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Emily went to a really interesting presentation on social media this morning. Thanks @DigitalDivinity!, posted about 5 hours ago

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April 2009


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Relaunch of 1 Big Database

A joint project between Bristol City, South Gloucestershire and Bath & North East Somerset Councils, 1 Big Database is the leading online resource of information for families and the community throughout the West of England.

For the past few months our design and development teams have been working on a whole series of improvements, including:

          --> Search enhancements, including a single search for the directory and events; postcode lookup and auto completion of search terms.

          --> Introduction of results weighting to optimise the relevancy of search results by giving priority to some fields in the database when a search is carried out – such as organisation name.

One of the major improvements is that the system is now set up to accommodate a daily feed of information from Bristol, Bath & North East Somerset and South Gloucestershire to the Parent Know How Directory. It will also provide local users with the facility to search 1BD and the national directory simultaneously.

"We have been working with Focus New Media for about 4 years now and the team always provide us with a creative, responsive and incredibly competent service. Attention to detail is a priority for them and explaining complex processes in non technical speak a skill they all seem to possess.. We have all been working on a large project recently and because of the Team's ability to research, plan and deliver it's success has been seamless. The Focus New Media team are flexible, informed and a pleasure to work with."

Jackie Fielder
Family Information Service Manager
Bath and North East Somerset Council

Read more about 1Big Database developments here.

Lisa Ballam
Lisa

Created on Wednesday April 15 2009 12:00 AM


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An extra pair of hands

The newest recruit to our burgeoning development team has a penchant for all things Apple related (ahem, the company, not the fruit), and when not at work will most likely be found dancing around at The Croft, 02 Academy, or Mr Wolf's. 

A graduate in Computer Science from Cardiff University, Paul impressed us with his extensive portfolio of freelance development work.  With proven all-round experience in developing web-based projects, we aim to take particular advantage of his Jedi skills in Rails coding.

A baby photo has been promised for our 'meet the team' page but we shall have to make do with the current shot opposite for now...

Simon Newing
Simon

Created on Friday April 03 2009 12:00 AM


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An email from Queen Elizabeth

HRH digging the webA message from the Queen - if you've ever been lucky enough to receive one - would traditionally be in the form of posted letter.  High quality paper, HRH watermark, the Royal seal encrusting the envelope, all that jazz.  The kind of thing you'd frame, or put away for grandchildren to admire. 

Now you can receive emails from the Queen!  Fully embracing modern culture, our beloved HRH has recently sent a bunch of adoring fans a response to their various posts on the Royal website... electronically!

I suppose this makes sense.  A number of them live in the farthest flung corners of the Commonwealth possible, making postal deliveries rather difficult.  A 12-year old girl living in the Australian Outback received her email after inviting Queen Elizabeth to swap Buckingham Palace for a life on a remote cattle farm 200km from the nearest town.  I'm sure Lizzy managed to deal with this offer with the greatest aplomb - having a lifetime's worth of polite engagements to attend you would rather hope so!

I like the idea of our Queen embracing modern technology, although the day we see her sitting at her Mac, tapping Her Royal Feet to iPod 'choons' and emailing Philip using txt speak is still very far away!

Lisa Ballam
Lisa

Created on Wednesday April 29 2009 11:20 AM


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Villagers stage protest over Google Streetview

Pitchfork rabble roused by Google's latest featI wasn't overly surprised at seeing today's leading article on the BBC Technology page.  Google's Streetview project has precipitated much debate on topics ranging from personal privacy to crime since its official launch two weeks ago.  In this instance, residents of a small town in Buckinghamshire physically blocked the passage of a Google streetview car, insisting angrily that the invasion of their privacy was too much to bear. 

I empathise, having felt a deep uneasiness at seeing my front garden two clicks into a Google search.  We are all well aware of increased surveillance and presence of cameras within city centres, but for me this goes a bit too far.

There are benefits to the service though, that I shall no doubt take advantage of.  It will make visits to unknown destinations much easier for a start, as you will literally be able to trace a virtual journey from your start point to destination.

The biggest question I have is what the real purpose of Streetview is.  How do Google propose to monetise this new feature?  I'm guessing a merge between Google Adwords and Local Business Centre (once they sort through their algorithm problems) will allow businesses to advertise their products and services from a virtual shop front, but surely this has already been done more effectively by Second Life?

With Microsoft's plans to launch a rival service later this year on beta, my head shakes with Luddite pensiveness.  This new technology could either take off and thrive in a social networking fashion, or wither away under a backlash of suspicion.  I'm not entirely convinced either way but will be interested to see what the general consensus will be once the launch hype has died down and people start experimenting with both Streetview and GeoSynth.