Archive for the ‘blogs’ tag
You are reading a blog - Innovation in Software - no longer under active maintenance. These pages are kept here for archive purposes. If you wish to find out more about Vagueware please read our current website which will include links to the new blogs when live.
The Mancunian Way – R.I.P.
Last night Sarah Hartley announced the closure of the Mancunian Way blog that I’ve been contributing to for a couple of years now.
Sarah explains on her own blog that she is on to new adventures.
I have slightly mixed emotions about this myself. I won’t miss the mild panic when Sarah’s email goes around asking for a blog of the week and I have to think smartly as I realise I haven’t contributed in a while, but that’s about the only thing I’ll miss.
The highlight for me will almost certainly be the the write-up I did for the Tony Wilson Experience last Summer, which the council liked so much they shoved it in their own press section and asked for permission afterwards. Always nice to have your writing enjoyed by an audience, and the feedback I got from the MEN blogs in particular was fantastic.
I also managed to cover b.tween, the anniversary of the Baby, several Northern Startup events, and managed to riff about things I thought of as interesting and useful.
So, I will miss it, quite a bit. A significant part of my online identity was “blogs for the MEN”, however it gives a little more space and time for other things in my writing life, and I’m off to do some new writing adventures of my own – all will be announced soon.
I will also watch with interest what the MEN decide to do in future post-Sarah. I don’t know of another regional newspaper in the UK that has as well developed a blog section (and for that Sarah should definitely be commended), so it would be a huge shame for it to lose momentum now. I have no idea what comes next over there, my only contact at MEN was Sarah.
Good luck to Sarah, those of you finding me via that blog please stay tuned for my next projects, and let me just say: The blog is dead. Long live the blog.
Another Blog for me
Organising BarCamp Manchester has allowed me to get to know some of the people over at the Manchester Evening News a little better, thanks to them hosting us on March 1st. In the course of events I suggested maybe a few blog articles about the local technology and geek scene would be a good idea on their blogs area.
Naturally, this resulted in me committing to producing said articles myself.
And so I have started contributing to “Manchester is Online”, which used to be called “The Mancunian Way” the blog that changed name and then back again to “The Mancunian Way”, (I didn’t get the memo :-) ) – one of the most widely read blogs in the region.
I should stress at this point that there are strict editorial guidelines on what I can publish there, so please hold back your press releases. No “advertising copy” is permitted whatsoever.
I’m just going to geek out there in a way that helps “normal people” relate to what it is the rest of us do. It’s a much more general audience over there, so it’s going to be interesting to try and work out how to relate to them.
All Change!
In the very near future, things are going to be changing at Vagueware.
Firstly, the site currently at vagueware.com is going down. I’m going to release the code running the idea bank as open source and you’ll be able to also setup a free hosted version of your own on Vagueware’s servers. Think of it as a bit like wordpress.org & .com but for open innovation rather than blogging. This will mean you can create your own IdeaStorm for your company or product.
I think open innovation and getting customers or employees involved in product and service development is going to be big in the next few years, and I want to help people get involved. If you have Ruby on Rails skills, patches to the code base will be appreciated as well – it’s going to be MIT licensed so that it follows the “Rails way”.
That will of course need a new name, and given that it’s all about constantly evolving and changing what you do and how you do it, it’ll be named Fluxish.
There are quite a few major changes needed to get the current build ready for that release, so don’t expect it this week. The ideas on the current site won’t be lost: I’ll be creating a special little hosted fluxish install and moving all the data and users over – I won’t be destroying anything, just giving it a new home.
So what will go in the idea bank’s place at the main site? Well, the new Vagueware site will concentrate on selling my consultancy and development services. There will also be a mini-blog there about the business, freeing this blog up from posts like this where I discuss what is going on inside the business. I’ll be highlighting companies I’ve worked with in the past and occasionally posting a page up as a more detailed article about the process of development.
This blog will become much more focused on innovation and emerging trends within the digital sector. This is an area I’ve drifted away from in the last three months, and I’m keen to get it back on track.
In addition, I’m going to be blogging more elsewhere in partnership with other organisations.
I’ve agreed to start writing more for O’Reilly GMT to try and turn it into a more mature source of information for the technology scene within Europe. I’m still working out and proposing what kind of articles those will be, but obviously they’ll not be about vagueware, not about innovation in software in the sense this blog will be, but aimed at a tech-savvy audience.
Also, I’ve been asked to contribute articles to ‘Manchester is online’, formerly ‘The Mancunian Way’. It’s one of the most read Mancunian blogs, and I’m hoping to bring some insight to a slightly less geeky crowd than the usual readership I get to speak to here. This is more of an experiment right now, but I’m looking forward to seeing how it develops. It’s the first time I’ll be stepping across into blogging for Mainstream Media, and I couldn’t be more pleased that I’m doing it with the team at the Manchester Evening News.
In short then, I’ve got a lot of writing to get on with over the next few months, so please don’t be too upset if this blog gets neglected at times.

