Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category
Innovation culture in Kilkenny and Waterford
Ireland’s vibrant culture of ideas doesn’t stop at The Pale
Our first Open Mic Jams ran last autumn, as part of Innovation Dublin. Participants pitched to packed houses at the Stag’s Head and The Odessa Club, and before we even get to the great ideas, we loved the sheer energy in the room. People seemed to like the stripped-down format, too.
So we thought we’d take the show on the road.
In Ireland, more than half our population lives outside an urban area, and of our cities, the resources, networks and attention are disproportionately focused on Dublin. “Most of the channels to express ideas are in Dublin, but there are a lot of people with good ideas outside of Dublin,” says Brendan O’Driscoll CEO of LaunchPad company, Soundwave, who pitched in Kilkenny. “It’s very important for there to be opportunities in other cities.”
Our Open Mic Jams in Waterford and Kilkenny were aimed at creative and innovative clusters in the southeast, but we also welcomed pitches from anywhere in Ireland — it’s not just about going where the ideas are, it’s about bringing people together.
Langton’s, Kilkenny (28/2/2012)
There’s already a thriving arts, culture, and startup community in Kilkenny, and we’re grateful for the enthusiasm of the people who got involved to help us spread the word. At our Kilkenny event, the networking opportunity seemed at least as beneficial as the open forum.
We heard eight pitches in total, including one from Kilkenny-based LaunchPad company, Instant Opinion, who talked about their feedback service that helps hotels and restaurants respond in realtime, so their customers leave happy.
“The three minutes makes you really focus and hone in on your message,” says Soundwave’s O’Driscoll. “In NDRC we had visuals to carry our message but we had to reinvent the pitch without visual aids or props. It really helped us focus on our message.”
But it wasn’t just established early-stage companies or LaunchPad participants. Or even tech companies. One of the benefits to hosting an event like this in a smaller city is that you get a really broad range of contributions.
“One woman had an idea for an arts festival, and everyone would dress as their favourite literary character,” says O’Driscoll. “That was a breath of fresh air, hearing a strong idea that doesn’t necessarily revolve around a next-generation web service.”
He’s talking about Clare Muldowney’s Literal Festival, a community-based event she wants to run, that would be both literary and theatrical. Inventorium is focused on digital ideas, but it’s still key to realise that not all digital ideas start out that way, and that traditional ideas might develop a digital element. And failing all of that, the exchange itself is valuable.
“There’s better crossover there,” he adds. “It was nice to have feedback from people in the arts about tech ideas, and vice-versa.”
Oh, and then there was the marriage proposal.
“We opened the floor after our pitch and one lady asked for more information. Then she asked if she could marry one of us,” says O’Driscoll. “I think we’re the first startup to get a marriage proposal out of an open mic jam.”
But you never know — look out, Lisdoonvarna.
Waterford (6/3/2012)
Waterford’s tech startup cluster, based around Waterford Institute of Technology, meant that this event especially helped people forge some real, meaningful links.
We heard seven ideas in total, with some impressive breadth. These ranged from Elaine Larkin’s early-stage Freelance Availability idea, to help link freelancers with available work, as well as her second idea for a news syndication service, to Nicholas McNulty’s concept based on condensed matter and shock waves, with which he and some colleagues in the nuclear industry want to develop a process for smashing solids into powder
Dublin-based startup Popdeem, a current LaunchPad company, also came down to pitch. About three weeks into their LaunchPad tenure, they realised they had to make a major change to their concept.
“We were right in the middle of our pivot when we went to the Open Mic Jam,” says CEO Richard Whelan, one of its founders. “So instead of coming down with a really firm idea, we pitched the problem and talked about two or three solutions that we had.” When they pitched, they were still called StudyBuddy, but the event was part of a major shift that included a name change.
In addition to putting some things in perspective, the team liked the energy of Waterford. “There’s a good buzz down there because it’s a smaller community,” says Whelan. “It opened our eyes, and we met a group of guys [based there] who ended up developing our facebook timeline page for us.”
He also met someone from Waterford IT who suggested he contact the CEO of Wexford-based R Works, a company that sells a productivity application for managing distributed teams, since the ideas were similar, but for a different market.
“It was similar to what we wanted to get into, and I was lucky to get 15 minutes of the CEO’s time, where we had a really good conversation,” says Whelan, who quickly learned that what R Works does for large industries wouldn’t work for the student market.
“It put the final nail in the pivot coffin, and it was good to know I could open up a dialogue with people quite high up and it was comfortable.”
In Waterford and the surrounding areas it’s not just about catering to the Waterford market, or even the Irish market. In fact, a large urban area like Dublin can leave us with a false sense of a large market.
In smaller cities, towns, and rural areas, innovators have no choice but to look outside their own regions; it’s small communities of highly skilled people, focusing on the bigger picture.
We admit we’re more used to working within Dublin-based networks, where everything is within easy reach, but we also know how limiting that can be. The rest of the country isn’t like Dublin, and tapping into new networks can work to everyone’s advantage.
We’d love to hear more about how we can best meet the needs of innovators in areas outside of Dublin, and outside of our own comfort zone.
Learn more about music analytics company Soundwave.
And keep an eye on Popdeem’s site for a beta launch.
Posted on May 10th, 2012 by Jenny
Success stories: Adaptics helps you measure the world with your smartphone
Adaptics is building hardware applications that will allow you to collect and visualise measurement data using pocket-sized electronic tools — even a complete measurement toolbox — that connect wirelessly to your phone. Tim Redfern tells us about their line of products for measuring voltage, current, distance, area, and even the weather.
What idea did you start with, and how did it start to evolve?
We initially planned to design an electrical measuring circuit from scratch, but it’s much more practical to use this chip that manages the whole instrument.
Multimeters are used by electricians and people who design electronics, to measure voltage and current, but there’s a burgeoning market for artists and hobbyists who work with electronics, and that would be the market we initially envisage would be interested in [our product, Electic]. It’s quite niche, but the world market for multimeters is about 75 million — it’s not a market that’s going away anytime soon.
And since we started with LaunchPad, we’ve come to think of [Adaptics] as being a family of products, rather than thinking about it as being just one thing. We started thinking about a whole phenomenon of hardware and software products.
Can you describe what you mean by hardware apps?
We’re thinking about them as hardware apps because they’re products that have both a hardware and a software component.
It connects to your device via bluetooth and lets you make measurements. The advantage of it is that the kind of user interface you can make on a smartphone, and the features you can provide using the smartphone are much more advanced than the low-end multimeters. You can buy a basic multimeter for 20 euro, but with the smartphone, you can record the information, have a much more sophisticated interface, and save the information.
Higher end meters that do graphing can cost about 500 euro, but we’ll be able to offer features that are on a higher end at a lower price, and a lot more portable.
What else are you working on?
We started focusing on another measuring device that has wider appeal. It’s a sensor accessory that uses a laser to measure distance, and would have another couple of related sensors that will also have what’s called an inclinometer, which is like a spirit level. It will have a measuring wheel, which can be used like a tape measure to measure around curved things, or say, a path on a map. It can do things like measure area and volume.
We call it Constructic, and our initial research shows that loads of people will use it. We’re also hoping to keep them all below a hundred euro.
Tell us more about your approach
There’s never been an app that had a manual — the whole philosophy demands that everything has to be self-explanatory. And we want to make these products from that starting point, to blur the distinction between software on the screen and the accessory it works with.
The instructions for using it will be on the screen of the app, and you’ll be able to download it for free and preview it. Obviously you can’t do anything without the hardware, but the app will be a strong business lever for it — you can make the purchase inside the app.
Eventually we will be able to offer different versions of the software, once you’ve bought the hardware, and it will be more specific about what you’re using it for.
What was your engagement with Inventorium like?
I’d been to quite a few Inventorium events and was enjoying the discussions about devising ideas for tech startups and pitching them. It’s a different way of thinking about things, and I hadn’t had that background. I’ve been involved in creative industries and media, but the idea of actually making things and selling them is quite alien.
How did the team form?
On the round of LaunchPad 4, I was having a few chats with Jack, whom I worked with for Playhouse — a large-scale media project where we turned [Dublin’s] Liberty Hall into a big display — and a few other things. We thought it would be interesting to do something, and this was based somewhere in the centre of our interests, knowledge and abilities.
I’d been more involved in the electronics and low-level programming. Jack’s been more involved in hardware and physical design, and [fellow co-founder] Johnny, is focused on user interface and user experience design. Patrice is Johnny’s sister, and has been advising us on marketing and financial things.
It’s hard to start a business with a bunch of creative people. It would have been easier if we had someone to just take on the business end.
Where is the business now?
We’re working with a product designer who is hopefully going to come on board. We have to look closer, and look at the costs of getting into the small-scale manufacture of a prototype range. Then we’ll put them in front of people who will review them. Once we get funding together for the physical prototypes, it probably be a 3-to-4 month process to produce them.
And what else is on the horizon?
The third one, Meteotic, is the idea of a weather sensor, a mini weather station. It’s a wind speed measurer and thermometer, and measures moistures in the atmosphere. The idea would be that you could crowdsource the weather through it, mainly for outdoor activities. And we’re talking about one that’s even simpler and more mainstream, which is basically a scales for measuring weight, and it would tie in with recipe wizards. It would be a really neat, featureless cylindrical disc that you sit things on and it measures things for you. We’re quite excited for it.
Posted on May 8th, 2012 by Jenny
The Wales Coast Path GeoVation Challenge
This weekend the 870-mile Wales Coast Path (WCP) opens, a walkable route that stretches all the way from Chepstow to Saltney, Chester. Combined with the existing Offa’s Dyke Path, Wales will become the only place in the world where it’s both theoretically and practically possible to circumnavigate an entire country on foot.
Pembrokeshire or Shangri La?
What Wales lacks in ‘Land of Milk and Honey’ weather it more than makes up for with scenery, activities, coastal access, and natural and cultural heritage — not to mention actual milk and honey. That’s why last year the WCP was the #1 travel pick for Lonely Planet’s Best in Travel 2012, beating Borneo, Sicily, Arunachel Pradesh (described as a modern Shangri-La), and six other contenders for the top spot.
From the rugged cliffs of Pembrokeshire to the geologically unique landscape of Anglesey, dolphin-spotting in New Quay and heritage from the prehistoric to the industrial, any project of this scale brings a whole series of challenges and opportunities. That’s why GeoVation, the innovation arm of the Ordnance Survey has included the path and the communities along it in its 2012 GeoVation Challenge.
The GeoVation Challenge
In the past few years, the OS has been opening up its data, making it easier and more exciting for people with great ideas to use spatial data to make those concepts into reality. The GeoVation challenges offer £125,000 worth of prizes to help develop the best ideas that use geography and geolocation.
At Challenge-specific pow wows, GeoVation looked at some of the problem areas that arise with the new path, and at how it will redefine some of the long-standing questions and challenges for the relevant communities.
For example, we can’t change the wet Welsh weather, but we can find ways to make tourism less seasonal, by providing more wet-weather activities. There are increased (and existing) needs for accommodation, toilet facilities, transport and parking, and mobile and internet connectivity. Addressing these needs is not only helpful for visitors but provides engagement opportunities for communities, as well as potential business opportunities.
Inventorium and GeoVation
GeoVation and Inventorium were brought together by our shared dedication to open innovation and collaboration.
Inventorium held a workshop on March 1st, where we brought together stakeholders to generate and shape ideas that could be uploaded to the GeoVation Challenge website. We wanted to engage with tourism providers, local authorities, accommodation providers, outdoor activity groups, local organisations and voluntary bodies, to encourage fruitful collaborations that might not otherwise have happened.
There were 22 participants, and ideas were submitted to the Challenge website, along with other idea submissions from around the UK. We are waiting to hear the winners of the challenge who will go forward to the GeoVation Bootcamp on June 22nd and 23rd, where the concepts will begin to take shape as potentially viable commercial prospects. The winners of the challenge will be announced in early July. The top prize money is £40,000, with two further prizes and a community prize of £1,000 and we’ll keep you posted.
The best GeoVation Challenge ideas will win big prizes, but when they’re implemented, they’ll mean everyone wins.
Posted on April 30th, 2012 by Jenny
Green Innovation Network/Rhwydwaith Arloesi Gwyrdd
Following our Green Symposium last October which was held in association with the Green Innovation and Future Technologies (GIFT) Project, we would like to draw your attention the Launch of their new Green Innovation Network. The launch will take place on the 2nd May in Bangor, details are given below as well as links to a survey to help them shape future events.
Green Innovation Network/Rhwydwaith Arloesi Gwyrdd
Green Business Breakfast Launch
Enjoy breakfast and be inspired at our first Green Business Breakfast in Bangor on Wed 2nd May, (07:45 – 10:15). Key speakers include Andy Middleton, founder of the ‘Do Lectures’ and carbon neutral adventure company, TYF, plus award winning construction company Wates. A FREE ‘Save Money, Reduce Waste’ workshop for businesses follows and we’re even providing lunch. Stay for all or part of the morning and contact Sue Francis at s.francis@bangor.ac.uk to find out more or book your place.
Green Innovation Network Survey
Help us shape our future events and training by completing our short (less than 10 mins, honest!) survey, for which you could win a delicious food hamper from Welsh gift company, Bodlon. Click here - https://www.survey.bris.ac.uk/bangor/gins – before Friday 13th April. Go on, you know you want to!
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Lansio Brecwast Busnes Gwyrdd
Mwynhewch frecwast a chael eich ysbrydoli yn y cyntaf o’n Brecwastau Busnes Gwyrdd ym Mangor ddydd Mercher 2 Mai (07:45 – 10:15). Bydd y prif siaradwyr yn cynnwys Andy Middleton, sefydlydd y ‘Do Lectures’ a’r cwmni antur carbon niwtral, TYF, yn ogystal â’r cwmni adeiladu Wates. I ddilyn ceir gweithdy AM DDIM i fusnesau ar ‘Arbed Arian, Lleihau Gwastraff’, ac rydym hyd yn oed yn darparu cinio. Arhoswch am y bore i gyd, neu ran ohono, a chysylltwch â Sue Francis yn s.francis@bangor.ac.uk i gael gwybod mwy neu i archebu eich lle.
Arolwg Rhwydwaith Arloesi Gwyrdd
Helpwch ni i gynllunio at ddigwyddiadau a hyfforddiant yn y dyfodol drwy lenwi ein holiadur byr (fel gymer lai na 10 munud, wir yr!), ac fe allech ennill basged fwyd hyfryd gan y cwmni Cymreig, Bodlon. Cliciwch yma – https://www.survey.bris.ac.uk/bangor/arag – cyn dydd Gwener 13 Ebrill. Bwriwch iddi, rydych yn gwybod eich bod eisiau gwneud hynny!
Posted on March 30th, 2012 by Jenny
A Review of the 2011 Open Mic Idea Jams
What happens to your eureka moments? Do you write them across your hand? Do you scribble them on the back of an envelope? There’s an app for that and now there’s a forum, too. Inventorium’s Open Mic Idea Jam series was part of Innovation Dublin 2011, and offered an audience and a microphone to anyone with an idea and three minutes to spare. Below is a review of the events and details of the Open Mic Idea Jams planned in Wales and Ireland in 2012.
The Idea Jam was intended as a place to share ideas at all points of development, network with like-minded and compatibly different people, and contribute to a climate of idea-sharing, mutual encouragement, and constructive critique. There were potential investors and mentors present, too, but for most it seemed a chance to open up new conversations about ideas. Eighteen people spoke at the first event in the Stag’s Head, beginning with Conor Lynch of Connector.ie, and his idea for a website for skill sharing. The pitches ran the gamut from an idea for an eco-friendly and cost effective way to dry clothes without a tumble drier, to a travel website targeting walkers in Wicklow aged 50+, to a cloud hosting service called Astroboa, described as “like a WordPress service for data”.
There was a similar mix of digital, service and physical product pitches at the second Open Mic event at Odessa, including a novel idea for car sharing that sounded like a cross between Airbnb.com and Gocar.ie. Along with this were some very early-stage, more amorphous ideas like Lisa Feay’s idea for a jazz radio station, and some other arts focused concepts, like Castle Variations, an annual week-long musical mashup in a castle.
The Idea Jams bring together a wide range of people and ideas that wouldn’t otherwise end up in the same room on purpose. They’re as useful for the audience as they are for the people pitching, a few of whom seem to have gone home with business cards for potential collaborators, partners, investors or customers. However, what was striking but perhaps not surprising was the fairly low representation of women, not just pitching, but actually attending the event. Is it because there are fewer female entrepreneurs? Or is a woman less likely to air publicly an idea that isn’t quite ready yet?
The most striking thing was this: digital companies, organisations, would-be entrepreneurs and innovators can learn some important lessons from people who make physical products, or sell services. We know already that starting something successful, whether it’s for profit, for fun, or for the greater good, means understanding who your customer is, what that customer needs, and being really clear what problem you’re solving. Your sweat equity, your money, and your passion is tied up in this great new idea. It’s easy to think that you’ve thought all of the important things through everything else can be clarified later.
For a video of previous Open Mic nights click here.
More Open Mic Idea Jams are planned for 2012:
Wales: 17th April, Fat Cat, Bangor
For more details and to register visit the events section of our website.
Posted on January 25th, 2012 by Jenny
Perspectives on Welsh Business in 2012 & What Inventorium has in Store
An article on WalesOnline.co.uk gave some interesting perspectives from business leaders on what 2012 holds for businesses in Wales some extracts are included below;
Phil Cooper: Managing Director, Venture Wales
“The natural reaction for some will be to downsize and simply cut costs. However, I hope others will respond by exploring new markets and diversifying products and services.”
“Yes, we are in a tight corner and 2012 is going to be very tough for many businesses. But only through individual enterprises taking initiatives and pursuing new opportunities together with strong political leadership will we start to turn the tide.”
Iestyn Davies: Head of External Affairs, Federation of Small Businesses in Wales
“Based on early indications, small businesses will be looking to employ more staff and will be keen to innovate and bring new products and services to market. In tough times they realise that innovation gives them a competitive edge over their competitors.”
To read the article in full click here.
Throughout 2012 Inventorium will be continuing to encourage open innovation inWales andIreland, helping teams to work towards the generation of new businesses, products and services. Our programme of workshops and Symposia will support the development of new ideas and ways of working for the public sector, SME’s and not-for-profit enterprises.
Events planned for 2012 will look at how digital technologies can be used to better support aspects of culture and industry in Wales Including workshops focussed on: Digital Culture inWales
Heritage Tourism
The Rural Economy
Education
Welsh Language and Media
Tourism
Agriculture
At each of these events Inventorium will aim to have sector professionals clearly defining some of the problems they are currently facing – the main focus of the rest of the day will then be on diverse teams of people – made up of industry professionals, technologists, designers, developers, academics and entrepreneurs – working together to develop solutions to those problems.
Details of these events will appear on www.inventorium.org/events
Posted on January 4th, 2012 by Caroline
An Anatomy of Games
This is an on-going development of a quick guide to thinking about game design.
There is much more detailed information about game design in the books listed in the games bibiliography. This is a version of a paper I have previously circulated elsewhere – there are more recent references. Read More …
Posted on May 16th, 2011 by MOwen
Network event for software developers – Bangor
Software Alliance Wales, Bangor have a network event at Blue Sky Cafe, Bangor on 9th March from 6 till 8.30. All coders welcome.
‘The Python Challenge’ is a set of riddles that require a little bit of Python programming to be solved and was written to provide an entertaining way to explore the Python programming language.
Book direct on - http://softwarealliancewales.com/?page=2011_09_Mar_Enter_the_code_dojo&lang=eng
Posted on March 7th, 2011 by Caroline
Mobile health app developers won’t make money with current pay per download business models
Despite the hype around mobile health applications and big market projections mobile health app developers will not be able to create big revenues with a pay per download business models. So how will mHealth apps generate enough sustainability to meet the rising expectations during this hype phase? How will mHealth business models evolve in the future ?
http://www.research2guidance.com/despite-the-hype.-mhealth-app-developers-won%E2%80%99t-make-money-with-current-pay-per-download-business-models/
Posted on February 22nd, 2011 by Caroline
Street Maps whenever you need them
A new iPhone/iPad mobile App Offmaps 2 is now available
It renders OpenStreetMap data directly on to the device and the main feature is the ability to download maps for selected areas around the world with several zoom levels for offline viewing. This is fabulous if you remember to do this while at home before heading out somewhere.
Offline vector maps have a useful search facility and have public transport overlays in some areas.
Posted on February 6th, 2011 by Caroline

