Trains , busses and 3G

June 27th, 2006

The fire at Kings Cross caused me to have a 7 hour train journey into work (from Brough in East Yorkshire to Canary Wharf). This is a trip I usually do twice a week and it is supposed to take 3 hours. My head is filled with thoughts about how critical transport is to the running of the Games and how little leeway there is for contingency in an already overloaded system. It would have been a completely wasted day if it were not for technology – my Vodafone Data Card allowed me to get through some work. The 3G coverage is a bit sketchy, but overall an excellent bit of kit.

New sun hats and shades (pester power in action)

June 14th, 2006

This image was reduced by Picassa I think – Jill?

Lucy on the beach

June 14th, 2006

For Alison and Susan!

From Telecoms to the Mississippi

June 13th, 2006

Just had responses back to an ITT we issued for telecoms consultancy. The quality of the responses is generally high which is great. Now the difficult process of deciding who we get for this. Need to be rigorous and as objective as possible. Hope it all works out. I wonder if any of the respondents will find this blog? Highly unlikely! It lurks in an obscure backwater of the web.

Speaking of backwaters, the documentary about the Mississippi backwaters and a man called Kenny Salwey, who lives in them, was excellent. I found a radio show about the programme. I thought the cinematography was outstanding. Kenny’s is a life that holds much appeal but it must be incredibly hard.

“I am Ramon Rodriguez Rodriguez”

May 22nd, 2006

Got this obituary via BoingBoing. I must say that I like a tribe that puts the back room staff at the top of the pile. Here’s to the Grateful Dead and Ramrod. I’m off to listen to Terrapin Station.

Jack Hargreaves is my hero!

May 6th, 2006

I share of lot of Jack Hargreaves‘ ideas about the ‘country’. It is encouraging to know he is regarded as the patron saint of sheds. An extract from the FAQ for uk.rec.sheds reads “Heroes? Our patron saint is Jack Hargreaves, who used to introduce the TV show ‘Out Of Town’ from an amazing shed full of obscure tools which might well come in useful one day.” From Jack’s Back. I’m told the box set of ‘Out of Town’ DVDs is coming up. I can’t wait!

CoCom 1

April 24th, 2006

We completed the first Co-ordination Commission visit last Friday. We called it CoCom 1 which sounds like a movie title or our “current defense (sic) condition” – “we’re at CoCom 1”, which means “World War Three” is imminent. Anyway, I’ve now caught up on sleep! It was a manic few days, but we seem to have done well judging by the press comments. I was involved in the planning and execution of the site visit. Great co-operation from people at AEG for The O2 visit, Murphys and LDA people at the Power Tunnels site, Newham people at Holden Point and LCR people at the Stratford CTRL site. So thanks to all of them! The great thing about the London 2012 project is the team spirit it engenders. This sounds a bit too good to be true, but in my experience it is very real, and it’s one of the best reasons to be working on the project. And thanks to the LOCOG team I worked with as well!

U316 TMA1

April 24th, 2006

Did well on my first TMA for U316. 85%. Delighted about this. It is a challenging course that is unlike any other I have done. You have to stick pretty rigidly to the schedule and work through the activities religiously to score well. Less scope for ‘tactical’ studying than previous courses. This makes balancing it with work very challenging, but equally somehow more rewarding.

Performancing Part 2

March 20th, 2006

It works really well. Amazing! (Got a bit of help from here.)

Performancing

March 20th, 2006

I am playing with the Performancing extension for Firefox. It seems easy so far. Let’s see if this works!

It’s that time of year again

February 7th, 2006

I started my latest OU course today. U316. That’s officially another 18 hours a week to find. Yikes!

British Computer Society Lecture

October 17th, 2005

I will be giving a lecture to the BCS Project Management Specialist Group on December 6th 2005. This will take place at the Tanaka Business School, Imperial College, with the kind assistance of Tidu Maini. A very brief synopsis of the lecture is as follows:

“The bid was truly a once in a lifetime experience and the outcome was sensational. But behind the scenes, the work of the bid needed to be structured into a series of discrete projects with explicit outcomes and deliverables. Numerous teams were formed to ensure success for each project. Each project was broken down into smaller elements with clear milestones. Progress had to be monitored continuously. Many people were working in multiple areas with huge resource constraints. This presentation outlines the approach taken and identifies, from a project management perspective, the numerous lessons – both good and bad – from an unbelievably charged two years.”

I’m really looking forward to this event. There are some details here.

London 2012 Technology Case Study

October 17th, 2005

Back in June Rachel Church interviewed me for a case study about London 2012 technology for Ark Sports’ e-newsletter on Sport and Technology. I am now suddenly incredibly busy planning the very diverse technology responsibilities of the London Organising Committee for the Olympic Games (which abbreviates to the horrible acronym LOCOG).

Capital uses pedal power to generate opening spectacle

October 17th, 2005

I was quoted in an article in The Times last week, commenting on the Cycling Road Race and Time Trial courses for 2012. Most of the work on these courses was actually done by Ken Farnes working for us as a consultant. Shame that wasn’t mentioned.

Summary of Brigstock Camp impact study

October 17th, 2005

I did a project on the Brigstock Camp application for a recent Open University course, U216. I thought I’d publish some snippets here which may be useful. The topic of my project was “What impact will the development of a ‘learning disabilities hospital’ at Brigstock Camp have on its surrounding area and in particular the local village of Brigstock?”

The research was predominantly web based, with some local interviews. Bill Wilson’s report was an excellent resource though quite complex. I’d encourage everyone with an interest in this application to read it. I’d like to record thanks to Bill.

I concluded, perhaps rather predictably, that there was a convergence of views and a de-facto agreement that the impact on the local area and village would be significant and unwanted. There was shared agreement that the impact of the scale of the development, the size and location of some of the buildings, the security fencing and lighting, together with associated CCTV coverage, were not in keeping with what was a) acceptable to local people and b) in accordance with policy. Whilst reassuring that the values of local people are shared to some extent by the policy makers it is clear that the main deciding factors were policy led and that agreement with local views was a side effect, not a principal driver of the decision making process. It is also clear that the decision making process is in the hands of a relatively small group of experts and officials. This is a barrier to any alternative view of the future of the Camp. However, there was a refreshing level of openness to discussing the pros and cons of the application, and this is the first step towards much greater participation by local people in future decisions. Many local people are willing to challenge policy makers to make sure alternative values are considered. Finally, it is clear that local people need to ensure that their values are supported by significant evidence to enter the debate effectively, let alone wield sufficient power to have those values predominate in the decision making process. In the search for such evidence, some values will be revealed to be irrational. There were many such examples in this case.

I also recommended that a web site be used by local people to track the application. I hope someone has the energy to do this. Here are my ideas:

Audience: In light of the ongoing enquiry, a local village audience will remain engaged and interested in the topic. The experience of researching this report indicates they will be from a broad cross section of the local community with very differing interests.

Medium: Given the dynamic nature of an ongoing enquiry, and the various communication needs, a website is the logical way to communicate. The proposed site would be a tool that local villagers could use to track the progress of the enquiry.

Purpose: Reports and a suitable summaries would need to be published on the site. In particular, the message that real power in local decision making processes is in the hands of those that set policy needs to be reinforced; and that therefore, the local community should focus on the details of the numerous policy documents and their relevance to the immediate local situation as the enquiry unfolds. The site would be a useful gateway to policy documents and consistently strive to remove unnecessary jargon. Locals would benefit from the simplifying and synthesising of a great deal of complex information into accessible updates that would allow them to grasp the main issues. They would also benefit from a forum to express and record a variety of views on specific proposals as they emerge. Additionally, they would need some form of tool to promote their views to a wider audience as the enquiry proceeds. The promotion of local values often requires the help of the media and a good quality web site that journalists can access is the ideal way to achieve this.

Pudding Mill Lane smoke plume

August 25th, 2005



Pudding Mill Lane smoke plume

Originally uploaded by mayfly.


Smoke plume from major fire near Pudding Mill Lane station, 25th August 2005, taken on an XDA2i.

View from my office

August 18th, 2005



View from my office


This is the view from the office I occupied for most of the bid. You can see the Dome and the new Barclays Bank building on the left.

Docklands from ExCel centre

August 17th, 2005



Dockalnds from ExCel centre


Taken on an XDA 2 from the South West corner of ExCel with the Dome in the distance in December 2004 during a site visit to rehearse the Evaluation Commission visit to London in February 2005.

London 2012

August 17th, 2005

I worked for London 2012, the London Olympic Bid, from October 2003 to 1st August 2005. I’m now part of the post-win transition team. I re-discovered this quote today, ironically enough from one of the Paris team, and thought it summed it up pretty well!

“Une candidature aux Jeux, c’est deux ans pour construire, un an pour convaincre, six mois pour consolider, deux mois pour gagner. Et une seconde pour tout perdre, ou tout confirmer.”

The ethics of care culture

June 16th, 2005

An article in the Guardian dated August 4th 2004 about the “values” associated with Care Principles’ methodology in building hospitals such as the one proposed for Brigstock Camp. The analytical concepts of U216,

  • time/space,
  • values/power/action,
  • risk/uncertainty,

are referred to in various ways in this article.