Retweet

March 27th, 2009 by Alistair MacDonald No comments »

There are many niggle things about Twitter, one of which is when someone asks for something to be “retweeted”. When that happens I not only get the original, but others post the same thing again and again.

Retweeting can be a really useful thing and I am not discouraging it. I would say don’t just retweet just because someone asks, do it because you want to tell your followers, but other than that I would encourage it. It can result in people outside your direct Twitter circle finding out about something they will find interesting or useful.

I have had an idea to solve this. No, stop, come back, it might be a good idea for once. Why not implement a retweet feature in Twitter. It could work in a not to dissimilar way as favouriting a tweet. The difference is when a friend, or several of your friends flag it for retweeting it will appear once in your stream.

The only technical problem I can see is that if the tweet is not flagged for retweeting straight away the tweet could get berried in the past and missed. There are obvious UI solutions to this, and I would look at aliasing the original tweet each time, but with Twitters scalability problems this solutions need to be really really simple to implement.

Please do post any thoughts here, or on Twitter.

Tweetup Newcastle

March 17th, 2009 by Alistair MacDonald No comments »

Do you use Twitter? Do you live in or around Newcastle upon Tyne? Do you fancy meeting other people who have answered yes to the previous questions in a pub for a pint? If the answers are yes, yes, please read on.

I am wondering if we should have a Tweetup. This would be just like when you tweet that you fancy a pint a couple of friends on Twitter join you. The difference is we give a couple of weeks notice so people can plan and not just a couple of hours as per usual.

The idea is not mine. There have been several round the world, and one is being run tonight in Preston. The format seems to vary some what, but I am suggesting we don’t try anything complicated and just gather informally for a chat. Restricting your sentences to 140 characters is optional. ;-)

So what do you think? Please let us know by completing this criminally easy poll.

Update: So that is a good solid yes. In my experience not all the people voting here will make it, and people who were not interested would not vote. That being said others will come, and we do not need any more than two people for it to be successful. I will seek some venue and day feedback next month and we can give it a go.

New web site

March 11th, 2009 by Alistair MacDonald No comments »

Welcome to the new web site. We are still working on things so please come back soon.

Twitchhiker

February 13th, 2009 by Alistair MacDonald No comments »

Occasionally I blog about a charity event. I do not do this often as the last thing I want is a hard sell every time I read a blog, and I suspect you are the same. This in one charity event that I am not only happy to support, but one you might find fun to follow, and you may even be able to help with.

Paul Smith, a good man, and only slightly crackers, had an idea while waiting in a supermarket queue. We are all users of Twitter. If stuck for something we can say so using Twitter and someone will have an answer or be able to help. Most users are selfless and will go out of there way to help people who they have never met. The idea was to ask the Twitter community to help him hitchhike round the world and see how far he can get. He put up a web site and we (his so called friends) told everyone he was doing it so he could not pull out. :-) He is now scared witless, but very much up for the challenge.

You can follow Paul on twitter and read more about the challange on the the twitchhiker blog. No matter where you are, if you are a Twitter user, please follow him and help him in his travels.

Yes, I am a BarCamp Addict

January 31st, 2009 by Alistair MacDonald 4 comments »

My name is Alistair, and I am a BarCamp addict.

What is a BarCamp? In short it is an open conference with many session over many tracks. You can attend any of the session be they presentations, discussions, demonstrations, or whatever. The only condition is that you need to participate, and you should really run a session yourself.

I am posting this because I have been asked by the organisers of BarCampLondon6 for a list of prior BarCamp organisers, and doing this puts in to perspective just how much of a addict I am. In 2006 I found out about BarCamps through a blog and managed to get on the reserve list for BarCampLondon06, and then got to go, and then went to more, and more, and more.

You will have a long way to go to beet my addiction though. After Ian Forrester could not make it to London4 and Tom Morris did not attend BathCamp I am the only remaining person who has attended all of the UK overnight BarCamps. In my defence Ian and Emma Persky have probably attended more BarCamps than I because they have had the opportunity to attend other European BarCamps, but this is not a problem to me as it is an addiction and not a competition. ;-)

For reference this is a list of BarCamps I have attended, and the session I have run. I appreciate you may well not be interested, but to be honest this list is as much reference for me as it is for you.

So now I have the record and I can stop, right? Wrong. It is nice to have, but I am not actually that bothered about the record. I attend BarCamps because I enjoy them and the company of fellow attendees. I could just miss one to demonstrate that, but I do not want to.

If you are interested in attending a BarCamp then keep an eye on the BarCapm.org wiki for ones around you. I will hopefully be attending BarCampLondon6 and BarCampBournemouth, and many more this year. Don’t forget we are also organising BarCampNorthEast2 and we would love to soo you there. So, you are reading this blog about BarCamps, so why not sign up to one and get addicted as well. We would love to see you there.

Twitter tickers

December 16th, 2008 by Alistair MacDonald 2 comments »

So, I had another daft idea, built it, and decided to share it. If you are like me you will like to skim thought all your friends “tweets” on twitter.com even thought you don’t read them all properly. I was doing this whenever I tweeted myself so when I posted something I also read all the way back to my prior tweet. The problem is when I am out and about I will tweet when I do not have time to check other updates, or have nothing to say after reading the some tweets.

Okay, I can just keep reading backwards until I see something I remember, but I decided there was a better and more over engineered option here. I have set up two Twitter bots that tweet the time on the hour, and at midnight. These can be followed along with other friends and show a distinctive icon. Now all I have to do is remember is the time you last checked your feed.

The bots are called hourtick and daytick. Please feel free to follow them. They are work in progress so all feedback welcome.

My leaving details announced

November 8th, 2008 by Alistair MacDonald No comments »

Back in May I decided it was time to move on from Beaumont Colson Ltd. The date was somewhat open-ended and although I expected to have gone by now it is only now that I feel both the company and I are ready. My leaving date is the 30th of November 2008.

For practical reasons my current role is being dissolved and most of the tasks being taken on by thee other employees. This is a logical move and something that should perhaps of happened several years ago.

I have however been persuaded to stay on in an advisory roll working a few days a month. This gives the company access to that knowledge and experience that is not available elsewhere in the organisation and gives me an income to live off.

My plans are not yet set, but I will be taking off December and will work on some old and new pet projects at the start of 2009.

I am planning a leaving doo (provisionally) on the 12th December so keep a note in your diary.

BarCamp no shows

October 8th, 2008 by Alistair MacDonald 6 comments »

You may know that I am a prolific BarCamper, that I love the concept, and really enjoy attending these events. I will be blogging about this addiction soon and will catch up on some well needed blogging about BarCamps I have attended.

I am writing this to stat to addressing a problem we have always had with BarCamps, and a problem that is getting worse. This problem is people signing up and not attending. At the recent BarCampLondon5 there were 150 tickets allocated and only 100 turned up. Most of these absentees were people who had not attended a BarCamp before. At BarCampNorthEast we shockingly had only 30% attendance. Even the first UK BarCamp managed 80%, and that was when we were all new.

Tickets for the popular BarCamps are hard to get and there is nothing more annoying to me than not being able to get a ticket when there would have been room. This is something we need to fix.

Overbooking is one option and is sometimes done. We kind of did it for BarCampNorthEast. We released tickets for everyone we could legally fit in the building rather than a comfortable level. We were convinced that we would not have full attendance, but would not have to turn anyone away if we were wrong. Considering the effort some put in to attend I do not ever want to turn people with tickets away.

BathCamp (the BarCamp in Bath :-) ) tried to decrease nonattendance by charging £5 a non refundable and spending the money on a t-shirt. For legal reasons that are far to complex to go in to here you should not charge for attendance and a t-shirt was a nice work around. Attendance was not bad, but was not perfect either, and I would say that the payment did not make much of a difference.

I have given this whole situation a lot of thought and I am wondering if the solution should perhaps be one of communication, or not relyaing on non attendibng deligates to communicate to be more exact.

Once we have booked then we often get no more than one email, and we never need to confirm we are still attending. Yes people are asked to say if they are not going, but this is obviously not working. Should we expect people to confirm they will be attending a week or two before the BarCamp instead of cancel if they are not?

I agree that we should not have it so a person who has missed an email can not go, but a date can be set in advance and an email reminder sent out in addition to tweets, blogs posts and whatever other communication tools are available at the time.

Taking this one step further, why not allow people to book queue-jumper tickets in advanced so they can plan ahead. This queue-jumper ticket allows you book a full ticket when they are released very close to the event. The queue-jumper ticket guarantees an event ticket if you book that event ticket in a predefined time window just before the event. After that window people on the resirve list can book, and finally anyone can book.

This can be done with something like EventWax and spreadsheet software to check there is no cheating.

All this actually does is bring the date when someone commits to attending the event closer to the event and this might not solve the problem. It could though so should we give it a go?

In the words of an old exam paper…. Discuss. :-)

Words of wison from the mouth of the young

August 20th, 2008 by Alistair MacDonald 3 comments »

Earlier today I was cycling to a meeting in the west of Newcastle. I was early so was cycling slowly when a kid cycled up along side me. I am no good at guessing age, but suspect he was no more than ten years old. “Nice bike” he said. “Thank you, not as good as yours.” I replied. It was not the most flashy bicycle I had seen, but it had a fancy suspension and was far better than mine. His response was surprisingly profound. “It does not matter how good your bike is, its a bike”. He then cycled off leaving me with a warm feeling of hope for the world.

Fail Blog

July 30th, 2008 by Alistair MacDonald 1 comment »

I have not blogged web site recommendation here for a while. Instead I have been using my tumblelog but as Tumblr has a great Firefox button to assist with this. That being said I am seriously considering using del.icio.us and ma.gnolia.com.

Also I hate reading blog entries that are just extracts from a bookmarking site. If I wanted to read then then I wold have subscribed to that feed. Okay, moan over.

Anyway, this blog is so funny I decided it was truly worthy of a blog posting all of it’s own. It is the Fail Blog. Enjoy.

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