The document contains various links to Flickr photos and discusses bees making honey from flowers. It suggests that the #culturehackeast event was full of flowers and bees, and importantly states that we can all be bees by pollinating ideas and contributing to culture.
Reading is an important activity for your life. We will get lots of knowledge by reading a book. Here I present about How to be a good reader for you. Let's reading for our brighter life.. Good luck ! :D
Reading is an important activity for your life. We will get lots of knowledge by reading a book. Here I present about How to be a good reader for you. Let's reading for our brighter life.. Good luck ! :D
How Doc Ready, the website that helps young people with mental health issues on their first trip to the doctor, came to be...
As delivered alongside Mark Brown of Social Spider at the Economic & Social Research Council seminar: Integrating technology into youth mental health practice on Friday 6 May 2016, at the Institute of Mental Health, University of Nottingham
Paper prototyping: early stage feedback on uxHarry Harrold
A lightning talk about paper prototyping, delivered at Service Design in Government: http://govservicedesign.net/ Won't make as much sense if you just look at the slides: the notes view should help...
Slides from my session at http://www.meetup.com/Norfolk-Developers-NorDev/events/152603352/
Might not make an awful lot of sense without reading the notes...
Some thoughts about hack days, developers, and data... Performed by Neontribe at the Culture Hack East data day: more on that at http://culturehackday.org.uk NB: Read the notes view. Doesn't make a lot of sense otherwise...
Tells the story of how Neontribe - an 8-person web development micro got to be on the UK government's G-Cloud framework. Built for a slot at the North Norfolk Public Sector Procurement Conference, Feb 24th 2012.
Best followed by reading the speaker's notes...
We like to start projects with prototyping in paper. It's the best tool we've found for getting non-technical folk and developers collaborating on how something might work.
Warning!
This presso makes extensive use of metaphor. Please treat with caution!
Let's imagine this is the developer community at a hack day. Buzz buzz buzz, work work work.
And here's where we'd like to end up at the end of a hack day. Tools, proofs-of-concept, mashups, a visualisation or two...
I told you there'd be metaphor...
And this is what a hack day is normally like. Lots of bees, making stufft.
Often out of pretty closed up flowers...
At #culturehackeast, all the flowers were open. Because they were there, in the room..
So, developers can move from flower to flower more easily.
And that was exciting. This is an excited bee. (NB: I have no basis for knowing this is an excited bee beyond it was the first image on a Flickr search for “excited bee” that was available under the right license, and in the correct aspect ratio.)
And here's where we ended up at the end of the hack day. Tools, proofs-of-concept, mashups, a visualisation or two...
Like this kind of thing: not produced at the hack day, but inspired by some of the playing with data we did in the stream I was in. thespace.lrb.co.uk
Some people played with this, and turned data from their boxoffice softare into maps that helped visualise their audiences: http://www.openheatmap.com/