3D TV? France 24 trialled 360 degree TV during its election coverage

I’ve discovered the English language France 24 about six months too late to enjoy its coverage of the French presidential election. (There are also French and Arabic language versions of France 24.)

Compared with UK-based 24 hour news, it has none of the stuffiness and oozes quirkiness and endearing informality. It’s regular Tech 24 and Webnews slots are perhaps closer to BBC World Service Click (the radio show formerly known as Digital Planet and presented by Gareth Mitchell and Bill Thompson) than the TV equivalent.

For its French Presidential election result coverage, the French-language version of France 24 needed a larger set! And as a gimmick trial, they streamed video from a 360 degree camera mounted in the middle of a circular table around which the presenters and commentators sat. (The technology was provided by Digital Immersion.)

You can replay some of the coverage and swivel around, up and down and zoom in and out. On the night of the election results, France 24 offered an iPhone/iPad app that allowed viewers to use their fingers to scroll around rather than the stabbing with a mouse on their PC.

Try the second clip under VOD2 on the Direct 360 webpage for a good example.

It’s a fascinating insight into a live production. While one person talks, those opposite are shuffling their scripts, whispering in each other’s ears and texting. During speeches from the candidates and segments from reports outside the studio, there’s much hand waving to the gallery, conducting as the crowds rhythmically cheer for their candidate, and members of the crew race around to refill glasses and bottles of water.


The always-on nature of France 24’s panoramic view means that the slick production values of the director and vision mixer up in the gallery are completely eliminated. Instead the visual cues, the normally unseen negotiation between presenters and guests are exposed, not to mention the lighting rig which for this temporary studio was not mounted overhead.

The innovation is discussed briefly on the English language Tech 24 show where presenter Eric Olander describes it as “the next step in interactive television”.

Other than the benefit of improving media literacy and allowing more people to understand what goes on behind the scenes, I’m not sure that the 360 degree actually improved the coverage of the election results.

But given the relatively low cost of setting it up, I’m sure a local broadcaster will try it at some stage!
Posted in gadgets, media, technology | Comments Off

Are public libraries under-appreciated and under-used?

From the 1880s, Andrew Carnegie began to give money to build libraries – the most widely recognised feature of his philanthropy. From that date, he devoted himself to providing the capital for the building of public libraries and the development of library services. Between 1883 and 1929, 2,509 libraries were built, including 1,689 in the USA, 660 in the UK and Ireland, 125 in Canada, and others in Australia, New Zealand, the Caribbean and South Africa.

So it should come as no surprise that the Carnegie UK Trust has published a report looking at the state of public library services in the UK and Republic of Ireland. It highlights the divergent library policies across regions of the British Isles, as well as major differences in the levels of usage.

In terms of public expenditure on libraries per person, NI is ahead of England and Wales, though lagging behind Scotland. However, in these austere times, funding of library services have already and will continue to be cut.


Local libraries aren’t just about dead trees bound into books. They are places where knowledge is valued and the tools for researching and finding information are taught. Life long learning from just after cradle to just before grave.

Local libraries are an important focus for literacy and digital literacy, and often the public internet locations of last resort for households without broadband. The banks of PCs and IT literate library staff also help communities grapple with local and central government services that are increasingly being pushed online.


In Northern Ireland, Carnegie's research found that 30% of adults never or rarely read books, while 44% deem themselves to be prolific readers.


In a sample of 1,000 adults in each of the five jurisdictions were asked about the importance of public libraries as a service to the community, Northern Ireland scored lowest, and the Republic of Ireland the highest.


Library usage in Northern Ireland lags behind Scotland, Republic of Ireland, England and Wales.


And of those people who had used a library in the last year, the survey showed that NI had the fewest people who used a library at least once a month.


Presented with ten different factors that might encourage use of library services, providing better information on services was the top improvement desired by those surveyed in Northern Ireland. There was stronger support for offering more mobile services in NI than any other jurisdiction. Having a coffee shop on site and doubling up with other council services in the library building were also popular in NI.


Interestingly, while longer opening hours would encourage greater use by existing library user (60% in NI, 55% across UK+ROI), it made little difference to non-users (26% in NI, 28% across UK+ROI).

Over Easter, every available space - including the floor - seemed to be occupied by groups of teenagers revising for GCSE, AS and A-level exams. By lunchtime, the newspapers beside the soft seats were well thumbed and battered. Youngsters were storming around the children's section. The upstairs cafe always seems to have a steady trade - no one seems to mind the risk of sticky fingers on the newly borrowed books! - and all that activity is before you take in the Lift the Lid open piano sessions every third Saturday. Yet the library could be a lot busier, and reaching out to a great proportion of the local community.

The Carnegie UK Trust report finishes with eight conclusions.
  1. There is a continuing and important link between the services provided by public libraries and individual wellbeing.
  2. There is at least a potential link between libraries and community wellbeing.
  3. The enduring link between public libraries and individual and community wellbeing means that the public library should continue to be a core public service, provided on a universal basis to all citizens.
  4. This core needs to be redefined for the 21st century, but all citizens in the UK and Ireland are entitled to a core library service to be provided free of charge.
  5. Encouraging reading through the provision of books and other information should remain a core part of the library service.
  6. There is a need for national policy and leadership in the area of library provision in each jurisdiction.
  7. Local authorities need to consider how to communicate more effectively and more creatively about the services they provide, particularly to those who do not currently use the service, but might benefit most from it.
  8. Library buildings, and their place in their communities, must be considered separately from the public library service itself.
During 2012, the Carnegie UK Trust “aims to support and facilitate joint learning across the five jurisdictions to develop better shared understanding of the threats to the public library service, the opportunities which exist, and the kind of solutions which will contribute to the long term sustainability of the public library service”.

Hopefully, Libraries NI, the CAL committee and DCAL will read the research (which includes a paper highlighting the specific findings for NI) and engage in this initiative along with other providers of public services.

Cross-posted from Slugger O'Toole
Posted in book, politics | Comments Off

WordPress your Instagram Photos

I have to admit to being a bit of a slow starter when it comes to Instagram but once you start engaging it can be one of the best sources of inspiration for everyday photography.

Photographs you capture with Instagram don’t have to be limited to just the generic mobile app actually you can now easily display your instagram feed or photos directly on your wordpress posts, pages and sidebars.


Remember to follow @flixelpix on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook

My FlixelPix Instagram Feed

Here is a the live feed for my latest 16 FlixelPix Instagram photos. You can follow me directly from the Instagram app by searching for the username flixelpix. You can control the size of the thumbnail images and they link directly to the full sized photo on the Instagram website.

Welcome : Instapress

To add this to your own blog all you need is the brilliant Instapress plugin for WordPress. It is probably best practice to install plugins from within your wordpress installation. Login to WordPress and click on ‘Plugins’, then ‘Add New’ and search for Instapress.

You can view the Plugin on WordPress here. Once you install and activate the plugin you need to authenticate with Instagram.

This is a once only action. You can revoke Instapress access at anytime by logging into your Instagram account then clicking on the ‘Manage Apps’ tab.

To add Instagram images to a page use the following short code in square brackets. You can add fields within the “” such as self to display your own photos, 10 to display 10 and 110 to set the image size to a 110×110 square.

instapress userid=”" piccount=”" size=”"

As well as the ability to display your images on a page or post the plugin also adds a sidebar widget which you can drag over to any sidebar from within WordPress’s “Appearance” tab. Like the short code option the widget can be fully customised to suit the look of your website.

If you are displaying more than 20 photos on a single page it is recommended you put the cache time up as high as possible. I have set the cache to be 60 minutes.

The plugin also supports paging and fancy box, the only limits are your creativity. Check out the Guide to Running a Photoblog on WordPress or brush up on your photography knowledge with these brilliant photography ebooks.

WordPress your Instagram Photos is a post from: FlixelPix Photography All content copyright FlixelPix. Photo reproduction strictly by written permission only.

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"a broadsheet man in a tabloid world" – Roy Hodgson – Radio 4 Profile

Radio 4's thirteen minute Profile programme this week turned its attention to Roy Hodgson, the new England football manager. As a non-sports fan who normally skips this kind of podcast episode, it was interesting to discover the background to the man who will either be lauded or vilified by the time this summer's Euro football tournament finishes.

Speaking five languages - at least well enough to communicate with European players in their native tongue - and described as "a broadsheet man in a tabloid world", Roy Hodgson has a history of picking up weak teams and "turning water into wine", with the notable exception of his brief six month spell at Liverpool.

Well worth a listen (starts 30 seconds in). Some other recent episodes to highlight: Jeremy Hunt, Kim Jong-un, Jimmy Wales (founder of wikipedia) and - what felt like an April Fool spoof but wasn't - Dame Edna Everage.
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The Hidden Hangar of Long Kesh

We impulsively ventured over to the old Maze / Long Kesh prison to visit two aircraft hangars erected in 1941 for use during World War II. The hangars house a collection of planes and helicopters owned and maintained by the Ulster Aviation Society.

I am happy to say I haven’t actually been on the Long Kesh site before, little is left of the original prison and it is hard to believe that such an infamous location could be the home of Heritage protected World War II hangars.

The museum is funded and run by a team of volunteers who source and look after the various aircraft. Ray Burrows gave us a tour of the site and explained how is currently rebuilding one plane that lay partly underwater for years and was actually used by fishermen to fish from before being rescued.

I wasn’t actively planning to take photos but brought the X-Pro1 and 18mm lens to grab a couple of ‘snaps’, to be honest I wasn’t expecting as many artefacts in a single hangar.

Ulster Aviation Society

The visit was of historical interest rather than a photographic excursion but it was great to discover the hangar housed an old fire engine on which I may have travelled a number of times.

Lisburn Fire Engine

If it is the same engine it was previously owned by the late father of a good friend of mine. The fire engine would have its annual run out at Lisburn’s Lord Mayor’s Parade and we and a single mannequin got to act as firemen for the day.

The vehicle didn’t look any different, it was surrounded with aircraft spares so I couldn’t get a good photo of the vintage fire engine but it still look as well preserved and stunning as it was back in the early 1990s. It was great that this team of dedicated engineers are caring for these heritage pieces.

I discovered the location in Will Leitch’s piece on the BBC website in which Ray commented “We consider we’re Northern Ireland’s best-kept secret at the moment.” The media coverage is putting the society on the map and with the Balmoral Show moving to the site this year I would expect the hangars will be busy with visitors.

The Museum doesn’t receive any public funding so it is utterly remarkable the collection has grown to include so many valuable aircraft.

You can find more about the Ulster Aviation Society and how you can visit the hangar on their website here.

The Hidden Hangar of Long Kesh is a post from: FlixelPix Photography All content copyright FlixelPix. Photo reproduction strictly by written permission only.

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Posted in Blog, mono, ulster aviation, X-Pro1 | Comments Off

bye bye bmibaby … all my bags are packed I’m ready to go

So many songs come to mind with the news that BMI Baby is to close its base and cease flying in and out of Belfast from 11 June, and to ground its fleet completely after 10 September (unless a buyer can be found).

If you hate me after what I say
Can't put it off any longer
I just gotta tell you anyway

Bye Bye B M I Baby Goodbye
(Bye, baby, baby, bye, bye, ahh.)
B M I Baby don't make me cry
(Bye, baby, baby, bye, bye.)

Launched in early 2002, 420,000 passengers went through George Best Belfast City Airport last year on bmibaby. They never did fix their online check in process that would allocate very young children in a different row to their parents. But Tiny - bmibaby's baby logo - will be backing his bags for the last time soon.

All my bags are packed I'm ready to go
I'm standin' here outside your door
I hate to wake you up to say goodbye
But the dawn is breakin' it's early morn
The taxi's waitin' he's blowin' his horn
Already I'm so lonesome I could die

There's so many times I've let you down
So many times I've played around
I tell you now, they don't mean a thing
Every place I go, I'll think of you
Every song I sing, I'll sing for you
When I come back, I'll bring your wedding ring

Now the time has come to leave you
One more time let me kiss you
Close your eyes I'll be on my way
Dream about the days to come
When I won't have to leave alone
About the times, I won't have to say

So kiss me and smile for me
Tell me that you'll wait for me
Hold me like you'll never let me go
Cause I'm leavin' on a jet plane
Don't know when I'll be back again
Oh baby, I hate to go
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The triumph of the ‘Norms’

Only a few short years ago we were mostly content to allow the ‘expert’ tech Journos/Pundits/Analysts to tell us all what type of Smartphone we ought to buy. Many of the leading tech pundits in those pre-iPhone days boldly claimed that a Smartphone (and the iPhone in particular) wasn’t a Smartphone if:

  • it didn’t have a ‘real’ keyboard
  • it didn’t have GPS
  • it didn’t multi-task
  • it couldn’t edit Word docs
  • it didn’t make toast! ;-) 

…etc.

For back in the ‘Pre-iPhone Era’ handheld devices were absolutely the domain of the hardcore nerd - in fact you pretty much had to be a nerd to even attempt to use one of these devices, which were about as user-friendly as a rabid cornered pitbull.

These industry analysts were not just nerds, but Alpha-Nerds, and they did love their tech gadgets, especially gadgets stuffed with shiny new tech and an ever-expanding list of impressive specifications. Nothing less that the very bleeding edge tech would suffice, bizarrely not just for themselves, but for all users. But the problem with relying on an ‘everything-but-the-kitchen-sink’ spec-sheet philosophy is much like having a great cake recipe, without ever having actually baked one. Sure that recipe looks great, easy enough to attempt and you have the ingredients to hand, but it’s pretty meaningless until the cake is baked and you can actually taste it.

It’s fair to say now that the spec-sheet fantasies of the tech media analysts have lost out to Apple, who have successfully fulfilled the promise of a powerful, robust and easy to use device. Millions have voted for the iPhone with their hard-earned cash, which is all the more surprising considering Apple weren’t even in the smartphone business when most of the competition were considered mature products.

I’m not bashing the nerds here (and I consider myself one) but the smug attitude of the media ‘analysts’ and ‘experts’, inferring they have the insider smarts for what the public really need, that bothers me. Neither is there anything wrong with having an elite techie club (for those who are obsessed with that kind of thing). But these experts were recommending devices to the general (most definitely non-nerd) public and expecting them to put up with hideous user experiences for the sake of ticking off boxes on a spec list.

Of course, as has often been quoted by Upton Sinclair, ‘It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it’.

I expect that this type of defensive thinking, plus perhaps some ‘creative’ and ‘promotional’ activity by some vendors, would result in the sort of recommendations and analysis that we’ve come to expect from some of these tech market analysts.

Surprisingly, and even in the face of concrete evidence, this type of Apple-bashing persists today - but at least now we can see what’s happening in the real world for ourselves. Just have a look around next time you’re in town and notice how many iPhones you see people using compared to any other types of mobile. You’ll probably be surprised how popular this sophisticated device is amongst the ‘normal’ folks.

Here’s a few gems that put it all into perspective:

Trevor Gilbert’s post on Pundits and Analysts

From Daring Fireball: Tomi Ahonen on iPhone Sales

And also: Apple should just ‘pull the plug’ on the iPhone, from John C. Dvorak

A shocking article from the Forbes site(!) by contributor Louis Bedigian knocking the newly launched iPhone 4S. Good to see that many of the commenters have really taken him to task on this.

I think [this post] (http://flyosity.com/ipad/the-ipad-is-for-everyone-but-us.php) from Mike Rundle really nails it on who Apple really has in mind for the iPad (and iPhone)

An excellent summary on how device specs have become meaningless from Drew Breunig.

Production notes: This post was written entirely on my iPad (including links and researching web pages for the quotes) using the excellent Writing Kit app for iOS. The header illustration was also created on an iPad using the iDraw vector illustration app. How far we’ve come, in so short a time.

Posted in Apple, Business, Equipment, iPhone, marketing, nerds, sales, smartphone, Tech | Comments Off

Open Source Belfast

Adam Turkington and Venus speaking about Open Source Belfast, now open in Sinclair House as part of SomewhereTo_. I was along on Thursday afternoon to run a session on Audioboo which the team may use to help capture and promote the varied programme.



While I was there I filmed a timelapse with a camera stuck on top of an egg timer. You can listen to the audio underneath the timelapse in the clip below.



One wall in the venue - which used to be a cafe - looks very rough, until you look more closely and find a miniature military landscape embedded in the plaster. Quite bizarre - and well worth popping into Sinclair House for a look.





Did I mention they serve tea and coffee?
Posted in Belfast, festival, technology | Comments Off

Video: Berkeley Ridiculously Automated Dorm (BRAD) [UPDATED]

During his freshman year at UC Berkeley, Derek Low set out to create a complete home automation system inside his tiny dorm room. Three months and several hundred dollars later, 'BRAD' (Berkeley Ridiculously Automated Dorm) has been completed. Check out the video below...6x1GkgbVP1I
Posted in News - New Products | Comments Off

Video: Berkeley Ridiculously Automated Dorm (BRAD)

During his freshman year at UC Berkeley, Derek Low set out to create a complete home automation system inside his tiny dorm room. Three months and several hundred dollars later, 'BRAD' (Berkeley Ridiculously Automated Dorm) has been completed. Check out the video below...6x1GkgbVP1I
Posted in News - New Products | Comments Off