥 that resulted in the loss of 25 million records stored on discs, a Gartner analyst has warned.

The notes that this isn't the first problem to have recently affected the Government:

Central government doesn't seem to be having much luck complying with its data protection obligations at the moment. , the Treasury [actually the Foreign Office] has recently had to give undertakings to the ICO that it will comply with the Data Protection Act following an incident involving disclosure of personal data on a visa applications website. In the 麻豆官网首页入口 report on the current issue, the ICO says it is already investigating two incidents involving the Treasury.

UPDATE: Oh the irony. Just noticed this. At the there's an interview with a person described as the "HMRC Chief Executive" talking about the need to celebrate success..

UPDATEII: And some wag has put a

Podcast Notes: Women Computer Operators of WWII, Kindle and Crowd Sourced Footy

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Chris Vallance | 14:07 UK time, Tuesday, 20 November 2007

If you'd like to subscribe to the podcast, by far the easiest way to get it, click here: This week we featured:


  • a fascinating piece about "awakening" .

  • British WWII code breaking computer Colossus restarted last week. The majority of those working on code breaking at Bletchley Park were women. We heard from Jan Peters and Sue Black who have just completed a new study in conjunction with the into the role of these women. Jamillah Knowles spoke with one of the women who operated the American WWII computer ENIAC

  • Clark Boyd of WGBH/麻豆官网首页入口 spoke about the (this isn't on the podcast because of music rights issues)

  • . Has the world turned upside down? We spoke with the godfather of the

  • Amazon's

  • Ebbsfleet United try crowdsourcing -

  • And we hear from the people who posted the 2billionth and 100millionth flickr photos

Of course I couldn't finish this write-up without posting the Chuck Norris video. Here you go:

You can suscribe to the podcast via iTunes: MyYahoo: Googlereader It's always available in itunes first thing in Tuesday morning. Ideal for the Web2.0 commuter.









2 billionth Flickr photo..

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Chris Vallance | 16:08 UK time, Wednesday, 14 November 2007

This is apparently the One of the has listed other milestones:







The person did it by substituting in a number into this URL https://flickr.com/photo.gne?id=XXXXXXXXXXX I've been typing in phone numbers of friends but without any very amusing results.

Podcast Notes: YouTube threats, Pakistan and Memories of War

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Chris Vallance | 14:22 UK time, Tuesday, 13 November 2007

If you'd like to subscribe to the podcast, by far the easiest way to get it, click here: This week we featured:


  • An interview with Muhammad Abdullah who is YouTube directed at local councillor campaigning against the building of a mosque. More here

  • Asma Mirza who blogs for and one of the spoke to us (there's an interesting snippet about political approaches to students in there)

  • spoke to us about the controversy

  • The 麻豆官网首页入口's Jamillah Knowles is trying to write a book in a month. She spoke to who is the brains behind the book in a month scheme

  • Britblog roundup from . Send British blog suggestions for next week to Britblog [at] gmail [dot] com

  • and offer different perspectives on coverage of the Iraq War

  • Current Vanguard Journalist Kaj Larsen . Current.com will be launching in a UK current.com on November 19th. And you can watch Kaj鈥檚 pod regarding Waterboarding on Current TV on channel 193 on Sky and 155 on Virgin Media.

You can suscribe to the podcast via iTunes: MyYahoo: Googlereader It's always available in itunes first thing in Tuesday morning. Ideal for the Web2.0 commuter.









Random Acts of Kindness

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Chris Vallance | 00:39 UK time, Thursday, 8 November 2007

Tom the ambulance driver behind Random Acts of Reality by a who had run out of funds to pay for her course ()

I'm not sure the exact reasons she ran out of money, though it looked like one of those cases where she didn't really fit the system vis:

The reasons are many, and often include my graduate status, the fact that I'm classed as dependent on my parents (but aren't), and the fact that the student loan company have pulled some of my funding from the last academic year.


This did remind me of a good friends situation many years ago. Her parents didn't like the idea of her going to university and refused to fill in their part of the grant form, so she received no grant. She was forced her to work all the way through college and, I believe, missed out on a 1st class degree as a result. I'm wondering, as I write this, if any students reading this blog have found themselves without money simply because their personal circumstances don't quite fit the rules imposed by the bean-counters? Drop a note in comments

Oh and get well soon Tom!

Podcast Notes: Pakistan, Google, Stopped Clocks and Spartan Pants

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Chris Vallance | 13:50 UK time, Tuesday, 6 November 2007

If you'd like to subscribe to the podcast, by far the easiest way to get it, click here: This week we featured:


  • and joined us

  • Pete Cashmore Senior Editor at Mashable spoke about the Google phone and

  • Mary Beard who writes about classics for the TLS spoke about her I immediately dragged the conversation downhill by talking about Roman Sex-workers, 300, and Spartan underwear. O Tempora O Mores!

  • Britblog roundup from . Send British blog suggestions for next week to Britblog [at] gmail [dot] com

  • spoke about a which aims to revitalise the blogging left. And offered some suggestions from the US left-blogging experience. Guido Fawkes takes a few pot shots at the enterprise here

  • but we had a sneak peak at a site employing the Wisdom of Crowds Clouds to predict the weather. Our resident weather expert gave the professional meterologists perspective - not as negative as you might think

  • Alfie Dennen is campaigning to save Britain's

You can suscribe to the podcast via iTunes: MyYahoo: Googlereader It's always available in itunes first thing in Tuesday morning. Ideal for the Web2.0 commuter.










Darpa Urban Challenge

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Chris Vallance | 18:04 UK time, Thursday, 1 November 2007

darpa.jpgI'm not much of a car junkie, but I covered the Darpa Challenge when I was in the US and ever since I've had a soft-spot for Robot Cars. The Urban Challenge, the final of , will turn country mouse robot cars into urbane street warriors as teams try and build cars that can navigate an urban environment unaided. No word on whether they will awarding points for spinners and megawatt stereos.

Dangerroom points out (their ). I remember in 2005 there were two teams from Louisiana, then just recovering from Katrina.

More on the . Other finalists websites are , , , and You can listen to my podcast from the .

Waste of Time of the Day: Abba on Beer Bottles

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Chris Vallance | 12:55 UK time, Thursday, 1 November 2007


performed on beer bottles. Next stop Mountain's Nantucket Sleighride transcribed for the glass harmonica?

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