Archive for the ‘Our News’ Category

Twitter Picture Goes Live

Thursday, January 14th, 2010 by Francois

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Johanna Basford’s latest  Twitter Picture project has just gone live.

Over a 24 hour period I will be creating the second TwitterPicture, an interactive illustration drawn by hand and inspired by Twitter.  Tweeters are invited to send me one suggestion each in 140 characters or less which I will incorporate into a super sized, hand drawn illustration.
The project will run for a continuous 24 hour period and will be streamed live here.
Watch the live creation of TwitterPicture 2 and get involved by Tweeting me your suggestion.
** IF THIS LIVE STREAM IS OVER CAPACITY, YOU CAN WATCH THE ACTION HERE TOO **
The view from the TwitterPicture webcam will be changing throughout the day, so keep checking back to watch the inky evolution!

Over a 24 hour period (9 AM Thursday 14th – 9AM Friday 15th) Johanna will be creating a hand-drawn interactive illustration inspired by Twitter.

Tweeters are invited to send her one suggestion each in 140 characters or less which she will incorporate into a super sized, hand drawn illustration.

The project is being streamed live.

So check out the live stream of TwitterPicture 2 and get involved by Tweeting Johanna your suggestions.

If the live stream on her website is over capacity, you can watch the action on Ustream.

The view from the TwitterPicture webcam will be changing throughout the day, so keep checking back to watch the inky evolution!

Happy New Year

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 by Francois

As this year draws to a close I’d like to wish all of our customers, collaborators and friends all the best for 2010.

2009 has been quite a year for us, we’ve grown in numbers, worked with some great companies, become dad’s and in general done a lot of growing up.

It has been tough at times but with all of your custom and support we’ve pulled through.

Looking at what we’ve achieved and all that we have to look forward to, I can’t help but feel that 2010 is going to be a really exciting year for us all.

So here’s to each and everyone of you – have a brilliant Hogmanay and all the best for 2010.

Photo Credit: http://www.flickr.com/people/meddygarnet/

Festive Opening Hours

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009 by The BCM Team

First off, Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to you all.

Our office hours over the festive period are as follows:

  • Monday 21/12/09:  9AM – 5 PM
  • Tuesday 22/12/09:  9AM – 5 PM
  • Wednesday 23/12/09:  9AM – 5 PM
  • Thursday 24/12/09:  CLOSED
  • Friday 25/12/09:  CLOSED
  • Monday 28/12/09:  9AM – 5 PM
  • Tuesday 29/12/09:  9AM – 5 PM
  • Wednesday 30/12/09:  9AM – 5 PM
  • Thursday 31/12/09:  CLOSED
  • Friday 01/01/10:  CLOSED

Normal office hours will be resumed on Monday January 4th, 2010.

We will be checking emails over the festive period but all non-critical issues or enquiries will not be dealt with until January 4th 2010.

For all critical enquiries please call your designated point of contact on their mobile phone.

Have a wonderful Christmas & New Year!

Photo Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/laurenmanning/1263330273/

Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) Reserved Instances Now Available In Europe

Sunday, April 19th, 2009 by Francois

AWS_LOGO_RGB_300pxAmazon Web Services (AWS) recently announced that Reserved Instances for Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) are now available in Europe.

For those not in the know EC2 is a virtual computing environment meaning you can customise and launch virtual servers how and when you want. You pay for this by the hour and there are no long-term commitments.

Those of you who regularly have to deal with dedicated server providers will no doubt appreciate this infrastructure-as-a-service model.

With the announcement of reserved instances you now have the option to make a one-time payment for each instance you want to reserve and in return you receive a significant discount on the hourly usage charge for that instance.

For example, we will be paying our $325 up front-fee meaning our small instance should cost around about 20-30% less if we run our instance, as we expect to, full-time.

In a nutshell this means that those of you out there with predictable usage patterns should be able to reduce your operational costs of running an EC2 instance.

As usual Europe was a little behind the US in terms of roll-out and so far only Linux/UNIX-based instances are available.

The only things that have made us think twice about signing up for a reserved instance are:

  • the up-front fee is non-refundable and you are locked-in to the computational pricing at the time you reserve your instance.
  • the AWS customer service agreement states that Amazon “may terminate the Reserved Instance Pricing program at any time.”

Having considered the above we can’t see  them terminating the program any time soon but we can see them reducing their EC2 pricing in Europe over time.

That’s why we’ve decided to reserve an instance for 1 year only.

Why All The News Round-Up Posts?

Saturday, April 4th, 2009 by Francois

Image of a Question MarkFor those who don’t know these are just links there’s no explanatory or summary text.

Although I sometimes think this would be beneficial I have stuck to simply calling out the sources we value.

And it is for this very reason that I often get asked why I write a news round-up post each week.

Well the reasons for this are:

  • it allows our remote team to easily share and digest the things that we find interesting as individuals
  • I, and a few other members of our team, can’t get into RSS readers
  • I love The Week magazine and think its format is something that is ideally suited to the Web
  • we are responsible for the hosting and back-up of this data

I also get asked why I don’t use an online/social bookmarking doodah.

Well, I’ve certainly tried but I’ve never really bought into them.

This may have something to do with the fact that even on my own computer I constantly back-up my bookmarks. Therefore, the thought of trusting our bookmarks to a hosted service alone really doesn’t sit well.

But you do it with email don’t you?

Err, no actually I don’t. I use mail clients that back up all my emails and all work related ones get dumped on a back-up drive and then they’re piped out to S3.

What S3?!!!! But you don’t control that.

Yeah, I know but I trust Amazon.

Irrational maybe, but I’m paying them for a service and they haven’t let me down yet.

The other major reason I do write-ups on our blog is that other people seem to appreciate it.

I’d be happy using something like delicious in addition to our regular write-up but this still wouldn’t fulfill all of the reasons we do a write-up.

Hence, the decision to stick with our current approach.

That said, I did recently bookmark this … so who knows you may be seeing a delicious embed some time soon.

I doubt it though.

UPDATE: I finally made the move over to Delicious and believe it or not I’m really pleased I did!

Photo Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/fontplaydotcom/504443770/

Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) Now Available In Europe

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008 by Francois

AWS_LOGO_RGB_300pxAt last the moment we have all been waiting for. Amazon Web Services (AWS) has just announced that Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) is being rolled out in Europe.

This is great news for us as we’ve been playing with EC2 while it was only available in the US. But now there’s a fully-fledged European data centre we can really get going with what we’ve been planning to do for quite some time.

Let me explain:

We believe that every client has their own unique hosting requirements. That’s why we’ve never resold hosting or entered into any affiliate relationships.

This mindset has given us the opportunity to test and use a wide range of hosting set-ups and providers.

From virtual private servers (VPS’s) to managed dedicated servers we’ve toyed with them all.

We aren’t particularly keen on adding to all the hype but we are genuinely excited by what Amazon Web Services has to offer.

Now that EC2 has finally landed in Europe we will be upping our testing of AWS by deploying our own live site on EC2.

Yes, yes, I can hear your wails of derision. Why do this when you could get a dedicated server for a similar price? Why would you deploy your live site on an untried platform? Etc, etc, etc.

Well of course many of these assertions are valid but here’s the thing: we’ve guesstimated the risk and believe we can derive far greater value from migrating now and learning from the experience.

Having looked at server logs over the years it is clear that numerous people and companies overpay for underutilised server capacity. And in these cases it is clear that using a service such as AWS would offer numerous operational benefits.

What’s more we don’t particularly feel comfortable advising clients to use something if we have no “real world” experience of using it ourselves.

So in a nutshell the potential benefits AWS could provide, in certain circumstances, is to compelling to ignore.

Irrespective of the outcome this is something we are certainly looking forward to and deep-down I have a funny feeling we won’t regret this one.

Collaborating Remotely

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008 by The BCM Team

An image of a man traversing a globeI have just got back to Sydney and am ready to spread the love for Border Crossing Media into the Aussie territories.

My brief trip to Scotland was a success as in the time I was there we launched our corporate site, started alpha testing Border Crossing TV and even managed to get the planning for our second phase of development underway.

For those of you who are not familiar with our story here’s a brief summary:

The collective was launched by Francois and Diogo and I joined the team on a part time basis in August 2007.  By February 2008 I had accepted a full-time position and things really started to motor with Border Crossing TV. In July 2008 we made a decision to meet-up and have some good old face-to-face time. I promptly applied for a visa, packed some bags and went on the now normal 25 hour flight to Europe.

By the way a freezing Scottish summer is great for straight-thinking. I recommend that all programmers consider relocating to colder regions – the quality of code you’ll produce will be great.

Anyway, from July to November 2008 we worked hard, sometimes too hard (keyboards were broken and twitches were developed) but it was certainly productive.

Since returning we have settled back into our usual routine of collaborating remotely and even though it was great to be over in Scotland there are certainly some positives to distance working that you really can’t escape.

  • we are more productive. Not working in the same office removes any distractions. You get into work and get your head down straight away. Moreover, thanks to the tools we use, we never feel that distance working inhibits us achieving what we set out to do.
  • we are always online.  We all work in different locations and time zones so work never stops and sites are always up … because whatever time of day it is, there’s guaranteed to be someone on-call.

So in summary it was great to head over to Scotland, but in truth it’s also great to be back home.

Distance working or collaborating remotely certainly isn’t easy at first but the more you do it the more you realise that it is a viable option. Now that we have the right procedures and tools in place it certainly works for us and if your considering it, dive in, you won’t regret it!

Have a great day or night.

Anton

Why Drupal?

Monday, October 6th, 2008 by The BCM Team

drupal.orgWell, here we go – our brand new Drupal-powered site is up.

I am not sure whether you noticed but we are using Drupal, a well-known CMS. We have worked with other CMSs before: from plug-ins for frameworks to Joomla but we had never spent that much time with Drupal.

We did not decide to go with Drupal because we thought “it was the best CMS”, but because we thought that:

  • it suited our needs
  • it is PHP based
  • it is under very active development
  • it has a huge (and ever-growing) user-base, which means great support
  • it has a great number of well-written plug-ins

If you have never used Drupal, let me tell you a little about the learning curve. It’s steep, I mean it is damn steep (in my best James Brown voice). You are guaranteed a few sleepless nights (or maybe even weeks) trying to get your head around it, but once you do, oh boy is it worth it. Well, at least that’s my opinion.

I won’t get into a detailed overview of how Drupal works or how to get things happening using it. I will, however, say this: Drupal is constructed in a way that you can override almost anything (providing you know your PHP stuff). You can define “custom objects” and wrap your representation pages around it. I am sure the last sentence was “very clear”.

So let me give you a quick example:

Say, you want to have a page that allows the visitors of your site to enter the specs of their PCs so you can build up a database of what computers your users use. You also want to have a page that lists entered computer systems in some way.

Here’s how you could do this with Drupal (in a very rough approximation):

  • Create a custom “content type” (object that will define a single computer system) that will hold users’ computer system’s parameters like processor, CPU, RAM, HDD, etc.
  • Create a page where you have a form that users enter their computer specs. The good thing about Drupal is that you won’t have to actually create this page i.e. you won’t have to add all those form fields manually. Instead, the form will be generated automatically using the custom content type you created.
  • Create a page that will read all entered computer systems’ specs from the database and display it in the way you want. This will also be pretty easy because, in a nut shell, all you need to do is select what “computer specs you want to display” and select “where (on the page) you want to display them”.

Described above is a very simple example and, of course, it can be done numerous other ways using Drupal or another tool. In case you are interested, for the example above you will need to install CCK and Views both of which are contributed modules.

Which conveniently leads me to the next great thing about Drupal, the contributed modules. There are loads of contributed modules to chose from, each of which can override the existing core to add the functionality you require. You can even write your own. Once you master writing your own modules you will be able to do just about anything with Drupal.

I hope this post tempts you into to taking a look (or maybe even a second one) at Drupal.

Update: Upon the completion of Border Crossing TV, we decided to develop a custom PHP framework which this site now uses. Working with Drupal was great and we look forward to doing so again.

Digital Distribution Seminar Here We Come

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008 by The BCM Team

We are pleased to announce that we have been invited to present a training session at the Erich Pommer Institut’s Digital Content Distribution seminar.

When: September 24 – 28, 2008
Where: Baden, Austria

The seminar will cover legal, regulatory and commercial developments in new media. Our slot, Producing and Distributing Audiovisual Content Online, will be held on Saturday 27th.

Our aim is to provide participants with an overview of:

  • the emerging and future trends concerning online audience behaviour, content development and the monetisation strategies of independent content producers and distributors
  • tips on developing, budgeting, shooting and casting for the web
  • how to maintain your production values – the art of encoding
  • the distribution options available and how to choose the right ones for your primary audience
  • how to estimate your return on investment and measure your success online

We are really looking forward to this, and would like to thank Nadja from the EPI and Jennifer from Insight Out for making this opportunity possible.

To Blog, Or Not To Blog

Monday, September 1st, 2008 by The BCM Team

A cartoon on blogging

Hi there, and welcome to our new blog.

When we were planning the update of our website having a company blog was pretty high up on the list of requirements.

At first this seemed like a small and natural addition to the site but the more we discussed it amongst each other the more we realised how divisive a feature this was.

In fact we were split pretty much down the middle.

Half the team thought it was absurd not to add one because:

  • we want to share our company news and views
  • we want to share the technical knowledge and tips we come across
  • we are repeatedly asked/told to start one by collaborators as well as clients
  • we really should start one
  • and just because everyone else is doing it – does not mean we should not

And the other half of the team thought it was absurd to even consider adding one because:

  • everyone’s doing it, and hardly anyone’s getting it right
  • do we really need to
  • do we really have enough time to commit to it
  • do we really have anything interesting to say
  • and even if we do have something interesting to say, do we have the skills to get it across interestingly

Truth be told we are still arguing internally but we have at least decided to give it a shot.

So here it is – our first blog post on the brief history of how we decided, or rather didn’t decide to develop and start blogging on a regular basis.

We hope this was the right way to go – and to be honest we can not wait to see if it works or not. Bragging rights are at stake, and they only increase in value when you work in an office as small as ours!!!

Now let’s see if this shows up as it should – here’s hoping!