Monthly Archive for June, 2005

G8 REBOOT - Lend us your screens.

Web release: Please distribute.

G8 REBOOT (http://www.g8reboot.net/) is asking people who have websites of any form, shape or kind, to advertise the Make Poverty History campaign, so that collectively we can raise awareness and as a result put pressure on our leaders to do the right thing.

Every single day, 30,000 children die, needlessly, of extreme poverty. On 6th - 9th July, 8 world leaders will gather in Scotland at the G8 summit, where they will be presented with a workable plan to double aid, drop the debt and made the trade laws fair.

But they’ll only do it if enough people tell them to.

You can help to raise awareness by letting your audience know about the summit in Scotland.
Lend us your screens. Spread the word. Help to make poverty history with your website.

Please visit http://www.g8reboot.net/ for more information.
Thanks!

The G8 REBOOT team
Email
http://www.g8reboot.net/

Live 8 list

I’ve just added my name to the Live 8 list - have you?

Technorati Live 8

Technorati have released a special Live 8 site - go check it out at: http://live8.technorati.com/.

Find out what people around the world are saying about Live 8 in real time with Technorati.

I think this is really cool, and apart from the obvious benefits to Technorati, it creates a portal/place where one can see what other people are saying, in realtime. Super stuff guys - looking forward to the next 12 days of world live web conversations! ;-)

G8 REBOOT - Help to spread the word. Lend us your screens.

I’ve been quiet online for a while now, and it’s been because I’ve both had lots on after work hours, but also because I’ve been spending my time trying to get a microsite out in time for it to make a difference.

Check out http://www.g8reboot.net to have a look.

Like most people in the UK, I sent in my text messages to the Live8 concert, hoping to get a ticket. I really, really wanted to go, but unfortunately I didn’t get one. In fact, only two people I know did get tickets, so I don’t feel that bad after all ;-) I know that a SQL random select statement isn’t unfair, so that’s life, and that’s cool.

Anyways, it got me to thinking - “the concerts are about raising public awareness for the G8 summit in Gleneagles, so that we can collectively put pressure on our leaders to do the right thing - trade justice, dropping the debt and more & better aid -
so what can I as an individual do instead of going to the concerts. We’re all in this together, right?
” And then I remembered the May 1st Reboot that the creative community has been doing for a few years now, put the two ideas together, and thought that it would be cool to do something similiar online.

If we can spread the message, then we can create more awareness. And that is good.

I know that there are a lot of people who run websites, particularly in the tech / web / creative community, and in turn each of those websites has an audience - so if we can get to each websites audience, then we can really create more awareness. It’s not unrealistic, and it gives people an opportunity to do something in spite of not being able to go to the concerts, or Scotland for that matter. So I ran the idea past a few close friends, and started working on it the next opportunity I got. Along the way, Damien and Ryan offered to get involved, so we made a small team which made things a lot easier. Several late nights and a weekend or two later, we’ve managed to put something together that is enough to get the ball rolling.

What’s left, is for us collectively to spread the word.

So, respectfully, I’m asking people who read this around the world, to spread the word. Help us to get this out.

Tell people you see and work with, email your friends, email people on your blogroll, tell people on messenger, add a line to the bottom of your RSS feed, add a button on your site, add a Make Poverty History banner on your site if you can, post the message to your sites on the day, tell your local newspaper, get involved.

Making Poverty History is not something that we can just assume our leaders will do, neither is it something that we can assume our neighbour or parents will do for us. And while it is a massive task, and one which will probably underscore this century, all of us can do something small to help, so that collectively it makes a bigger difference.

So, respectfully, I’m asking people who read this to help us spread the word. Lend us your screens.

G8 REBOOT

One Water launches

_ www.we-are-one.org.uk

one named as official water for live8 and Make poverty history.

One has been chosen by the organisers of Live8 and Make Poverty History as the official water at both events. At Live8, one will be offered to all the acts and celebrities taking part as well as featuring throughout the media village, while in Edinburgh at Make Poverty History, One will be available both backstage and for the crowds during the event.

Did you know that 1 billion people in the world don’t have access to clean water? Or that 2 million people a year die as a result of water related diseases? Simply buy a bottle of one water and all their profits, every last drop, go to building unique ‘Roundabout PlayPumps’ overseas which are backed by the South African Government of former President Nelson Mandela, the World Bank and The International Finance Corporation. One changes the lives of people - one person, one day at a time.

By installing ‘Roundabout PlayPumps’ in villages, it is ensured that people get free readily available clean water. The unique roundabout replaces the traditional ‘hand pump’ and works by a rotational movement. So by children simply playing on the roundabout, their energy pumps water for all the community. As a merry-go round has always been fun for children, there is never a shortage of ‘volunteers’. In fact the pumps are so efficient; there is always excess water for irrigation purposes.

G8 REBOOT: Shulblog is doing it

Shulblog - Helping to make poverty history.

So is Dydric

Are you? Do it.

G8 REBOOT - Spread the word. Lend us your screens.

G8 REBOOT

Do it.

G8 REBOOT - Lend us your screens.

Every single day, 30,000 children die, needlessly, of extreme poverty.
On July 6th, we finally have the opportunity to stop that shameful statistic.
8 world leaders, gathered in Scotland for the G8 summit, will be presented with a workable plan to double aid, drop the debt and made the trade laws fair. If these 8 men agree, then we will become the generation that made poverty history.
But they’ll only do it if enough people tell them to.
We don’t want your money - we want you!

Visit these sites to find out more:

Make Poverty History

Ubuntu 5.04 discs > London

I’ve got Intel x86 and PowerPC (4 each) Ubuntu 5.04 discs that came in the post the other day, delivered from Canonical. If you want one, let me know and I’ll post it to you.

Updater:
I’ve got 3 x86 discs left.

Find what you love

Steve Jobs talks about finding what you love, and I have to say that this speech moved me somewhat. I’d always had a kinda skewed impression of Jobs, completely from what I read on the web and in the press, so some of the stuff that he talks about is new to me.

And boy does it add respect.

I was part of my own startup not so long ago, and at some stage I think I stopped loving what I was doing, so I made a tough call and left. In retrospect it was totally the right thing or me to do then. At the time, it felt like I was ripping my own guts out, and was incredibly painful. Jobs’ words ring so true with me now. I’ve also had two grandparents die of cancer, so I have an inkling of what he went through, and again, it seems the most rational thing in the world - “love what you do”, yet so few of us do that. I can think of so many people I know that seem to be making the irrational decision of doing what they don’t love. Why?

I reckon that if you can get that sorted, then everything else falls into place. You want to become more productive so that you can fit more of what you love into the day. You learn as much about whatever you love, so that you can be the best at it, and make a success of it. You learn that you need to build something that is sustainable so that you can continue doing what you love. You learn that people are the most important asset that you have, because when the chips are down it’s the people that you love, that will love you back and get you through the rough times. You learn to swallow your pride because somewhere along the way you meet people who know more about what you love, and you know you really need to listen to them.

If you’re at a crossroads, then read it.
If you need to find inspiration to make to through the day, read it.
If you’re a startup and you don’t know what the next step is, read it.

Zuma charged by the NPA

Ex Deputy President has been charged by the NPA

Stealth Start-Ups Suck

Mark Fletcher talks about why a startup should never keep things under wraps in “Stealth Start-Ups Suck” - personally I agree and think it’s good advice for all the reasons he has listed - I think a lot of industry veterans would agree as well.

Update: 24 Hour laundry has updated their content - cool.

U2 at Twickenham tonite

Going to see U2 in a few hours - it’s a real stinker here in London, so we’re staying in the shade drinking loads of water. We’re also wondering who the support band is for tonite - word is it may either be Athlete or Interpol, neither of which I’m afraid I know nothing about ;-)

Update:
Awesome!!!!!!! Thanks guys, for a great concert ;-)

Johnny Clegg was awesome

Wow, I went to see Johnny Clegg last year at around about the same time, and that was really great. But somehow this year, on Friday, it was even better. I can remember clearly how I welled up with tears when Johnny played Great Heart, Impi and Scatterlings, the emotion in the audience palpable, the people around me all feeling the same way.

I think it’s got something to do with how I feel about my homeland at the moment, as well as the pure emotion and memories that the songs dig up from within. Johnny is a great performer, and really gets the crowd involved - and I think that as the Hammersmith Apollo is a relatively small arena, the effect is compounded. I’m not sure how many people were there on Friday, but I do know that at one stage it felt like we were all of the same thought.

Thank you Johnny for a great evening, and thank you for the songs you sing.