Please note that this site is no longer updated. You may, however, be interested in the New Statesman New Media Awards for 2006.
in association with

New Media Awards 2005 Weblog

RUBBISH MAN IN CITY HALL
Electronic giant unveiled for environmental awareness
29 April 2005

The Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures & Commerce, (RSA) in partnership with Canon Europe, have unveiled a seven-meter tall robot next to London’s City Hall. This project attempts to encourage the technology industry to take more environmental responsibility.

The so-called WEEE man, is made of electronic waste such as lighting, medical and household appliances, and symbolises the amount of electronic waste an average UK citizen discards in a lifetime – 90% of which currently goes to landfill.

In 2006 the EU will introduce WEEE (Waste, Electrical and Electronic Equipment) legislation, to put the financial responsibility upon manufacturers to recycle their electronic products. The WEEE man is part of a campaign to highlight this legislation. It also aims to make people more conscious of the environmental damage that electronic waste could have in the long run.

I went to the City Hall for a closer look this morning and had a chance to talk to some of the people passing by.

“I had absolutely no idea that one person could generate such amount of waste. I think this initiative will truly make a difference. We ought look after our planet” Shelia Dez, said.

“Interesting project, but I have my doubts to whether or not it will change the way big companies deal with electronic waste and environmental schemes. I sadly believe that is not in the companies’ interest to protect the world.” Carl Turner said.

“I saw it on TV and came straight down from Kent, I think the statue is actually quite dangerous and fragile, it looks as if it could fall on our heads any minute. I really don’t like it,” Alan Ramsy commented.

Today the RSA, also launched an educational WEEE man website where you can learn more about the benefits of recycling and gain advice on what you can do to help. The WEEE man will be standing at the South Bank for a month.

Posted by Paloma Gutierrez at 1:09 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


RACE FOR PLIGHT
Tough race for good cause
28 April 2005

This is a curious note. Today, Ladbrokes.com will launch the Big Bird Race, highlighting the plight of the near extinct Albatross. The eighteen tagged birds Albatrosses; The Ecologist, The Ancient Marine, and Ocean Spirit, among others, will be released from the southern coast of Tasmania and will race to South Africa while being tracked with satellite technology. The birds are expected to arrive at the Cape of Good Hope around the 5th of August.

You will be able to watch the race from Ladbrokes.com ‘Grandstand’. Alternatively the event can be watched live at Frankie’s Italian Bar & Grill, 3 Yeoman’s Row, London. All raised profits will go to future seabird conservation projects.

Posted by Paloma Gutierrez at 1:45 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


STREET ART FOR ALL
Alternative art online
27 April 2005

In the chaotic and fast experience of urban living, we may fail to look carefully to our surroundings. Creativity is certainly all around and proof of this is the overwhelming amount of inner city art.

A New York based, Wooster Collective website, funded in 2001, allows users to look at street art and graffiti from Bangkok to Madrid, without having to leave home. It also contains updated events, books and bars listings. All the pictures and comments are posted by artists or anyone who finds something eye-catching on the streets. The site is not comercial, rather it aims exclusively to be a space for sharing and showcasing art from all over the world.

In going through the site today, I found it interesting to see how people express themselves in different ways. Today’s homepage page, for instance, features an artists from Prague, Australia and Barcelona who all use different colours, materials and shapes in their art- highlighting that cities affect people’s creativity and the way they perceive the world.

Other exciting places to look for street art and graffiti are www.graffiti.org and www.ekosystem.org.

Posted by Paloma Gutierrez at 11:26 am [Permanent link to this entry]


BLOGGING ON KENNEDY’S BATTLEBUS
Kennedy campaign weblog is a highlight compared to poor Labour and Tory efforts
26 April 2005

Continuing on from our earlier post we decided to have a quick look a more in-depth look at what the party are up to online. to find out what you may have been missing over the last few weeks. . .

After looking at each of the three main party web sites full marks go to the Liberal Democrats, for their kennedycampaign.org weblog (although we’ll keep schtum about their main site). Whilst not written by Charles Kennedy himself, the site makes no claim to be. A small team, led by James, the “Battlebus blogger", keep the site updated with posts and photographs. There’s an informal tone to the proceedings (with some great candid photographs that offer an alternative view on the campaign), and as well as allowing comments on their posts, the site staff have made an effort to engage with them and answer questions. It is updated practically daily, so if you fancy a slightly different look at a campaign on the move, we can highly recommend kennedycampaign.org.

The Conservatives fair less well; there is no mention of how their own campaign is going on their website apart from a few press photographs and non-specific news updates. They do show their slight digital awareness by having a page of blog links, but there is no personal flavour to the site other than this.

The Labour site is a little better (once you’ve got past the hideous “election pledge” splash screen), with a link to “Tony Blair’s campaign diary". Unfortunately, the last person that seems to have had any contribution to the diary is Tony himself - the prose is curiously detached and reads much like a press release. There’s also a tendency to put up “video diaries” when, as anyone who’s actually used the internet knows, plain text would be a lot better.

If this is the best the parties can do between them in 2005, though, it does make you wonder how well they will all do in 2009.

Posted by Tom Armitage at 3:15 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


PARTY ON LINE
Survey compares party political websites

Just in case you missed it yesterday, the Usability Company revealed the results of the best party political website. The study, which considered usability, accessibility and content of the sites, positioned the Labour website first, followed by the Tory’s, the Liberal Democrats in third, and finally, the Green Party fourth.

The study showed, disappointingly, that all the party websites were a case of ‘style over substance.’ For instance, they found that the Conservative site showed the picture of Tony Blair more often than the one of Michael Howard, which made the site confusing for users. Moreover, the survey found the Liberal Democrat website not well structured and difficult to navigate.

In going to each of these today, I felt that the difference between the sites is actually minimal. They are all simply designed and, with the exemption of Liberal Democrats site, not visually appealing. As regards content all of them practically offer the same information, tend to show the images of rival candidates and feature a similar structure.

Posted by Paloma Gutierrez at 1:13 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


THE BROAD DIVIDE
Wales comes out top and bottom in latest broadband take-up report
25 April 2005

I was strangely pleased to note this morning that my home town of Cardiff, specifically the constituencies of Cardiff Central and Cardiff North, has the highest percentage of broadband take-up in the England and Wales.

The analysis carried out by Point Topic aimed to discover the realities of the digital divide in England and Wales. The results show that although Wales’ two largest urban areas, Cardiff and Swansea, have the greatest take up, the rural constituencies of Wales, such as Meirionnydd Nant Conwy, have the least.

None too startlingly, the report concludes that there are two forms of divide: geographic and socio-economic. Stating: “As geographical availability improves, concerns about the socio-economic divide are starting to increase. Broadband lines and Internet access are much more likely to be found in more prosperous homes. Usage falls off sharply in older and less well-educated families - less than 10% of households headed by people over 75 have Internet access compared with well over 50% for the country as a whole. Low take-up by some groups prevents society from taking full advantage of the benefits of the Internet. Children in poor families, for example, will be even more disadvantaged in their education without proper access to the Internet.”

For more indepth reporting on broadband in the UK regions visit the New Statesman’s dedicated website on the topic.

Posted by Kathryn Corrick at 10:27 am [Permanent link to this entry]


NEW POPE ANNOUNCED
Confusion becomes the latest new religion

A quick update on last Friday’s entry . . .

Over the weekend the Irish chancer, as he describes himself, who bought popebenedictxvi@hotmail.it launched his own weblog: cyber-pope.blogspot.com. He claims that his misadventures on eBay led him to form a new religion - Confusionism - and will be using the site (amonst other things) to develop his new found faith.

Posted by Kathryn Corrick at 9:05 am [Permanent link to this entry]


POPE FOR SALE
Papal e-mail addresses and URLs for sale on eBay
21 April 2005

Newly elected Pope Benedict XVI may have trouble checking his e-mail, as people are quickly snatching up e-mail addresses and URLs in the pope’s name, reports the BBC News website. In an act of generoisty, the New Statesman has offered the new pope his very own New Statesman e-mail acount, should he want it. After reading this week’s Leader, however, we doubt the pope will be keen on associating himself with the magazine.

The race to cash in on the papal election gained attention when Vincent Flood, 27, a journalism student from Dublin, put popebenedictxvi@hotmail.it up for sale on the online auction website eBay.com. Flood, who is a non-practising Catholic studying in London, said he just did it for a laugh. “I wasn’t really thinking about it. I definitely wasn’t sitting by my computer waiting for the announcement,” he said. The current high bid for his auction item is £80.

Flood is not the only one trying to make money off of the pope’s name. A Canadian seller is asking $100,000 for popebenedictxvi.com, and another eBay listing is offering two for the price of one - popebenedictxvi@catholicemail.com with popebenedictXVI@usa.net at a starting bid of $4.99. Popebenedict.de, popebenedict16th.de, and www.popebenedict-16.com are also up for sale.

Tuesday’s election of the new pope has also seen a slew of memorabilia put up for sale on eBay, reports cnn.com. EBay already has at least 68 items up for sale, including fridge magnets, prayer cards and clocks bearing the likeness of Pope Benedict XVI. One seller is asking $2,499 for an autographed photo of Ratzinger taken in 1978.

“It was almost immediate that we started to see Pope Benedict items and memorabilia come onto the site,” said Hani Durzy, a spokesman for eBay, which is located in San Jose, California. “Right now, much of the world’s attention is on Pope Benedict and so it is not a surprise for us to see numerous Pope Benedict listings on the site.”

Posted by Chris Camire at 2:30 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


ENGAGING YOUNG VOTERS
Electoral Commission supports 02 site to get out the vote
20 April 2005

In the general election of 2001 voter turnout reached an all-time low of 59%, and some think that number could fall below 55% this year. A recent poll of 3,000 O2 active users, aged 18-24, revealed that only 38% intend to vote. In an attempt to boost voting, 02 has launched a site on its mobile portal to promote involvement in the democratic process, reports PublicTechnology.net.

The Electoral Commission sponsored site aims to raise awareness and understanding about the electoral process by providing O2’s 3.8 million active users with a comprehensive information resource for anyone with questions about the elections, especially first-time voters. This includes a complete guide to the election, with information on how to find your polling station, how to vote, how to obtain a postal vote and a host of frequently asked questions.

Becky Lloyd, Campaigns Manager at the Electoral Commission commented, “It’s enormously important that we try to reach the electorate through a variety of communication platforms. It’s important that we communicate with the younger electorate in particular through a medium with which they are comfortable and familiar and mobile phones are a good way of doing this.”

Unfortunately, this service can only be accessed via the active O2 web portal, which limits its influence. The new service can be accessed here.

Posted by Chris Camire at 4:53 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


CREATIVE ARCHIVE SLOWLY TAKES SHAPE
The BBC Creative Archive begins to emerge into reality

The BBC’s “Creative Archive” project - which will offer BBC material to the public to use, non-commercially, as they see fit - has gathered many mentions in the press and around the web in previous months, although there’s been relatively little to show for all the talk. That’s all changed, with the launch of the Creative Archive Licence Group site.

The site’s main purpose is “to keep you up to date with how the BBC and the other partners in the Creative Archive Licence Group will make programmes available under the licence“. A “roadmap” for future development is currently available from the site. It shows how the archive will take shape and roll out to the public in slowly growing stages. The pilot scheme is scheduled to take 18 months.

The project’s primary goal for now is to develop and refine a licence under which Creative Archive content (to be supplied by organisations including: the BBC, Channel 4, the British Film Institute, and the Open University) can be distributed. This may not sound very exciting, but it is key in the provision of such archive material; the licence material is offered under needs to limit potential use of the material (so that the creator’s copyright is still of value) but also legally allow use of the material by third parties. The scheme is similar to Creative Commons, and the License Group acknowledge the influence of the CC licenses on their own.

It may seem a slow start, but already material is emerging. The BFI have now launched their own Creative Archive site that will host any material they release under the licence. Currently, a few silent films from the early twentieth century are available.

The team are treading carefully, as they are still learning and considering how best to implement the project. After all, there’s never been a scheme quite like the Creative Archive. If successful, the Creative Archive could set a precedent for other projects worldwide. The pilot scheme launches soon; hopefully there will be even more exciting developments to report on in the coming weeks.

Posted by Tom Armitage at 12:36 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


GOOGLE GETS LOCAL IN THE UK
Google's latest services now work in the UK
19 April 2005

A brief post, this, simply because it can get tiring linking to all the amazing applications Google keep coming up with. But it seemed worth updating our first look at Google Maps now that Google Maps UK has finally launched. It has all the features of the US version - finding places, businesses, and directions - apart from the slightly creepy satellite photos. I’m sure they’ll get around to photographing the UK from space at some point in the near future. The business finder is particularly impressive, because its information is all sourced from Yell. So if you’ve ever wondered where the Indian restaurants in the vicinity of the NS offices are, you can now find out.

In addition to localising their mapping service for the UK, Google have also now launched UK-specific versions of Google Local (which allows you to search for businesses and services by location) and Google SMS. The latter service will send you Google results via text-message; you simply text your query to a number and Google responds - all for the cost of a standard text message. Cheating in pub quizzes has never been so easy.

Google may be a large company with some great minds working for it, but credit must be given where credit is due: their services are pretty nifty, and it’s great to see their growing support for non-US audiences. Let’s hope that as well as continuing to innovate, they roll out their current localised services across the globe.

Posted by Tom Armitage at 12:29 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


DOMAIN GAMES
Labour hires controversial American webmaster
18 April 2005

The Labour Party has hired Zack Exley, the controversial cyberactivist from liberal American website MoveOn.org, according to Silicon. As of now, there is little known about what exactly Exley will be doing for Labour.

Exley originally made a name for himself through “cybersquatting” – the practice of buying up an internet domain in the name of a party or politician and using it to help the opposing side. He purchased the domain name gwbush.com in the late 1990s for $70, and he used the site to post doctored photos of George W. Bush snorting cocaine and drinking. Exley avoided legal penalties because he was a registered Independent at the time and was not employed by any of the political parties.

He then went on to join MoveOn, a major player in the 2000 presidential election which engaged in grassroots campaigning and claimed to have built an online community of some 2 million political activists. MoveOn created an uproar when it posted a video comparing Bush to Adolf Hitler. Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry went on to hire Exley as his Director of Internet Campaigns.

The Conservative Party claims that several websites with party leader Michael Howard’s name have already been registered by the Labour Party. Labour is not alone in its cybersquatting, however. The Lib Dems have come under fire for registering plaid-cymru.co.uk, and the Conservatives themselves own both tonyblairmp.com and tonyblairmp.net. In an election where honesty and trustworthiness are shaping up to be key issues for voters, online trickery is probably not the best way to win people over.

Posted by Chris Camire at 1:57 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


EXPLORING LONDON ONLINE
Museum of London plans interactive website
14 April 2005

The Museum of London is working to develop a new e-learning project called Exploring 20th Century London, reports PublicTechnology.net. The project, funded by DCF/Hub, is in partnership with London’s Transport Museum and three other London museums. The goal is to create an integrated database of selected records from each museum’s collection featuring sound, film files, and images.

The Museum of London’s official website currently offers a wide array of features, including description of all the museum’s galleries and a learning centre where students, parents, and teachers can download educational packets. The Exploring 20th Century London site should enhance the interactivity of the current website, as it will giver users the option to access more than text. This is in line with a current trend that sees more museums using new media technology on their websites. The Tate Britain website, which we reported on a few months back, allows users to take a flash tour of the museum.

The Museum of London is holding a seminar on May 10th to discuss the new, online project. The seminar will feature speakers from MLA, ALM London, and the London Museums Hub. The aim is to gather information from regional museums, archives and libraries that will better prepare the Exploring 20th Century London project team on how the site can best serve its users. Although the site stands to benefit from the seminar, one questions why they don’t launch the site sooner and continue to improve it after its launch. There is a tendency to want to deliver grand, fully realised projects, but many great projects have started small and grown over time.

Posted by Chris Camire at 2:19 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


V IS FOR. . .?
Site launched for those planning not to vote
13 April 2005

Somehow www.notapathetic.com launched last Thursday and we failed to notice. The MySociety gang, with their finger on the proverbial pulse, has built a website for people who are planning not to vote in the UK General Election on May 5th, and who want to tell the world why.

The aim is not to persuade anyone that voting is a good or a bad idea - they just want to hear, record and share the explanations. It makes fascinating, if depressing, reading. Those who have taken the time to make posts are not (as the domain name says) apathetic, but they are fed up and many seem to feel powerless.

Charles Kennedy will be pleased to know that his party is the only party to get much positive feedback but there are enough other nay-sayers to alternatively make Charles weep.

For anyone trying to engage the public in the general election this site should be an essential read.

Posted by Kathryn Corrick at 5:17 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


IN SEARCH OF FUNDS
West Lindsey website helps businesses find funds

A new website is available to help people, businesses, and organisations in West Lindsey search for grants, low-cost loans, and awards, reports eGov monitor. By visiting www.west-lindsey.gov.uk and clicking on the ‘West Lindsey 4’ logos, users can access information about what grants are available, to whom, how much is available, and how you access the money.

The site, offered by West Lindsey District Council’s Economic Development Services, provides information on what is available to fund projects, ranging from new business development to charitable projects. It features a straightforward menu system with easy-to-follow onscreen instructions and is regularly updated when new sources of funding become available.

Putting all the available information on one website should make searching for funding opportunities much easier and more convenient. The service, provided by j4b, has been available for several years now. West Lindsey’s implementation of it shows how it is not just county councils, but the smaller district and borough councils that can make use of new media technology to provide services at a highly localised level.

Posted by Chris Camire at 11:12 am [Permanent link to this entry]


EASTERN PROMISE
Chinese Premier forsees an Asian IT century
12 April 2005

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao wants to join forces with India to make the 21st century the “Asian century of the IT industry", reports Silicon. Speaking at the office of Tata Consultancy Services in India on Sunday, Wen said the two countries must combine their strengths to take a leadership position in the IT world.

Wen marked the second day of his four-day visit to India by meeting with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and top Indian leadership in New Delhi on Monday. “India has the advantage in software and China has the advantage in hardware,” said Wen, after a ceremonial welcome at the red sandstone official residence of Indian President Abdul Kalam. “Both countries could work to their mutual advantage and be world leaders. I strongly believe that the combination of India and China could certainly set a new trail in IT.”

According to The Asian Age, the Chinese Premier exuded confidence when discussing the numbers of computer and internet users in China, which is estimated to be upwards of 100 million.

“We are making giant strides in the field of IT,” said Wen. “There is an ever broadening market for the IT industry. The coming together of India and China would be mutually beneficial.” With an ever broadening market for the IT industry, Wen sees the two countries coming together as not only beneficial for Asia, but for peace throughout the world, as well.

“I hope and believe that my visit will inject fresh vigour and vitality into relations,” said Wen. “As the world’s two major developing countries, China and India will exert positive influence on peace and development in Asia, and the world at large, when we live in peace, deepen mutual trust and expand co-operation.” An IT alliance between China and India could significantly level the playing field in the competition with the West, and Wen’s pledge to use China’s and India’s burgeoning power for peace is encouraging. As China’s influence in the world increases, only time will tell whether this good-will approach to power extends itself to other facets of Chinese policy.

Posted by Chris Camire at 2:14 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


I-DEAS
IPPR wants your thoughts on digital policy
7 April 2005

The Institute for Public Policy Research launched an online consultation today in which people can post thoughts on the future of Britain’s digital policy. The consultation will take place on the project’s weblog at www.digitalmanifesto.org.

The consultation is aimed at people who are not traditionally interested in information technology. IPPR hopes to implement ideas posted in the weblog into its ‘Manifesto for a Digital Britain’ – a new digital policy programme for the UK that will be released in July.

“We want to hear suggestions and opinions from people who are not already involved in the field,” said William Davies, Senior Research Fellow in Digital Society at the IPPR. “We’re interested in hearing from people who talk about digital policy at the pub.”

For three weeks the site will pose different questions that people are invited to respond to. They fall under the categories ‘Innovating’, ‘Reassuring’, and ‘Empowering’. Current questions include: “Does British competitiveness depend on additional infrastructural improvements, or should skills, content, and media literacy become the dominant policy issues?” and “What single measure could support better relationships between public and private sectors, in the delivery of large eGovernment projects?”

Davies hopes to take a specific recommendation or some illuminating quotes from the weblog to include in the manifesto. He is careful not to be exceedingly optimistic about the project’s potential, however. “We mustn’t expect an online consultation such as this to be a fabulous success, just because it’s using new media,” he said. “Techies can be over-ambitious in their expectations.”

Posted by Chris Camire at 11:26 am [Permanent link to this entry]


HACK AWAY
e-Crime convention looks at internet fraud
6 April 2005

E-mail fraud has grown from 4-16% in the last six months, and it only takes 6.4 days for a system to be attacked after vulnerabilities are exposed. IP owners convened at an e-Crime Congress yesterday in London to discuss the problem of internet fraud. Computer hackers are no longer breaking into systems for fame; they are doing it for money. In an economy where security is a marketing tool valuable to the brand, companies that process secure information online must work to instill confidence in their consumers.

“Sixty-one per cent of internet users are concerned with online credit card safety,” said Tim Morris, Vice President and Regional Head, Security & Risk Asia Pacific, MasterCard international. “Merchants must be willing to adopt new payment technologies. And we must work to shut down collusive merchants who can run businesses from a bedroom with a great looking website.”

Experts see consumer education as a critical step in fighting online fraud. David Litchfield, Managing Director and Chief Research Scientist at NGS Software Ltd, suggested that the government adopt a national computer security day, in the same vain as national no smoking days, in which people are educated on how to secure their computers. Litchfield also thinks the government should take greater strides in ensuring e-criminals are apprehended and fully prosecuted.

“It is a fantasy to think that you can get full security,” said Litchfield. “Inevitably, people are going to break into your system. There have to be consequences for these people – law enforcement response and jail – so that nobody will want to take the risk.”

In an age of quickly advancing technology, many companies find it difficult and expensive to keep their security systems up-to-date. How much money should a company spend on security? Litchfield compares this decision with insuring one’s car.

“You have to accurately access the risk,” he said. “It is hard to put a measure on it because there is no panacea or silver bullet. The most expensive is not always the most effective.”

Litchfield added that the best way for companies to protect themselves is to employ someone who understands exactly what kind of technology they are working with. “If you don’t have those people working for you, you need to find them,” he said.

Posted by Chris Camire at 12:01 pm [Permanent link to this entry]


STOPPING CHILD ABUSE ONLINE
Home Office to set up Centre for Child Protection
4 April 2005

The Home Office last Friday announced that the government is to set up a ‘Centre for Child Protection on the Internet’. The Home Office press release detailing the project explains that the Centre’s aim will be ‘to reduce the harm caused to children, families and societies by child abuse facilitated through the internet‘. The Centre will tackle every aspect of the ever-growing problem of online child abuse, from the ‘grooming’ of children via chat rooms and instant messaging, to the distribution of child pornography and other abusive material. The Centre is supported by members of the Internet Task Force, making the project a real concerted effort: it is not only the police and government behind the project, but also child welfare groups.

The Centre’s proposed duties include providing support to victims and their families and advice to local agencies, active investigation of ‘high priority targets’, and managing the national database of child abuse images (the imaginatively titled ‘Childbase’). It will also provide a ’single 24/7 point of contact’ for anyone to report suspected abuse. This last service may raise some suspicions; a single point of contact to shop paedophiles sounds like every News of the World reader’s dream come true. Hopefully the public promotion of the service will also educate users in how to use it appropriately.

Though it has been announced today, the agency will only come into operation in April 2006, when it will be attached to the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA). SOCA itself will only come into being at that time; its creation is subject to the passing of the Serious Organised Crime and Police bill. If that bill is not passed, there will be no Centre. The Home Office clearly wishes to act in the best issues of children and parents, and deal with the serious problem of child abuse online at a national level. The announcement of the Centre, though, has the air of a PR exercise rushed out of the door prior to some major political event.

Posted by Tom Armitage at 11:34 am [Permanent link to this entry]


VATICAN USES SMS
Pope's death announced through e-mail and text messaging

The Vatican used text messaging and e-mail to update the press on the medical condition of Pope John Paul II, reports Silicon. The 2,000 year-old church employed new technology in order to meet the demands of real time news. Only fifteen minutes after the Pope’s passing on Saturday, the Vatican had sent journalists an SMS message informing them of the news.

Journalists purchased state-of-the-art handheld computers, at the suggestion of the Vatican, which they used to communicate with church officials. Upon the pope’s passing, the computers were e-mailed a simple Word document, reading: “The Holy Father died this evening at 21:37 in his private apartment.”

Television viewers across the globe were informed of the pope’s death even before the thousands of people gathered outside his apartment in St. Peter’s Square in Rome. Archbishop Leonardo Sandri informed the crowd minutes later, and they responded with a long round of applause – an Italian custom, which was captured on live TV.

The events surround the death of John Paul II stand in stark contrast to the secrecy surrounding previous pontificates. In 1963, for example, the Vatican kept Pope John XXIII’s inoperable stomach cancer secret until days before his death. John Paul II himself was a proponent of information technology. In February, he wrote a letter in which he encouraged the church to use the internet to spread its message, saying the “mass media can and must promote justice and solidarity.”

Posted by Chris Camire at 10:29 am [Permanent link to this entry]


LONDON PORTAL
Website to provide a single point of contact for public services in London.
1 April 2005

London’s first ever city-wide eGovernment portal is scheduled for ‘operational release’ on 20 April. The gateway is to provide a single point of contact for public services in London.

The four applications that will be ready by the April deadline include: a ‘Find Your Nearest’ service that will allow users to locate their nearest Post Office or GP; a Master Services Directory, which will have a browse/search facility for all public services of 33 London Boroughs; an online directory of information regarding community and voluntary sector organisations across the city; and a comprehensive job search facility allowing users to find jobs in London’s public sector, which can link through to vacancy details on the relevant organisation’s website.

The London Portal will be accessed at www.yourlondon.gov.uk, although it will not be widely publicised until later this year.

Posted by Helen Leo at 10:45 am [Permanent link to this entry]