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Archives for June 2008

Sir Clive Sinclair.

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Chris Vallance | 17:51 UK time, Monday, 30 June 2008

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Sir Clive Sinclair is something of a hero to me, and I suspect a lot of other UK computer users in their 30's and older. He more or less single handedly created the UK home computer market.

In the interview below Sir Clive discusses many issues: His view of the internet, the future of electric vehicles, flying cars, and the development of the computer. It's a typically eclectic mix of ideas, with ambitious schemes side by side with very perceptive comments on the current state of technology. An edited version of the interview below will appear on iPM this Saturday, below is the source material - largely unedited.


In the article we reference a speech before congress. To clarify that was the . I do recommend reading it. If you find any of Sir Clive's ideas far fetched, reflect on how many in this speech are now reality.

Suggest a story for July 5

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Jennifer Tracey | 17:23 UK time, Monday, 30 June 2008

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If you've an idea for a story or someone you'd like to hear interviewed - leave a comment, send us a email or a if you're on Twitter.

Your idea can be a rough round the edges, woolley sort of thought, or a solid tale you want told. Also drop us a line if you've come across some interesting stuff online you think we might like to feature.
Thanks.


Global Voices Summit 2008: Not just anyone..

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Chris Vallance | 14:50 UK time, Saturday, 28 June 2008

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globalbanner.jpgThis must be every repressive regime's worst nightmare a room full of passionate bloggers determined to get use the latest technology to report what's happening in their countries.

I'm at the , a gathering of bloggers from around the world: I'm not sure there is a representative from Antarctica, but every other continent must be represented.

This week's iPM comes from the Summit and focuses on the issue of censorship and the persecution of bloggers, themes that come up time and time again at the conference. (click here to listen, unfortunately I can't update the podcast from here).

My colleagues at Click have also been discussed here, in particular their interview author of Against the Machine: Being Human in the Age of the Electronic Mob. Siegel believes that, "No-one would talk of citizen heart surgeons, for example," he says. "But on the internet they talk of citizen journalists, because it seems that anyone can take up a keyboard and write a story".

His views have angered some participants and It's easy to see why. Not just anyone who lives under a repressive regime has the courage to take up a keyboard and blog. I've met several people here who have faced persecution and imprisonment because of their blogs.

For these people, and the governments who expend significant efforts oppressing them, blogging is much more than vanity publishing.

I'll write more from the conference over the next couple of days. Incidentally, the name badge in the photo above belongs to Pakistan based blogger aka Dr Awab Alvi, one of the guests on the first ever iPM. He's an excellent fellow, though taller than he sounded on the radio....

Arianna Huffington: self confessed cyberslut

Jennifer Tracey | 16:48 UK time, Thursday, 26 June 2008

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The Queen of bloggers at , a woman who needs no introduction... favourite websites.

The websites she mentions:
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´óÏó´«Ã½ iPlayer redesign includes radio

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Jennifer Tracey | 15:49 UK time, Thursday, 26 June 2008

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Radio stations listing on ´óÏó´«Ã½ iPlayer

The lush gorgeousness that is the iPlayer has combined radio and TV as part of its new interface. Bout time too say the Radio Foursters.

You can listen to the past seven days of radio programmes as you can already on the website, but you'll also be able to fast forward (can't imagine why you'll be needing this...) and rewind programmes.

And there's a 'last played' function, so you can pick up where you left off and, joy of joys, you can subscribe to programmes via an RSS feed.

Sneaky peak previews on the ´óÏó´«Ã½ Internet blog.

The real thing? Says it launches in beta version today...

Lost money online?

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Jennifer Tracey | 13:20 UK time, Tuesday, 24 June 2008

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Was it a scam, faulty goods or identity theft? Did you know where to report it? Did you get your money back?

Victims of e-crime are being disregarded by police and other authorities according to whose press release landed in our in-tray this week. They say if you're a victim of an online crime, it's almost impossible to get help from the police.

'Ebay e-victims are told to report it to ebay. Credit card victims are told to report it to their credit card company. Victims that used debit cards, wire transfers or cheques are told they simply lost their money.'

E-victims say, police sometimes tell people who are reporting an online crime that they don't have the expertise to deal with it. Or they blame the victims themselves for being stupid enough to fall for a scam.

OK, so much for churnalism, up till now we've just been quoting the release - but internet crime is a growing problem, () and there's an active political debate about what the solution should be.

The Tories say the Government has . But last month, the for a central reporting centre, though there is some debate as to whether they've gone about it in the right way.

We're thinking of looking into this. If you've experience of the issue email us or leave a comment.

Right to cite?

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Chris Vallance | 11:14 UK time, Monday, 23 June 2008

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AP kicked off letters to for his use of quotes (with credit) from articles written by the agency.

As many bloggers reacted in anger at AP's actions the organisation hastily qualified its initial position. Here's the statement they sent us.

In response to questions about the use of Associated Press content on the Drudge Retort web site, the AP was able to provide additional information to the operator of the site, Rogers Cadenhead, on Thursday. That information was aimed at enabling Mr Cadenhead to bring the contributed content on his site into conformance with the policy he earlier set for his contributors.

Both parties consider the matter closed. In addition, the AP has had a constructive exchange of views this week with a number of interested parties in the blogging community about the relationship between news providers and bloggers and that dialogue will continue.

In spite of the phoney war between big media and bloggers often paraded in the press, the relationship is in reality more symbiotic than parasitic. Bloggers read and quote big media, journalists .

In the player below Arianna Huffington reflects on the row and on use of media content, she calls it a serious mistake on the part of AP.

AP says it has a continuing 'dialogue' with bloggers on this issue. But what should the approach be? We discussed the issues with , and blogger and .


Suggest a story for June 28

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Jennifer Tracey | 10:19 UK time, Monday, 23 June 2008

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Here, at iPM HQ, we look for stories and ideas that you probably won't hear on the news.

Last week we looked at how the rising price of oil is having an impact of the quality of the roads we drive.

We also put claims to the test that playing the computer game, World of Warcraft ,can actually help you develop leadership skills useful in the real world.

If you've come across something that intrigued you and you'd like to hear more about it - drop us a line.

Comment below, email ipm { at } bbc.co.uk, or send us a if you're on Twitter.

Thanks

Show Notes: Oil Prices and Potholes, Games and Leadership

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Chris Vallance | 10:48 UK time, Saturday, 21 June 2008

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works_sign_226pa.jpg. Our lead story on this week's podcast: how rising oil prices aren't just making the cost of driving soar, we hear claims they are also making the roads we drive on worse.

According to , the price of asphalt has doubled thanks to rising oil prices which have increased the cost of production four-fold. In an earlier report the significant funding problems, a view echoed on the programme by who gave a grim assessment of the state of the roads. , told us that the rising price of asphalt was making the situation worse, and likely to lead to a worsening of the state of the roads. For their part the Department for Transport told us that central funding has increased. Feel free to add you own thoughts on the state of the roads in the comments.

Our exploration of the state of the roads began with an email we received a while ago, asking if it was possible to make roads greener. Well there are several projects looking at just that. We heard from the leader of the .

Bringing us full circle, they told us their system, which uses concrete rather than asphalt could see reductions in fuel consumption of up to 5%.

Our favourites this week came from .

And lastly following , which in turn picked up an earlier report in , we decided to put to the test claims that playing massively multiplayer online role-playing games can develop useful business skills. , gamely gave a mock job interview to World of Warcraft Guild Leader Adam, but in spite of top-flight gaming skills, Adam found himself fired rather than hired.

Finally, Tom Chatfield of Prospect told us that increasingly the trend was going the other way. Thanks to Adam for being a good sport - you can judge for yourself how he did on the podcast - personally I think he was a pretty convincing candidate.

Next week we hope to hear from , and I'll be at the . Any suggestions for question to Sir Clive, or people you'd like me to interview at the summit do drop us line, ipm at bbc.co.uk or leave a note in comments.

Updates: Fuel Bills and Crime Maps

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Chris Vallance | 18:29 UK time, Wednesday, 18 June 2008

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A couple of developments today which add to stories we've mentioned on iPM. Firstly energy prices: you'll remember that in May we spoke with David Hunter of Consultants , who told us of "double digit rises in domestic bills" on the basis of wholesale price increases. Now Nils has confirmation of big .

We've also heard from the government today, about . We looked at that issue in this week's podcast. There's more on mapping crime below, with an interview with Dennis Rosenbaum of the University of Illinois at Chicago talking about Crime Maps


Show notes: crime maps and podwalks

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Jennifer Tracey | 21:00 UK time, Friday, 13 June 2008

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14 minutes is short. So short, our favourites website guest didn't make it this week...we just needed a little more space...

Crime maps
Chris was in Chicago talking to the cops who've been making it work in America. But will they work in the UK? Boris and the Conservatives think so.

Podwallks
Guided audio tours aren't square and boring any more - have a listen.

Suggest a story on the blog that you think should be investigated or email ipm { at } bbc.co.uk. are good too, if you're aTwitterer.

Suggest a story for June 21

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Jennifer Tracey | 17:35 UK time, Friday, 13 June 2008

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We receive a steady stream of emails each week and try to respond to as many as you can. Apologies if we haven't had a chance to reply to yours - we do read them all.

And you're welcome to leave a comment here or add your support for another story that's been suggested.

If you've an idea for a story or someone you'd like to hear interviewed - please share what you know here on the blog, email ipm { at } bbc.co.uk, or send us a if you're on Twitter.

Thanks again.

Podwalks: navigate without a map

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Jennifer Tracey | 16:43 UK time, Friday, 13 June 2008

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What if you could make your way around a city without a map? And have a local take you round instead, telling you funny stories and letting you know about a good pub round the corner.

The , starting 20 June, is inviting you to explore the city listening to podwalks, or guided audio tours you download online.

They've been produced by artist . She's created simliar podwalks for other UK towns and cities including Liverpool, Newcastle and Stratford.

Here she describes the Southwark podwalks - it starts with an extract by the guide and local resident, Jack Thurston...

But this isn't a new idea...way back, in a pre-podcast age...artist and musician found a way to transmit the memories of residents living in Leyton, east London, to wandering visitors.

His project, , preserves the memories of the community who lived there before the was built.

You collect a set of headphones from the local library and go in search of the radio transmitters along the route...

Mapping Crime: Lessons from Chicago

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Chris Vallance | 15:28 UK time, Wednesday, 11 June 2008

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London Mayor Boris Johnson wants to introduce crime-mapping, and if elected, the Conservatives currently

Boris's inspiration for this plan is, . I found that a little surprising, because the crime-map I'd heard of was , produced independently of the police. That map was one of the earliest and most celebrated Google-mapmashups, and a project that continues in an expanded form as the .

I spoke with the Everyblock team to find out what they thought about London's plans.


Chicagocrime.org was itself only possible because of the innovative approach to data undertaken earlier by the police in Chicago. Currently the Chicago police's official mapping , a project that won the 2007 Innovations in American Government Award. The department in charge told me they have had over 400 visits from other police forces interested in their approach, including delegations from the UK. In the player below I speak to Information Services Division Commander Jonathan Lewin and GIS manager Joseph Kezon


While Chicago with a population of just shy of 3million isn't on the same scale as New York, it has faced comparable problems with violent crime, and has like New York and many other municipalities in the US, enjoyed significant recent success in combating crime. But Chicago's approach is very different from the famed "zero-tolerance" approach that , and which it's often claimed the . For Chicago community policing is a central part of their approach, and the maps they publish form the basis of the conversation between beat officers and local communities.(And indeed beat meetings are mentioned in the Conservative )

Not everyone, of course, is happy with crime mapping. On the programme this weekend we'll hear from groups who worry that crime-mapping could be counter-productive, affecting house prices, increasing fear of crime, and leading to areas being stigmatized.

UPDATE: The Govt has g. There's a further interview on the subject with criminologist Dennis Rosenbaum of the University of Illinois at Chicago below (also posted in another entry)


What do you think? Do you want this information or should it stay behind the thin-blue firewall? Let us know.

Matt Frei: ´óÏó´«Ã½ America correspondent

Jennifer Tracey | 12:40 UK time, Tuesday, 10 June 2008

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Matt Frei's presents , a nightly news programme shown on ´óÏó´«Ã½ World and ´óÏó´«Ã½ AMERICA.

He's reported on all the major events and runs , a weekly blog on the stories he's covering.

For iPM's favourite website's slot, he explains why his blog is so interesting to run.

He recommends
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Suggest a story for June 14

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Jennifer Tracey | 16:52 UK time, Friday, 6 June 2008

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Thanks for your story suggestions. We've followed up on a number of interesting emails and comments you've sent in which has led to these -

* penatycharges on passenger rail fares
* campaign to use coca-cola's distribution network to help people in developing countries
* the issues behind Britain's recent power blackout

If you've an idea, a suggestion or some advice, please share what you know here on the blog, email ipm { at } bbc.co.uk, or send us a if you're on Twitter.

Thanks again.

Show notes: penalty fares, ´óÏó´«Ã½ America's Matt Frei and CCTV art

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Jennifer Tracey | 16:02 UK time, Friday, 6 June 2008

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Stories covered in this week's pod prog

Penalty fares
Have you been unfairly charged a penalty fare at the train station? Interviews and information on the blog.

Favourites
´óÏó´«Ã½ America correspondent Matt Frei's top website choices.

CCTV art
Filmakers Manu Luksch and David Valentine talked about making films using CCTV. Details on the blog.

You can suggest a story on the blog or email ipm { at } bbc.co.uk. are good too, if you're aTwitterer.


Making creative use of CCTV

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Chris Vallance | 20:28 UK time, Thursday, 5 June 2008

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videosniffed.jpg

A photo taken by me of a camera recording CCTV footage picked up from a camera filming me taking a picture of a camera recording etc.Click to enlarge

On the podcast we'll feature the work of directors who use CCTV cameras to shoot their films. is the director of Faceless. She obtained images by using data protection legislation to request footage of herself from CCTV operators.

David Valentine uses CCTV as an "environmental television studio". He makes his films by accessing existing networks (with permission). In his last film he was granted access to a CCTV control room, but in previous works he's employed a technique called ""

Sniffing works by using a CCTV receiver to pick up the signals transmitted by certain types of cameras. We obtained permission from a camera owner do a bit of video sniffing ourselves (the Information Commissioners Office tell us there may well be data protection issues with recording images without consent - and indeed there are concerns about cameras that broadcast their images too).

The still picture above is a photo taken by me looking in the viewfinder of a camera recording a video sniffed image. If you look closely you can see both of us in the image.

Our efforts at film were arguably less successful, I thought I might do a Bob Dylan with messages written on white sheets of card, but I obviously lack his cinematic talent, and we had to resort to waving.

UPDATE: Video below with apologies to Charles Chaplin.


Both Manu's and David's films are in festivals ( and ), and well worth watching. David's work is supported by . His latest film The Duellists is a genuinely entertaining movie, and can be .

Fare's fair? Penalty fares and you

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Chris Vallance | 18:00 UK time, Tuesday, 3 June 2008

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Are penalty fares fair? Inspired by a listener email, we've been taking a look, and it turns out that because of the length of the wait at stations one rail body thinks many of you may deserve a break from being charged expensive "penalty" fares.

The national rail watchdog representing passengers told us that there has got to be "more discretion exercised" when penalty fares are charged.

Passenger focus, :

..on average rail users queued longer at off-peak times, with one in six passengers waiting in line for more than three minutes. This was compared to one in 20 passengers during peak times...The longest queues were observed at London Kings Cross station, with one in four passengers waiting longer than the industry standard of five minutes in the peak.

This has implications for penalty fares. According to the Department for Transport's Penalty Fares Policy, "where penalty fares apply, passengers must allow enough time to buy a ticket, including time to queue, if necessary.... This standard is normally five minutes at peak times and three minutes at other times. If queues at a particular station regularly fail to meet these standards ... the operator must either take action to sort out the problem before a penalty fares scheme is introduced or make sure that passengers are not charged penalty fares when these queuing standards are not met.

So are the train operating companies complying with these rules. The Passenger Focus study suggests that in many cases queues are longer than the proscribed times, and that penalty fares shouldn't be charged.

Anthony Smith the Chief Executive of Passenger Focus says, "passengers must not be expected to miss their train because of unacceptably long queues at the station. It should be the train operator's responsibility to notify staff at the platform and on the train that passengers stuck in a queue were unable to purchase a ticket due to time constraints and should not be penalised" There's more in an interview with Anthony below - in it he calls on the DfT to do more to make train companies monitor waiting times and amend their penalty fares policies accordingly:


However, the Passenger Focus study only looked at a group of large metropolitan stations. So here's a little crowdsourcing project: have you had to wait more than 5 mins at a peak time and been charged a penalty fare? Are ticket collectors understanding if you tell them there was a long queue? Drop us a line.

We have approached the Department of Transport about this issue, they told us that, We already have powers to stop penalty fares being charged if our guidance is not being met...we are rolling out smartcards to more people and why recent franchises commit train companies to providing more ticket machines.

From the train companies, in a statement the Commercial Director David Mapp said "The vast majority of customers are able to purchase tickets within the target queuing times despite the 45% increase in rail passengers since the targets were first introduced... Where train operators do operate penalty fares schemes they exercise sensible discretion and will only issue a penalty fare where they believe that a customer has had a reasonable opportunity to buy a ticket and decided not to. If a customer feels that have been unfairly issued a penalty fare there is an independently operated appeals process"

Those of you with a moment to spare might find it interesting to take a look at that appeals process. I'd be interested in hearing your experiences of it, as well as your experiences of queuing and penalty fares. Are fares fair? You tell us.

Broadband Price Rises Possible

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Chris Vallance | 14:54 UK time, Tuesday, 3 June 2008

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openreach.jpgRemember our broadband experiment? Well now our colleagues at Have Your Say are exploring national variations in broadband provision.

When we looked at the issue most people were unhappy with their service. So you will be interested to learn that a review of the way infrastructure is priced may mean you end up paying more for your broadband.

, the company in charge of the local access network - the last mile of cabling and exchanges, can charge for access to it's lines. Early indications from Ofcom are that prices will go up. And if broadband providers costs go up, so, unless they absorb the rise, does the amount they charge consumers like you and me.

Naturally some of the suppliers who will . For its part say:

We are encouraged by Ofcom's approach to the review, both the proposed timescales and its intention to open all the key issues to consultation. Ofcom's acknowledgement that prices for certain key copper access products need to be realigned with costs is also welcome; the current charge ceilings, with prices fixed in nominal terms, are not sustainable indefinitely.

Or in plain English, BT Openreach say they need the extra money to cover their costs. The companies who will have to pay for the rises, as you would expect, have a different view of the issue.

Polyclinics and us

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Jennifer Tracey | 17:18 UK time, Monday, 2 June 2008

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We've been hearing a lot about polyclinics since surgeon and junior minister proposed their introduction in his .

And they were a high profile part of his interim report on the future of the NHS in England and Wales also published last year.

Many of you have emailed iPM on the subject in the last couple of weeks. All with concerns about the development of polyclinics in your area.

If you want to find out what these clinics are probably going to look like - you can take a tour with Lord Darzi on YouTube.

You can read Lord Darzi's from October 2007 and on the Department of Health's website.

You may also be interested in the views of bloggers and on the subject as well as a recently published on The Guardian's Comment is Free.

Leave us a comment or drop us a line if you'd like us to explore further. Is there a particular aspect of this issue you don't feel is being heard? Are you a strong supporter of polyclinics and feel the aims of the clinics have been misunderstood? All comments and opinions welcome.

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