Tuesday, November 20, 2007

How not to drive your kid to school...

I noticed an interesting posting on Stef Lewandowski site about the need to reduce Co2 and his thoughts on the scourge of the 4x4. It reminded me of something - a little story of seriously selfish car usage.

A few months ago when walking my daughter to school (in the same leafy streets of Moseley/kingsheath that he mentions) I noticed a really odd scenario. It took me a few days of witnessing bits of the scenario to figure out what was happening. And then one morning as we reached the exit of the cul-de-sac where we live a large SUV blocked the end of the road. At the same time a very little girl (must have been about 5 yrs old as was smaller than my then smallish 6 yr old) crossed the road on a scooter (a child's scooter), once she had crossed the vehicle moved on, very slowly, and then I realised. The car housed the parent. The parent was kerb crawling their child to school!!

This to me was wrong on so many levels.

-The pure selfishness, blocking the road and then continuing to drive at 5mph in order to accompany a child
-The lesson this offered the child i.e. this as an acceptable way to be accompanied to school - god knows if we all went this way
-The general safety of the child and others on the road
-And really - is it necessary ever to drive such a big vehicle on such tiny back streets of Birmingham in such an uneconomical way?

Anyway I for one would welcome a reduction of vehicles on the road (see Stef's posting), it would make the buses more usable and the prospect of cycling safer. But there are other issues that need addressing. Employers need to be more flexible about home working. Also more flexible about start times, possibly rewarding cyclists/public transport users in someway.

The thing that's weird is that there is still some kudos in driving and in driving such obviously fuel gussling and damaging vehicles.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Nesta big idea thing

Yesterday I went to the West Midlands launch of the NESTA Big Green Challenge prize - a prize of £1million for the most innovative idea and implementation to reduce carbon emissions by a community. I have a whole bunch of thoughts on this and will blog about it later on this weekend (I have my daughters 7th birthday party to get through and a night out at Project X this eve). However although I feel the prize idea is in some ways flawed in relation to the scale of the problem the event itself provided some good networking opportunities. I was pleased to see that there are some significant movements within my own neighbourhood (Moseley, Birmingham) to try to reduce CO2 and I will be looking into this at more depth and spreading the word about how to get involved.

Incidentally, based on my previous post I have only used my car two days this week (not much I know but a start).

Sunday, October 28, 2007

walking, driving and future-ish thinking

Oh dear ranty nuttiness must be still with me, as in highly unusual turn of events am blogging for second night in a row, to personal blog no less!

Been thinking about walking. I was until a couple of years ago a total non-driver. I was a sort of angry pedestrian who shouted at cars, even my daughter started to! I remember one night in the Prince in Moseley, maybe ten years ago, giving a district nurse grief for driving everywhere (I cringe at the memory there are just some jobs were having to drive is sort of part of the deal). Anyhow three years ago my brother moved to New Zealand and when it came time for me to go and visit I was under strict instruction 'you need to be able to drive once you're here, there's very little public transport and I'll be at work and I can't drive you about'. So I learnt to drive. As it turns out, of course, there is public transport in NZ, just being a driver and a reasonably new resident he hadn't yet investigated it. I did however hire a car and my daughter and I took a bit of road trip Thelma and Louise style around a little bit of the North island, staying in Motels all the way and got to see some of the very beautiful places.

Anyway I digress - so I learnt to drive and this year, 12 months after my first NZ trip, I finally bought a car it cost me 100 great British pounds and was certainly a recycled, many times, piece of equipment, this at some level eased my guilt, as well as feeling like I'd managed 17 odd adult years as a non-driver. The thing is now I find I am becoming more and more like all those other drivers I used to get so cross with. Today as a pedestrian I took my time walking in the early afternoon sunshine and I got to thinking, reminded of how this all happens, how folks become dependent on their vehicles, how the cycle of car dependency leads to fewer folks on the streets, fewer people policing their neighbourhoods, in turn a perception that the streets become dangerous places and further car dependency ensues. Obviosuly this is my observation not an area I have researched but let me share an anacdote. I used to work with a woman who would drive from the Perry Barr campus of the university where I work across the road (albeit a big old road) in order to use the one-stop shopping centre! This was all to avoid using the underpass. Such was her fear of being a pedestrian, bearing in mind my district nurse lecture you can imagine the ear bashing this lady received.

I mean I guess this is all pretty obvious stuff. In recent discussions on how to make Birmingham (where I live) a better place there has been much made of a need for less cars and ultimately that would make a hell of a difference.The city centre is pretty much pedestrianised but all around the city are these huge, fast roads. These roads are not really compatible with walking. I have for the majority of my employment in Perry Barr used the (what I consider) fast and relaible bus service. I have considered cycling but the prospect of negotiating Newtown Road and onto PB on two wheels is pretty scary. Anyway the thing is I understand that the existing infrastructure of a city requires these big roads, goods and people in and out. But surely we need to be looking urgently at alternatives, not just from an ecological perspective, but these roads frequently go straight through the middle of residential areas.

I think we need to be taking a much more holistic approach to our big city plans recognising that all our citizens experience the city in very different ways. There is a bunch of cosmetic stuff that might make our external image a bit better. But wouldn't it be fantastic to be known as a city that took a really innovative approach to developing its neighbourhoods , had empathy for its citizens and where they live and led in innovative approaches to getting folks out of their cars. Easier said than done I realise. I reckon the battle with making a place a better place to live and be is 'buy-in' from the residents. But here's the thing couldn't taking this approach lead to all the magic ingredients for a dynamic city and prosperous economy something like this - fewer cars, more pedestrians, safer feeling streets, increased well-being amongst all citizens, potentially leading to increased inclusion, leading to greater diversity in the workplace, this diversity potentially leading to a more creative and dynamic knowledge economy, leading to a more attractive city for potential employers to be based and recruit from. Anyway I need to think this through a great deal more, but I can't help thinking that there are some linkages here in this crude and simplistic outline, that if they could be evidenced could be the basis for a convincing approach to address a bunch of issues.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Birmingham Opera Company


Birmingham Opera Company
Originally uploaded by letmein

Where to start? contrasts and talking to myself

I am loosing it! This may be long and very dull but from a 'better out than in' perspective I am just going to type.

Earlier today I bumped into Antonio Gould as I walked back from swimming at, what I consider the beautiful, Moseley Road Swimming baths he asked how my research was going? I very nearly started unravelling, I think what came out was: "Um my head is full, I am talking to myself, I read all the time, if I am not reading I am writing, if I am not doing that I am interviewing people and I am reading some more and trying to make it all make sense and again I am talking to myself. Breathe."

Happiness and inspiration
You see I have had a fantastic week, one of those weeks where on several occasions I have experienced happiness as it happens (if you know what I mean? as opposed to retrospectively). I feel like I have done a bunch of stuff that has inspired me or made me think, spent some nice chunks of time with my girl on half term duty, stood in the autumn sun in the park watching children play, seen her selected from an audience in a full-on audience participation play at the Midlands Arts Centre had some interesting meetings with interesting people and realised there are connections within connections. I've attended the Opera, Birmingham Opera Companies La Traviata, which was spectacular and awe inspiring to keep realising that the majority of people were just folks from Birmingham - the whole thing was fantastic. It was cool for me as my friend Sara stopped off in Birmingham on her way down to London from up north and thanks to some frenzied email/telephone exchanges and a little help from Facebook friends I managed to secure some extra tickets. I was interested to see what she made of Birmingham's cultural offerings being a little bit a snooty Londoner (sorry Sar just a little bit). I think she enjoyed it. I will write more about the whole show either in a bit or in a separate posting.

Talking to myself/writing in my head - this is becoming alarming
Something I have found in the last year or so and I think following some personal changes in my life is my ability or lack of to sleep. I mean I can sleep but I spend a lot of time awake thinking and writing in my head - does this make sense? As I try to process all the stuff, read or otherwise, I think about and sort of recite to myself, in my head, how I will write it. It now isn’t just in the night it is sort of whenever I am alone. This has been today driving me a little nuts today as I've struggled to stay focussed on what to write/think about first. As I swam laps of the little Moseley pool so many things were going through my head stuff happening locally, regionally how it fits in with my thinking and research anyway briefly-ish here is some of it:

Showbiz - all the shows I have been to this week Acts 1,2 and 3
My final theatrical visit of the week was to the deepest Black Country to see my daughter’s paternal grandmother perform in her amateur dramatics panto. Now I have to say that this was by some distance a contrast to the opera the previous evening but for all the amateurish bits it was highly entertaining. What these three shows had in common the Snow Queen at the MAC, La Triviata at the NIA (en route from Verona) through to Snow White in Tipton was that they all conveyed and offered absolute joy to the participants and to the audiences. You know I've been kind of reminded what it's all about why people sing and dance and perform. But here's the thing each of these offered some regular people the opportunity to be involved and to benefit from that endorphin inducing pleasure. When I heard some one describe the opera as a ‘community project’ the other day (I felt in slightly dismissive tones) I felt sort of insulted on behalf of all those folks who'd worked so hard and whose collective joy and energy made for an extremely professional event. Might blog some more about this in the future.

The fit with the research is I guess from the social inclusion angle. I was talking to a group of students last week about the creative industries not necessarily being conducive with regeneration or as a vehicle for social inclusion – the networks being pretty exclusive or at least might seem kind of intimidating. Def more on this another time.


The usual suspects
A final thing to mention is this thing I've been reading about on other blogs about Birmingham's (where I live) creative sector being run by the 'same old faces’ and 'usual suspects' etc .. Now I understand these feelings, have felt them myself of course sometimes it does seem like the same people get funded to do stuff year after year while others don't or whatever but I have to say I have been finding it a little amusing recently. It's hard to articulate what I am trying to say but here I'll try and say it as simply as possible. There is a sense from the younger end of the local CI sector that they possess some new view, some new way of doing things and some how assume that the old guard didn't imagine the same thing themselves when they too were the bright young things. Being somewhere in between age wise I remember the latter when I first moved to Bham I've seen them become the 'usual suspects’ I now see a younger generation working their way up to become exactly that 'the usual suspects' - I am not making any judgement on either just a bit of an observation. I sort of feel that these are imagined barriers between the two groups or perhaps I have misunderstood the whole thing.

Okay it is late.

There are a few other issues I would like to cover which have come up this week, which I will hope to explore in more detail soon:
- Gender and the music industry
- Woman's Hour's thing about artists and there never having been, other than maybe Frida Kahlo, any 'great female artists'.
- And some other stuff

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

phone and facebook together.

Just keep having this slightly odd thing. Sara (one of my oldest friends) and I keep finding ourselves on the phone chatting and facebooking at the same time. I was suddenly reminded of when we were kids and we used to speak, for what seemed like hours, on the phone while looking at each other. You see we lived opposite and if we stood in our respective mums bedrooms and spoke on the phone, we could look out of the window and see each other speaking to each other. There is something sort of similar in our new communication. Multiple perspectives or something like that.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

sunday afternoon stuff

Today I had a pretty standard Sunday kind of day - pretty standard to how I used to spend Sunday that is, in fact most of the Sundays of my childhood, adolescence and early twenties before settling in Birmingham. Get up in a leisurely way (or at least as leisurely as my six year old will permit), make coffee, breakfast, listen to desert island discs and a few mins of the Archers (depending on tolerance levels), read papers, head to a market, go to a cafe, eat brunch etc. Then head out for a walk get some coffee etc.

Woooo slow down - go to a market? Okay so it's been around for a while and it's not that big or that fabulous but still the essence is there. You see today I popped over to the Custard Factory flea market luckily having had brunch at Peaceful mind in Kings heath.

You see the whole time I've lived in Birmingham I've sort of been waiting for it to be like it is or at least how it is getting to be. Something to do with spending my young life living a ten minute walk away from Greenwich market, which although disappointingly down at heal and oddly touristy now was in its day a lively mix of thrift, flea, antique, gift and craft market - well markets in fact. It was huge, hours of perusing, coffees, lunches and Sunday paper reading, meeting up with friends to dissect the Saturday night which the Sunday followed - I love this kind of endless Sunday pottering - and if you're really lucky you get a longish walk in a park followed by a boozy Sunday lunch sometime mid afternoon, somewhere warm and cosy..

So how does Birmingham’s answer to a Sunday measure up? Well Kings heath/Moseley does well on cafes, Sunday lunch places to eat and parks - If I can be bothered our Sunday dinner might be pretty good too! As for the market well - um it's small (but perfectly formed). It's kind of got all the right ingredients some market stalls, live music and good live music (although I didn't catch who they were but some jazz guitar Jiango Reinhart style (poss something to do with Jibbering records in Moseley), an art gallery, some stuff for kids but here’s the thing it's small I was hoping it would be bigger we kind of exhausted the pottering possibilities within 40 minutes.

The thing is Digbeth, although just a short walk from town, a ten min bus ride from Moseley/KH, is still a slightly unlikely destination unless there is a good reason to go,. Now this market could be a good reason to go but needs to be bigger, needs to keep you there longer. Also I was disappointed that Rooty's was closed and that the majority of little shops in the Custard Factory were also shut. Seems a little counter-intuitive as the market 'user'. If you think about the long rambling flea markets of Paris (that I would happily take a couple of metros to reach) you know you can spend a whole day there.

Now I am not trying to do the Custard Factory flea down - I enjoyed my time there and realise that it being a good place to go is just as dependent on the crowds coming and that there is a certain amount of momentum required for these things to grow and get really good. So I would suggest they keep everything open cafes, shops and stuff and all you folks who like to meander, potter about on a Sunday head down there.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Reflections, local internet history again

I got to thinking - well sort of - it was that earlier posting about events we ran back in the 90's on internet stuff got me thinking about what sort of footprint these events etc had left in terms of archive materials, other than those buried (maybe) on servers and hard drives somewhere and came across these - incidentally the previous posting made mention of an event called 'Is content still King?' the event that actually took place on that world cup final day was this one:

The Future Shape of Cyberspace: Virtually There

6pm Wednesday 10th June 1998

MAC Hexagon Theatre, Birmingham UK

What will the Internet of the future look like? Will we be communicating and collaborating in three dimensions? This event brings together thinkers and practitioners to explore the worlds of VRML, virtual meetings, and avatars.

The panel will include Simon Bore (Oku Pi, London VR Group), and Dr Graham Walker an expert from BT's Labs in Martlesham.

Advance tickets are now available at the price of £4 by calling the MAC box office on 0121 440 3838 or 0121 440 4221 or through Robert Sharl consultancy if paying by cheque.

This event is a part of Rotunda's current cross-media programme "The Future Shape of Cyberspace", chaired by Robert Sharl consultancy.

For more details: auto@rotunda.sharl.co.uk. Tel:0121 693 5606.

This event is supported by CUBIT business internet club.


And then this later posting about pdfheaven a later project:

From: Charlotte Carey

Subject: PDF heaven

Pdfheaven has announced the biggest ever festival of creative acrobatics, a world's fair of exciting work in Acrobat Portable Document Format - the multi-platform, multi-application medium for exchange of digital documents.

Pdfheaven will be showcasing work that highlights the creative potential of this file format - from the visual arts and creative writing to architectural designs and diy origami, and beyond. If it's pdf they want to see it! All the work will be shown at a special event during metapod.expo in October 2000.

pdfsubmit@pdfheaven.com
http://www.pdfheaven.com



I'm not sure where I am going with all this but I guess there was a reveloution (still occuring) that we have all contributed to, lived through and in some instances and in some small way helped shape. Last year or was it the year before I got talking to Eva Pascoe (founder of Cyberia) at the time she was talking about putting together a book - something around cybercafes and possibly women or early days people (I forget now) - as briefly the marketing co-ordinator of Birmingham's first cybercafe (1995-1996) I was interested - we spoke about the possible inclusion of some Birmingham history. Not quite sure what happened with that but feel a little bit like there are some stories to tell.

Think tank spendy day trip

Just realised it is cheaper for me to take Lucy to take the train with family railcard to London and go to Science museum than going to Birmingham's own Think Tank! It really p***S me off that it costs so much to go to what used to be a free entry science museum even the concessionary rate is £6.50!!!

Rant over - wishing I'd got up early and got the train!

Thursday, August 9, 2007

2nd post internet stuff

It's strange. Now everyone uses the internet (who I know professionally at least). Ten years ago they didn't. Stef from 3form has been fulfilling his 'create something new everyday' thing and come up with this t-shirt. Take a look it's kind of funny. And made me think of some stuff.

I am reminded of a number of things. This has been on my mind a lot recently. The Internet seriously assists collective conciousness. I have been feeling very aware of the power of the internet and the changes it makes to our lives as we all share contacts, links and knowledge. Trying to imagine how things will develop, how everyone will adapt, how flat will things become is in someways hard to imagine - for me at least. I suppose it's because I have always been an advocate of the internet, seen it as positive and something to embrace. Afterall it is only really a mirror of our actual lives isn't it? but recently getting a little freaked out with all the facebook action - where will it all go? Seeing peoples lives unfold in parallel to your own though their flickr pics regardless of whether or not you've seen them in years - I kind of love it but it freaks me out.

Still I am not an internet or technologies commentator at least not at the moment. But I am reminded about a series of mini conferences we organised on behalf of Birmingham's first internet business association: CUBIT - club for user of business internet technology, sounds soooo dated now - in fact I think it did at the time. Still we managed to organise some pretty interesting events: one that sticks is: 'Is content still king?' - it was 1998 I remember it well as a big learning point for me never run an event and set it the same time as the world cup final - still I did - but we had a fullish house, Hexagon Theatre in the MAC. Not sure where I am going with this smattering of nostalgia only to say really this future speculation is interesting, futile, impossible, possibly useful. Can we remember what was talked about that evening? I think we were suggesting that transactions micro and other were the future of money making online and that content for its own sake was dead? did we anticipate this? I can't recall right now. And it's interesting that something less than 10 years ago is like a little bit of local internet history already. Did we write about it? did we blog it? updated our website, wrote a press release for sure but blogs weren't invented then were they?

It's amazing to me how the momentum and cycle of knowledge, ideas locally etc has taken off and that it's kind of nearly everyone not just the industry people. But were does it go are we saying anything? is it making us more creative? are we having the same conversations we would have anyway? or are we just documenting our lives, thoughts, relationships?

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

A new blog

Sometimes I just want to rant on about this and that and it's stuff that doesn't relate specifically or at least I don't want to relate to my work. So here is a new blog that I may or may not write too much on - I'll see how it goes and let it emmerge or not as time goes on. Some probable areas of interest that might crop up: My observations around technology-ish, online networking type stuff, people and behaviours, people and the environement and life in general.