Posts Tagged ‘internet’

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Posted 24 Aug 2010 — by admin
Category employment opportunities

Just over a week ago I said goodbye to my former employers, those seriously playful folk (no not the Jameson ones!), with a tear in my eye. Could have been raining, or maybe it was the whiskey chasers, who knows. Either way I am now what some would politely describe as ‘inbetween jobs’.

So what to do next? Well, I’ve been in this old new media lark since it was really new so I know quite a lot of stuff about quite a lot of stuff and hopefully that is where my next challenge will take me. I’ve checked the stats for this blog and there is a slim possibility that my reader might work for a cool company who is looking for someone a little like me. A senior producer who’s been hiding in HoxDitch for the last two years making nice things for cool people. My special power is understanding BBC speek, kinda like Harry Potter and parseltongue but with less hair and no lightning shaped scar, and I love getting my hands dirty on great projects.

So for the benefit of the search engines, I’d like to say…

producer, senior producer, BBC, experience, web, internet, project management, products, development, iphone, flash, creative, jobs, challenge, career.

Direct your kind offers to simon[at]mistersnappy[dot]co[dot]uk – do a switcheroo with the bracketed stuff and we’ll be in touch as quick as a flash.

That is all.

Twitter Revolution and Foreign Policy

Posted 22 Jun 2009 — by admin
Category news

In an article in the Guardian Gordon Brown talks about how the internet allows people in oppressed nations tell their stories to the masses. He says that this this internet revolution gives people the opportunity to let their views be known and talks about this as if it’s new, like today new, like he’s just found out about it. He says, ‘Foreign Policy can never be the same again’. I bet that’s a right pain the in the arse Mr Brown!

The more I read this article, the more I think that isn’t actually what he’s talking about. What he’s really saying is that the advent of forums and platforms such as mobile phones, the internet, twitter and youtube mean that poor old Mr Brown and his political cohorts can no longer ignore these actual revolutions around the world, in our names, and without our knowledge. Popular media is enabling people in the midst of these political crises to get the word out and now it is us, the direct recipients of this mostly first hand information, who are applying pressure to governments world wide to take action, and sometimes taking action ourselves. No longer can the international political community ignore and keep quiet about incidents such as the Iranian elections and pass them off as ‘domestic incidents’ in which they can not be involved. They will find it increasingly difficult to brush oppression and war under the carpet and control the images that appear on our screens.

While some believe that social media is being used to subvert information that comes out of places like Iran, the constant stream of comment, photos and video will become increasingly difficult to ignore. We are now in a position that despite what the news agenda is, the social media universe will define it’s own agenda and will give a voice to people when the mainstream media have moved on to the latest celebrity boob job.

Social media has many faults and is still very much in its infancy but used in the right way it give power to the powerless and a voice to those that some would prefer silent.

'Wireless Internet Now Free For All'

Posted 21 Aug 2008 — by admin
Category actual, london, technology, trains

As I boarded the 9.10 to Leeds with my copy of Nintendo Magazine wedged firmly under my arm I was looking forward to a leisurely train journey ‘ooop north’. Armed with my shiny new Apple Mac and a spare pair of pants I eased myself into my reserved seat ready for the off. To be honest, when I booked the National Express train to Leeds I wasn’t completely sure whether I was getting a train or a coach but as I arrived at platform 2 in Kings Cross Station I was releaved to find a spruced up intercity with the familiar National Express livery painted down the side and not a coach in sight.

In the back of my mind I was secretly hoping that there would be WiFi available on the train but I didn’t hold out much hope. These luxuries are usually only available to the corporates in first class, but as I took my seat I noticed a sign to my right that declared “Wireless internet now free for all”.

So I’ve now been sitting on the train for nearly two hours, checking my email and preping for my trip to Leeds, Skyping home (with the video functionality) and writing utter drivel on this here blog. The only slighty strange thing is that google thinks I’m in Sweden, unless I got the wrong train from Kings Cross!

Far from this being a leisurely train journey it has been, like the WiFi connection, superfast.

Must dash, the train is about to pull in to Leeds!