Feb 24

With the coming of the New Year we see a lot of Top 10 lists.  You know like the Top 10 planning, design and development websites of 2009 or the Top 10 Quotes of 2009.  We are doubly blessed that since this is the “end of the decade” that we also get the top 10 lists for that as well.  You know like EPSN Boston’s Top 10 of the Decade (all Boston Teams) or Yahoo GamesTop 10 Video Games of the Decade (Super Mario Galaxy in the top 10?, really?).

Not to buck the trend, I decided to put together my own list of influential technologies for the years 2000-2009.  As you read this, please keep in mind the criteria that I used:

  • The technologies listed are not in any order
  • The technology did not have to be invented after 2000, but had to have reached wide spread adoption or a major turning point after 2000
  • I tried to avoid specific products or websites by name, but rather focused on the technology or the trend, rather than a specific implementation
  • I am strongly biased by my own personal experiences with the technologies, your experiences with them may be different than mine

MP3 Player Portable Music Players / Digital formats – It is not hard to see the impact of the portable music player on our society, just walk down the street and look at the number of people who have white ear buds in their ear. 

While the music player is obvious to see, what is not seen was the companion shift to digital distribution of content and the mind shift that we made with the change.  The digital music stores helped the music players to take off (although all indications are that most of the music does not come from online stores).

RSS Feed iconRSSReally Simple Syndication is probably the geekiest of all the technologies that I will list it.  This is one of the technologies that predates that 2000s, but saw wide adoption in the last decade; if had a blog or a website that published RSS before 2000, you should have a special badge to indicate your early adoption.  RSS is probably the third most popular document type on the Internet (behind HTML and CSS).  It is the best example of the power of a common data format.

People with laptops Social Networks early forms of social networking existed before the year 2000 (Yahoo Groups was one that I used to hang out in back in the day) and the concepts behind social networking even pre-dated the world wide web with people interacting on bulletin boards.  But again, it was in the last 10 years (actually 4 or 5) that social networking went from being a niche activity to seeing wide adoption.

The real impact of social networking is just now being felt as the “social” aspect expands from a casual activity that takes place out of work, to applying these principals to activities at work.  The overall trend of taking social technologies and applying them to the work place is called the consumerization of IT, and we will see it with a number of the technologies in this list.

Cellular PhoneSmart Phones – One of the things that the MP3 players mentioned earlier did was get us used to making out computing experience portable and taking it with us.  Going back to the 1990s we had Personal Data Assistants and cell phones.  It was natural to combine the two into one device and throw in the MP3 players as well. 

LAN CableBroadband – In August of this year Comscore released their latest estimates of broadband penetration in the United States.  The national average is now 89% of all Internet Users have some form of fast Internet access.  Personally I have had a cable modem for nearly 8 years, but I entered the year 2000 with dial up access. 

High speed access at the home was unusual in the 1990s; most people only had high speed access at their work place.  Now broadband access is becoming so ubiquitous that the people who develop websites and applications are starting to take it for granted.  By itself broadband access is a fantastic improvement, but like many infrastructure technologies, the real power of broadband is as an enabling technology that brings us other things (like streaming media).

TV on Computer Streaming Media – As I am writing this I have the television on in the background showing a movie.  The interesting thing is that it is streaming from Netflix in full High Definition quality to my Xbox using my internet connection.  There is no special magic about the Xbox; I could just as easily be streaming to my web browser or to any number of devices that support streaming.  Nothing special about Netflix either, I can stream from dozens of sites.  Contrast this with prior to 2000 when video on the web (when you could get it working) was of low quality.    

GPS Device in Car GPS – the Global Positioning System dates back into the 1970s from a military experimental standpoint and has been operational for civilian use since the 1990s, but this is one of the technologies that really took off in the 2000s.  The obvious adoption inside of the car was a first step, but now that many phones come equipped with GPS we are starting to see the real applications of location awareness.

Game ControllerGame Consoles – Game consoles are not new by any stretch of the imagination.  As early as 1978 I remember hanging out with my friend Charlie after school every day playing his Atari 2600 for 46 minutes (the time between us getting off the bus and having to turn off the console before his mother got home from work).  But the generation of the game consoles that launched with the original XBOX and the PS2 are really a different class of systems.  The modern game console is a hub of entertainment, with connections to social networks and streaming video.  Certainly games have comes a long way from Space Invaders.

reporter Social Media (Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts) – The last item is less about the technology and more about what it has enabled.  A vast reduction in production cost and a huge reduction in the distribution cost have led to the emergence of user generated content.  There are some that are saying that user generated content is replacing content from traditional media companies, but I look at the trend as additive; I still watch the evening news, but I have added social media to the mix as well.

I rather enjoyed putting this list together, but I am sure that I have missed a technology or two that is influential and would love to hear about the ones that I missed.  I will say that I intentionally left off search as a technology.  Search was clearly influential in the 2000s; however I think that it was established by the beginning of 2000.

Oct 17


BBC news reports that the most UK police forces are to be equipped with smartphones by March 2010.

Gary Cairns of the National Policing Improvement Agency (NPIA) explains that officers with smartphones spend about 30 minutes less per shift in the police station than officers without smartphones – leaving them free for frontline duties.

The cost of the scheme is £80million – and it costs about £270 per officer, per year. 85% of officers offered smartphones take up the offer – although the BBC reporter seems to think this is a bit weak, I think it’s pretty impressive. I wonder what the figures would be like if every UK teacher was offered a smartphone? Or every student?

So what’s smart about these phones? Well, the article doesn’t mention what type of phone the officers will get. But they will enable officers to access key databases, like the Police National Computer and other information like criminal records, vehicle details, briefings and photographs of wanted or missing people. And they’ll let officers transmit information back to base.

Officers are interested in how GPS technologies can help them do their job – for instance, tagging streets with ‘useful’ information about who lives there, and what they’re known to the police for.

A bit big brother? Yes. While I can imagine how useful a googlemaps-police criminal database mash up app would be in the fight against crime, I know that people make mistakes. And how am I to check what information a police app might have on me? How can I correct inaccurate information? And how is information police might gather by mobile validated?

Each phone is password protected, and can be remotely wiped, making them fairly secure – but not impregnable. It would be scary to think of what would happen with a smartphone in the wrong hands. But the pros probably outweigh the cons here.

Finally, I wonder do these phones have facebook and twitter disabled? Officers might be spending 30 minutes or more in the frontline, but how useful is that if they’re sitting in a parked car, eyes glued to a little glowing screen?

Jul 01


The Handheld Learning Conference claims to be the world’s leading event about learning using mobile and inexpensive access technologies. Over 1,500 international delegates got together last year.

This year’s conference is themed around “Creativity, Innovation, Inclusion & Transformation” in part because 2009 is the European year of creativity and innovation (which was news to me). It runs from Monday 5th to Wednesday 7th October 2009.

Lead speakers include:

* Malcolm McLaren, Agent provocateur and artist
* James Paul Gee, Presidential Professor of Literacy Studies at Arizona State University
* Professor Elizabeth Hayes, Arizona State University
* Gordon Shukwit, Director of IT and Learning Technologies, Apple Inc
* John Davitt, International Learning Advocate, NewTools.org
* Tim Brighouse, Former Commissioner for London Schools
* Donald Clark, e-Learning Expert
* David Cavallo, Chief Learning Architect, MIT OLPC
* Tim Rylands, Teacher & Innovator

HHL promises to bring together experts from the education, technology and entertainment sectors.

Education, technology and entertainment?
Hurray! This sounds like a magic mix. Kind of like a geek cocktail for me!

The conference is spread over three days, to demonstrate, debate and explore how mobile technologies such as phones, entertainment devices, GPS locators, and netbooks can enable “transformational improvements” in learning across schools, home, further education, training and business.

I’m not sure what ‘transformational improvements’ are – hope there’s not too much of this type of marketese at the actual conference – but I am interested in seeing how mobile technologies can help us all do things better.

Here in Northern Ireland we’re hoping to get as many companies and organisations as possible together to organise a subsidised Trade Mission to the conference – lots of folk are already signed up. So if you’re a ROI or NI learning company and you’re interested in attending the conference, let me know ASAP.

And if you fancy easing yourself into handheld learning with a sleek Apple device, get yourself signed up for the conference before July 31 – you’ll get a free iPod touch when you arrive at the conference. Nice.