February 12, 2006

Audio signatures for BBC radio networks

Interesting stuff from our R&D team - aka Tristan Ferne - automatically produced radio signatures for BBC radio networks, using the iTunes signature maker.

"I have a directory for each radio station on a particular day with an MP3 file for each programme and I run the application over this. Each random chunk is then cross-faded into the next one in the same order as the programmes were broadcast. This gives a 1-minute signature file per day per radio station, hopefully representing what went on that day..."

Laden with issues, editorial and technical, which Tristan explores further in his blog post. We're not quite sure how, or indeed if, to deploy them yet - though we do have a set of potential locations and functions in mind. Interesting either way.

Cookin/Relaxin: Radio signatures

January 31, 2006

Jobs at BBC Radio and Music Interactive

Several new jobs in our team available now! Closing date soon! We're looking for Technical Project Managers, Software Engineers, Information Architects, R&D types, a Senior Software Engineer and a User Experience Manager. Here's some of what we did last year. For more on the jobs and all information on how to apply, go to http://www.bbc.co.uk/jobs/rminteractive/.

Closing date now past. Thanks for your attention.

Work: quick review of 2005

Please excuse a lengthy, self-indulgent post (unusual, huh) in which I take stock of the last year at work. Partly this is public thank you to the teams I work with at BBC Radio & Music Interactive; our own excellent Technology & Design team in particular (take a bow!), and the many teams around the organisation who support and enable our work. But this is also me using the blog as the proverbial 'outboard brain', the notebook-cum-scrapbook-cum-sketchpad with the web attached. So excuse the inward focus and switch channel if you like, but I figure some people might find the dispatches from the front line of the BBC interesting, given how little info actually makes it out of large organisations. So here's a (currently flu-ridden) design manager's view, as I see it from our third floor haven at Broadcasting House, overlooking the new building rising from the ground. The Technology & Design team I run is responsible for designing and building the BBC's interactive services around radio and music ...

Continue reading "Work: quick review of 2005" »

December 20, 2005

Notes: Richard MacCormac on Broadcasting House

I can hardly ignore an article in today's Guardian on the BBC's architecture scheme, having trumpeted it in the past. I can hardly comment either, but the article is well worth a read, covering the recent exit of MacCormac Jamieson Prichard (MJP) from the Broadcasting House (where I work) scheme at the hands of the contractors, Bovis; a similar departure of David Chipperfield from the BBC Scotland project; the inertia over the White City Music Box project by Foreign Office Architects; and the tortuous details of the difficulty of conducting private-sector partnerships in public sector buildings.

I sincerely hope that MJP's vision is realised at BH - not for the selfish reason of working there, but remembering how inspired I was by a talk on the project that Richard MacCormac gave at the Royal Academy in February 2004. I've been meaning to post the notes I took that night since then, but never got round to it. Now seems a good time to do it. MacCormac spoke with passion, poetry and pragmatism, talking us through slide after slide of architectural drawing, sketch and photograph, and influencing the way I've since thought about the organisation as well as architecture. I'm posting in the rough, un-edited form in which I took the notes, and I hope they capture some sense of the thrilling vision MacCormac has for the building.

Continue reading "Notes: Richard MacCormac on Broadcasting House" »

October 26, 2005

Job: Software Engineer Team Leader at BBC Radio & Music Interactive; MattB

Matt Biddulph moved on to work pastures new recently, and I wanted to say thanks to Matt for his work with me and the team at BBC Radio & Music Interactive and note that we're recruiting for a replacement as of yesterday.

Matt is one of the most creative, intelligent and engaging people I've had the pleasure of working with, and contributed immensely of our team's strategic and tactical thinking and key product development over the last couple of years. He's a great team leader, too. So to anyone looking for one of the smartest software designer/developers in the business, hire that man!

As to the job going forward, here's a link to the BBC Jobs site where you - or someone you know who may be applicable - can apply. Now a return to your usual programming (no pun intended).

June 16, 2005

Over 600,000 mp3 downloads of BBC Radio 3's Beethoven programmes

I've kept quiet about this until now, amidst all the good pointers to it going on elsewhere, but I'm massively pleased to be able to point people to the press release we just issued around the public response to offering mp3 downloads of BBC Radio 3 programmes around Beethoven's first five symphonies.

"Live performances of Beethoven's first five symphonies, broadcast as part of The Beethoven Experience on BBC Radio 3, have amassed an incredible 657,399 download requests during a week long trial. The downloads – launched on 6 June - offered complete Radio 3 programmes containing live performances of the symphonies by the BBC Philharmonic in Manchester, conducted by Gianandrea Noseda. They were available free of charge and therefore not eligible for the Official UK Download or Top 40 Singles charts, although the public’s enthusiasm for the programmes is evident from the individual totals:
  • Symphony 1 (6 to 13 June) - 164,662
  • Symphony 2 (7 to 14 June) - 154,496
  • Symphony 3 (6 to 13 June) - 89,318
  • Symphony 4 (7 to 14 June) - 108,958
  • Symphony 5 (7 to 14 June) - 139,905
"Roger Wright, Controller of Radio 3, said: "The response has been incredible and much bigger that we expected. "The success shows Beethoven's enduring appeal and we hope this will encourage new audiences to explore online classical music."
"Simon Nelson, Controller of BBC Radio & Music Interactive, said: "This trial was all about gauging listeners' appetite for downloads and the results are astonishing. We are hopeful that we have attracted people who wouldn't previously have explored much classical music, as well as inspiring others to embrace digital technology."
"Gianandrea Noseda added: "I'm thrilled that our performances have reached such a large, new audience and hope this trial will encourage more people to experience and enjoy orchestral music live in concert."

I can't tell you the amount of buzz this is generating right across the BBC. Lots of extremely interesting questions continue to be raised by the success of our trials - from distribution to commercial policy, from music strategies to on-demand radio, from marketing to navigation and so on - and we're feeding a lot of the learning and creative ideas right into the heart of the various bits of strategic and tactical BBC work going on at the moment. It's profoundly interesting for us, and I hope for some of you.

You'll have missed the first set of symphonies, but the remaining four will follow on from the 27th June, so keep your eyes peeled on Radio 3.

BBC Radio 3: Beethoven downloads
BBC Press Office: Beethoven downloads get more than 600,000 requests

June 09, 2005

Mark Thompson on a virtual redefinition of broadcasting and life in the digital city

At the somewhat unlikely forum that is the Churches' Media Conference 2005, Hayes Conference Centre, Swanwick, Derbyshire, my ultimate boss, BBC Director General Mark Thompson, delivered what I think is an absolutely fascinating and thoroughly inspiring speech. Touching as it does on a few topics often covered here - on-demand media and navigation, cultural production and consumption, and digital cities (yes really). As is my wont I'll quote from it at length, though I reckon it's worth reading the full speech.

Continue reading "Mark Thompson on a virtual redefinition of broadcasting and life in the digital city" »

May 27, 2005

Explaining podcasts using broadcasts

As Tom has noted (with picture!), we've been trying pretty hard to create a good user experience around the podcasting and downloading trials we've instigated recently. And I think we've done a pretty good job. Until Odeo and the like arrive to hugely simplify the process of subscribing/unsubscribing to podcasts, it's a messy business currently, and this is one of those areas where the BBC's traditional mission to explain, demystify and advocate new technology is entirely in line with the need to create useful, usable user experiences. Credit to Jamie Tetlow and Sarah Prag in particular, though as ever, it's been a team effort.

It's also worth listening to Radio 4 and Five Live a bit, given that you might catch some of the trails for the downloads and podcasts available there. This is another important component of taking this technology to a new audience, and it's imperative that we use our 'traditional' radio broadcasts to complement and contextualise the work on IP-based platforms. Speaking the language of the network, from the slightly querolous tones of Jim Naughtie to the collaged soundclashes of the Five Live trails, they are increasingly adept, careful explanations of this currently complex tech, for millions of citizens who are not necessarily comfortable with this technology. We have more work to do here, and we're not as joined up about this kind of thing as we might be, but this side of the BBC's activities is important too - and it doesn't just benefit us, either.

In other news, our new Glastonbury 2005 site is live, as reported by one of our mighty client-side developers, Duncan Ponting, who notes that it's about as CSS as we can get at the moment and that it features an RSS feed for your newsreadin' pleasure. Tip o' the hat to designer Kate Rogers, too!

May 18, 2005

Further BBC download/podcast trial starts

A few weeks ago I mentioned an extension to our BBC Radio download/podcast trial, including a wider set of programmes. Well, it's going live throughout this week and we've pulled all the details together, just for you:

BBC Radio: Download and podcast trial

May 03, 2005

A mandate for mainstream media

Nice 'big up' (as I believe they say) from Mr Weinberger in his latest JOHO newsletter. Several of the things he refers to in his brief note emanate from my team - others from other forward-thinking bits of the Beeb.

"My goodness but the BBC is up to lots of interesting things! ... The BBC is showing us what mainstream media might be like if its mandate were simply to make our lives better."

We're trying. Of course, many of those 'interesting things' are inspired by David's writing and thinking in the first place - but anyway, cheers David!

JOHO: Walking the Walk

March 13, 2005

Arrivals, San Diego; and a departure, London

I'm extremely pleased and proud that four of my team are off at ETCon 2005 next week, presenting a couple of papers around our work at BBC Radio and Music.

The four, who Matt dubbed "the Beatles of post-broadcast technology" are Matt Biddulph, Tom Coates, Paul Hammond (new site!) and Matt Webb. They're presenting a paper around 'Reinventing Radio: Enriching Broadcast with Social Software', and Tom and Matt B crop up again with other colleagues from the Beeb, on our current major infrastructural project - 'BBC Programme Information Pages: An Architecture for an On-Demand World' (as seen on Radio 3 currently). [Matt Webb's also presenting his 'It's Not Rocket Science: The Brain for Designers', too.] They've had many hard day's nights pulling it all together, but they're going to be great. So go check them all if you're there, or like me, watch the blog posts and Flickrbursts for second-order ripples.

[And in terms of allusions to the rather-overrated real 'Fab Four', Matt, I'd certainly rather have delusions of grandeur being a Teo Macero, Manfred Eicher, or Brian Eno, rather than a George Martin any day, but hey, I ain't quibbling about being a 'fifth Beatle' in this company.]

One of that fantastic four, Matt Webb (the George Harrison, perhaps?!), is also moving on imminently. So I want to take this opportunity to publicly thank him hugely for all the fantastic work he's contributed to my team, the department, and in fact no less than the future of BBC radio. Seriously, Matt - along with his excellent colleague Tom and the rest of the team - have contributed vast amounts of landscape-changing thoughts and projects to BBC Radio and Music during his 18-months or so here. Too many to list here, but his impact has been positive and profound. So again, I thank him for his sharp mind, consummate professionalism, astonishing creativity and sly humour and wish him well on his next journeys, wherever they may be.

January 26, 2005

Radio Player v2: It's all about the content

We launched a new version of the BBC Radio Player today. Go to bbc.co.uk/radio or bbc.co.uk/music and click the 'Launch BBC Radio Player' button to see/hear it.

It's just live, so there's inevitably a few tweaks and errors to fix (i.e. erroneous scroll bars in Mac Safari and Firefox etc.) - please bear with us. But this one is a huge step forward in terms of the amount of BBC radio content you can now access. We've tried to foreground the content rather than features in this version, whilst improving the navigation. We're also enabling browsing whilst listening, which has necessitated the use of framesets, but this reinforces a coherent approach across our emerging 'family of on demand products' (News Player, Sport Player etc.). There's over 500 hours of quality programming in there, across networks and genres:

"Newly available programmes include: Colin & Edith, Jo Whiley and Vernon Kay (Radio 1); Steve Wright, Sarah Kennedy and Ken Bruce (Radio 2); Morning on 3 and Performance on 3 (Radio 3); Ace & Invisible and Rampage (1Xtra); Night Train (6 Music); Midday News (Five Live); and Drive with Nikki Bedi and Breakfast with Gagan Grewal (Asian Network)."

"The new Radio Player also features live streaming of every one of the BBC's English local radio and national stations: Radio Scotland and Radio Nan Gaidheal; Radio Wales and Radio Cymru; Radio Ulster and Radio Foyle; all 40 of the BBC's local radio stations."

More here: BBC Press Office

There are a few little apps-type extras in there - watch for a minimise button appearing soon, for instance, for those worried about the increased size of the player; plus a 'resume listening where you left off' function; plus a brand new back-end - and then we move right on to development of a yet more sophisticated version (possibles: personalisation, ratings, multiple formats etc.).

But hope you like the improvements for now, and agree with the approach of getting the content out there clearly. As ever, I'd be interested in your reactions. Major tip of the hat to our teams here, particularly Dawn Budge, Conal Jones, Andy Maclarty, Neil Slater, Dan Taylor, Jamie Tetlow and others who helped out on it.

December 06, 2004

Alan Moore interviews Brian Eno

If you're in or near London on 14 December, you could go to see Alan Moore interview Brian Eno. BBC Radio 4's Chain Rection show is being recorded and you stand a chance of getting tickets via the link below. Here's the spiel:

"Chain Reaction: Simplicity itself. A well-known public figure begins the series by interviewing the person of their choice. The following week the interviewee gets the chance to chat to the person of their choice. And so and so on."

14 December Alan Moore interviews Brian Eno. Award-winning author, Alan Moore, has written some of the best comic book stories, in the industry, for the past two decades. Moore's many credits include such groundbreaking works as Watchmen and Miracleman. Brian Eno found fame with 70s glamsters Roxy Music and went on to explore the aesthetics of ambient and 'Fourth World' music. A prolific artist, he also turns his hand to videos, film music and art installations."

Quite looking forward to hearing who Eno chooses ...

BBC Radio 4: Chain Reaction: Alan Moore interviews Brian Eno

November 22, 2004

On Demand BBC radio listening figures

Please excuse the BBC-centric post (again), but our on-demand listening stats have been released for the first time today, as reported in The Guardian. Most, if not all, is driven by our RadioPlayer. This quote indicates some of the salient points:

"Unsurprisingly, Radio 1 has the most online listeners, but the statistics also show that on-demand radio is taking off across the board. The most popular "listen again" shows have been Radio 4's adaptation of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and repeats of The Archers. Others stand out as having disproportionately large "listen again" audiences, particularly specialist shows, often broadcast at an inconvenient hour or perhaps undiscovered by listeners until they see it promoted. The listening figures for October are the highest to date. In the past year, the number of hours spent listening to live online radio has risen from 4.7m to 6.1m. But it is the on-demand listening figures that show the steepest rise. The number of requests per month for on-demand shows over the year has almost doubled from 4.5m to 7.7m. And the increase in on-demand listening hours is even more striking, rising from 1.8m to 4.1m."
MediaGuardian: Sharp rise for on-demand

November 12, 2004

Podcasting In Our Time

I mentioned BBC Radio and Music - where I work - are offering mp3 downloads of Radio 4's In Our Time. Thanks to m'learned colleague Matt Webb, you can now get it as a podcast too. Find out more at Matt's site or if you know what to do, here's the link.

Interconnected: In Our Time as a podcast

November 04, 2004

More BBC radio mp3 action: Radio 4's In Our Time available now

I'm pleased to be able to mention that BBC Radio & Music are now offering you the chance to download each edition of Melvyn Bragg's weekly Radio 4 programme, "In Our Time" - a discussion show on "the history of ideas". This first show is about the origins of electricity ...

As with all our recent mp3 downloads, it's on a trial basis for 7 days after broadcast. So give us feedback on it via the link below. Each edition will be available soon after broadcast. [Other BBC radio downloads in the current trial: 1xtra Barack Obama documentary; Five Live Fighting Talk]

BBC Radio 4: In Our Time mp3 download

November 02, 2004

Another BBC radio mp3 available

We have another free mp3 of BBC radio available, this time over at 1xtra. It's a rather topical documentary on US Democrat politician Barack Obama.

There are more details about the documentary here and you can download it here.

October 26, 2004

John Peel RIP

Terribly sad news today - the brilliant broadcaster John Peel has died. He was an absolute inspiration to so many ... Via his BBC Radio 1 show, he shaped so much music over the last 30 years, and stood for an unswerving commitment to new music from his first show to his last. The end of an era. Will miss his voice terribly.

Ex-colleague Paul Gambaccini is talking to Simon Mayo on BBC Radio Five Live currently and suggesting that no one has even listened to as wide a range of music as Peel, given how every day was spent listening to new music and that the birth of commercial gramophone coincides with Peel's life pretty closely ...

Gambaccini then listed a few of the artists that Peel's Radio 1 show 'broke' in the UK and beyond - not that Peel would ever have attempted to claim such a thing, always looking further forwards and backwards for new sounds. Gambaccini's off-the-cuff list includes the likes of The Clash, Sex Pistols, Roxy Music, Althea and Donna, Led Zeppelin, Pulp, Leonard Cohen, Joy Division, Laurie Anderson, The Undertones, Elton John etc. I'd personally add bringing Frank Zappa and Captain Beefheart to UK. He brought punk, reggae and hip-hop to the UK. Even given that list, he stood for the smaller bands - the newest, most dangerous sounds. A personal memory is regularly driving back from football on Wednesday nights in my friend Paul Morgan's car, listening to his show and hearing the darkest of darkcore jungle, or some insanely brutal thudding techno, followed by some scratchy Charley Patton-style delta blue from the 1920s, segued from one into the other without a care in the world about musical pigeonholes or the narrowmindedness of others. Gives a vague sense of the range of the man.

He played his favourite record, Teenage Kicks by The Undertones, twice in a row. Few shows went by without a track by The Fall. I'd sometimes see him ambling around Broadcasting House in his baggy old jumper - an amiable presence, with a bag containing the successful demo CDs which weren't dispatched from his car window during the drive in from Suffolk. He was a Liverpool fan to boot. Perhaps as he was so completely genuine and sincere, and yet incredibly funny and approachable, he somehow worked on Radio 1, Radio 4 and the World Service simultaneously. As a broadcaster and curator he was completely unpredictable, in the best sense. The Peelenium gives another flavour of his obsession with interesting sounds. His 20 years' worth of listener-generated 'charts of the year', the Festive Fifty, put real listener interaction into broadcasting - and just check those lists for a snapshot of all that's good in popular music over those years. Alternatively, the legendary Peel Sessions series gives another indication of how Peel stood for caring about the breadth and range of music. A daring DJ, a shining pillar of the BBC and one of the greatest influences on UK music ever - he'll be much missed.

John Peel RIP.

BBC News: Legendary radio DJ John Peel dies
BBC Radio 1: John Peel passes away
BBC Radio 1: Peel tributes (inc. Damon Albarn and Jarvis Cocker, amongst countless others)
BBC News: Mark Radcliffe's tribute
Wikipedia: John Peel

September 22, 2004

Hitchhikers (R4); Late Junction (R3)

Please forgive the BBC-centric nature of these two links. But two things of recent import at work.

a) The fantastic BBC Radio 3 show Late Junction recently celebrated its fifth birthday. One of the best shows on radio anywhere, imho. Fiona Talkington celebrated by playing the great World Standard and the supreme Tabula Rasa by Arvo Pärt, amongst other choice cuts (check the tracklisting). Many happy returns!

b) The new recordings of the legendary Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy hit BBC Radio 4 this week. You can hear the shows, and even play the game - a not-very-updated (on purpose!) version of the classic '80s adventure game based on the series [Flash]. The game was scripted originally by Douglas Adams himself and the updated version is suitably respectful, but does include new graphics by the legendary (for some of us of a certain age) Rod Lord, ironically actually done using a computer this time. There are more details on the making of the new game, and tons more Hitchhikers stuff on the Radio 4 site. Nice one, Chris Berthoud, Roger Philbrick and the rest of Radio 4 Interactive, as well as game developers Sean Solié, Rod Lord and Shimon Young.

July 28, 2004

Ripples, or "The Social Life of a Broadcast"

The recent redesign of the BBC Radio 3 site featured a joint project between the BBC's Radio & Music Interactive department (where I work, running the Technology & Design team) and Central New Media division to deliver unique, persistent pages per programme. Tom Coates, of my aforementioned team, has written an excellent summary of both the practical aspects of the project and the significance of the work from a user experience point-of-view. Go read Tom's summary because a) it's very good, and b) will appropriately detail the fine people who worked on the site. I thought I'd step back a bit and talk about the genesis of the project, and the thought process behind the project from my point-of-view, as a new media professional working in radio and music for the BBC.

Building on some related work around automated search results for programme information and some informal r&d that Tom Coates and Matt Webb led around time-based navigation models, I wondered if we could jam these ideas together to deliver something I'd been wanting to address for a while: in short-hand, making a radio site blog-friendly. Or rather, beginning to create a site which presented information spaces of the appropriate shape, size, and formal quality to enable them to be informational building blocks for others.

We could devise a solution for building a database of every single programme Radio 3 broadcast out of the radio production feeds and systems we have to hand. We could further create a page for this, hooked around a persistent URI. We had our first chance to deliver this with Radio 3's then-imminent redesign.

On the one hand, this was about simply representing the breadth, depth, and richness of Radio 3's output, from one-off documentaries and specialist output to daily shows. In essence, properly representing everything we broadcast. But beyond that, this is also about beginning to model something I'd described as 'the social life of a broadcast', building on an idea I'd had for enabling and tracking the ripples of conversation and meaning around broadcasts.

Ripples around radio
When the BBC started producing websites supporting broadcast media, the approach (before my time/reasonably enough at the time) was to essentially 'cherry-pick' key shows and hand-build bespoke properties around those shows. So previously, and in broad brushstrokes, Radio 3 had selected shows to represent thoroughly online - over and above the BBC's transient What's On listings feed, that is - adding further editorial where possible. This had been pretty successful.

And yet, looking from a different angle, we can surmise that all radio broadcasts have some impact or stimulate some discussion in 'real life'. For example, and in a tip-of-the-iceberg kinda way:

  • people share reactions during broadcast if near the same radio, or after broadcast - chatting in a café; on the phone; in the hairdressers; in personal letters and emails;
  • there are 'water cooler' moments ('events' like the Last Night of the Proms, of course, but then also 'specialist water coolers' will react to specialist shows),
  • there are press reviews a week later,
  • letters and phone calls to either the BBC, or to newspapers/magazines in reaction to those reviews

Ripples, before

So we see the broadcast causing a series of 'ripples' through social space over time.

We've now witnessed the rapid expansion and growth of a new and fertile social space online, built around personal publishing systems (like blogs, Livejournals, or community discussion spaces like messageboards). Similarly, transient conversational spaces conjured by instant messaging. Similarly, smart social software tools built around personal workflow and self-expression, like Flickr, Audioscrobbler, Mixmatcher etc.

And consequently, as well as numerous Google queries for radio shows, we have the chance to provide some hooks and frames for many of conversations enabled above.

The hand-built approach was not scalable to the demands of covering 10 national radio networks (for example, Radio 4 alone broadcasts over 10000 different shows per year) and certainly couldn't thoroughly cover Radio 3's output. So those Google queries often had nowhere to go on our sites (see below) - we were not serving this increasing demand. Moreover, we hadn't been providing basic foundations upon which people could actually build conversation, critique and reflection in this new space. In order to stimulate this space we need to give people something to build on; to hook on to.

Our colleagues over in BBC News built one of the building blocks of blog world. The granularity and permanence of those content blocks enables people to build around it, link to it, discuss. Just check Technorati for an idea of how a significant chunk of the blogosphere builds around BBC News. We just couldn't do that with our radio content, and yet BBC radio was generating 'discussable' content at the same rate as BBC News. So those 'real world' conversations about radio couldn't be mirrored online.

I'd personally witnessed here how difficult it is to build blog entries around R&M content. Google for the Radio 3 'Sunday Feature' documentary on the brilliant Brazilian music 'tropicalia' e.g.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=Radio+3+Tropicalia&btnG=Google+Search

Or google for a Radio 4 documentary called 'Devil's Architect', about Nicholas Hawksmoor e.g.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=Radio+4+Devil%27s+Architect+Nicholas+Hawksmoor&btnG=Google+Search

When I wrote the initial project proposal around this, cityofsound, with entries around these two BBC radio programmes, came out top on both occasions (currently third, and it's interesting to see now how both the new Radio 3 site is already more relevant (not specifically around that specific programme, but not bad) and how the rest of the net has been tracking those programmes). A year on, the Hawksmoor documentary is now referred to from a few places it wasn't previously.

However, it's still the case that there is no meaningful sign that either show ever really existed on the BBC site. Nor did I have anywhere to link to when writing my blog entries in the first place.

Observing referrers coming into my site, we can see a demand for more information about such shows. Look at these screenshots of my blog's referrer logs, with search engine queries for the above shows [click these thumbnails for detail]:

referrer_radio3tropicalia Query for 'Tropicalia';
referrer_radio4devilsarchit Query for 'Hawksmoor';

[check the bottom of the browser window to see the search string]

Others have made similar observations.

Why make more ripples around radio?
I've selected some choice examples above, but they're fairly representative of the type of shows which were falling between the cracks of an approach which focuses on hand-building and cherry-picking. They're typical of specialist BBC content - often content which helps make the BBC especially distinctive and arguably one of the real strengths of the BBC - in producing shows in the niches; in the spaces left untouched by many other broadcasters.

These shows often have deep resonance for their audience, but their existence can still disappear without trace even in the 'real world', except in the intimate conversations noted above. This has been noted in the context of radio drama on Radio 3. This from Adam Thorpe in The Guardian last year:

"(Production of radio drama) goes on day after day, week after week, in a range of styles that leaves television's one-track realism far behind. And yet, radio is a Cinderella medium. Just one Radio Times cover a year is devoted to this last Reithian bastion. Meanwhile, the superior intelligence and imagination of Radio 3 and 4's drama output (let alone its features) is so taken for granted that it goes virtually unnoticed."

"The odds seem to be stacked against radio drama being regarded as an art form. For the cultural powers-that-be, it can never be much more than a platinum version of The Archers. And here's the rub: no newspaper or journal (with the exception, occasionally, of the Times Literary Supplement) ever reviews the latest radio play separately from, say, Gardener's Question Time. Two of our greatest living dramatists, Edward Bond and John Arden, have followed the example of Samuel Beckett and given up mainstream theatre for the radio; Bond's latest play, broadcast in May and focusing on the world of arms manufacturers, went virtually ignored."

"Even when reviews do appear, they treat radio plays as blacked-out stage plays. There is none of the distinctive critical language found in music or dance criticism - yet radio drama is as stylised as either. Technical notions of the type usually associated with film - crossfades and cuts, acoustics, music, sound effects - are entirely ignored."

"(H)ow many of these (radio plays) made the slightest ripple? They were appreciated in private all over the country, no doubt; perhaps this makes radio drama more truly an expression of the people's soul than any other medium. It is certainly one of the few art forms uninfected by commercial pressures or the cretinous reign of the celebrity. Nobody gets rich making radio plays." [my emphasis] The Guardian: The Best Plays You've Never Seen

So I wondered whether we could help make those ripples visible; about building on those private reactions to radio content; about the internet sharing radio's ability to express people's soul. In one of those beautiful and accidental moments of serendipity, I discovered this article just as I was thinking through metaphors for broadcast media and the social spaces of the web. The fact it referred to ripples was just too strong a coincidence to ignore.

Some implementation details then: first and foremost, we needed a way of denoting a unique reference for a Radio 3 programme which is as permanent as can be. The URL structure derived from that is pretty important. Then we need to devise ways of automating the production of programme pages, built around content object models based on our incredibly complex output; and then devise new ways of navigating towards this content, taking on board the bewildering range of programme formats the BBC broadcasts). This has been built for the Long Now - though they may not have used that phrase! Tom has much more on the detail here - cos he and the team did it.

If such a system were in place, and if it were desirable to pursue some of the opportunities this would afford, we could pursue an even richer relationship between broadcast media in the form of Radio 3 and new media.

  • We could model upcoming programmes, gathering user-generated material for the show/production teams before broadcast, where applicable/desirable (potentially, a We-Media-like tactic);
  • more effectively communicating the existence of upcoming programmes;
  • switch mode during broadcast to represent when a programme is currently playing;
  • then provided an excellent place to situate the opportunity to listen to the programme again, while we can, via our radio-on-demand Radio Player;
  • also potentially garnering user/listeners comments and reaction, whilst accreting further knowledge and feedback around the subject area after broadcast (from "I loved Gidon Kremer's reading of Shostakovitch here" to "You pronounced Shostakovitch wrong");
  • in turn stimulating wider discussions about BBC radio broadcasts both across bbc.co.uk and in the highly discursive, highly socialised environment which has emerged on the internet.

Ripples, after

This is idle speculation/grand strategy at this point - as are many other development ideas which could really increase user agency around our programme information. More to follow, hopefully. But we now have a new foundation in place at Radio 3.

The opportunities for interaction around broadcasting could be quite profound, and yet whether some presenters or shows will want or need to respond to these 'ripples' in this way is open to question. Whether it's truly desirable for many shows is something we'll have to investigate, probably on a case by case basis. However, the potential is there now, and it begins to solve some problems we were already having around the basic issue of linkability. It also begins to blur the edges between the Radio 3 site and the sites and spaces that Radio 3 listeners also inhabit, weaving new patterns into the fabric of the web.

Essentially, I now know that as well as chatting in the office about how Radio 3's superb Late Junction played the Billy Cobham track that Massive Attack sampled, I can now link to that particular programme ... and just as the memory of those discussions won't erode, I know that link won't rot.

July 19, 2004

Radio Player survey

We're constantly iterating the Radio Player (our 'live listening' and 'radio-on-demand-like' service here at the BBC, available as a pop-up console via http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/, and across our radio and music websites) - and as part of this process, we're interested in people's views on the current version. There's a quick survey (approx 5 minutes to complete) on our site. It'd be great if you could share some of your reactions with us, in order to help keep the product moving on ...

BBC Radio Player Survey

July 03, 2004

Publishing from a muddy field ...

"Oh is this the way they say the future's meant to feel?
Or just 20,000 people standing in a field."
[Pulp, "Sorted for E's and Whizz"]

And all of them taking pictures with their phones ...

Another small step forward recently (well, for us, within the context of the BBC anyway). My software team were part of a project to build what we're calling the Mobile Interactive Producer, or MIP (gotta hava TLA). This enables BBC radio & music producers and broadcasters to post images and text directly from a mobile phone on to a relevant bits of the BBC's various radio & music websites, direct from the field - and in the case of Glastonbury recently, I mean the field.

Moblogging is hardly new, but the real work here was thinking through the issues around as secure an interaction as possible (big name DJs standing in middle of rock festival with direct uplink to web via mobile is an interesting scenario to work with) and getting it to work within the BBC server environment, which is built to scale to hundreds of thousands of concurrent users but not necessarily to enable dynamic real-time data interchange. After snapping the pic, categories (or destinations) and captions could be inserted in the text component of the MMS. After verifying the authenticity of the communication, the software then builds photo gallery pages automatically, with auto-resizing of images to fit. For the record, I believe producers and broadcast assistants generally used Nokia 6600's, but it's been built to work with any camera phone, as it simply uses MMS. We've got more work to do around ensuring URIs for each photo etc. and permanent linkability. We've also had interesting discussions regarding 'image quality versus immediacy' - I'm tending towards the latter being more important in this context (we should probably manage the users' expectations more at this point - yet that will all become somewhat academic as phone cameras keep advancing in quality).

The initial results are gently compelling, to my mind, having a real sense of immediacy and intimacy. Have a browse around the galleries for Glastonbury 2004 (e.g. Radio 1's Vernon Kay in Tent City), Red Hot Chilli Peppers gig over at Radio 1 as well as Pete Tong in Ibiza, and Five Live broadcasting from Euro 2004 in Portugal.

Notes: It's an extension of the mobile messaging infrastructure built for the 10 Hour Takeover - again the principles of loosely-coupled extensible architecture come into play, all Matt Biddulph's thinking - and credit in my team should go to the various Matts: Patterson, Webb, and Biddulph, plus Paul Hammond (as well as others in related teams: Dan Pike, James Whitmarsh, plus those who build the eventual repositories for the pix). Next development is to publish SMS from phones to the BBC Radio's LiveText streams over DAB and Freeview ...

April 26, 2004

Talk radio pre-Howard Stern

Recently discovered this reference to fictional parody of the BBC Third Programme (what BBC Radio 3 used to be called) in a 1962 John Updike short story, called "The Astronomer":

"Bela lit a cigar and, managing its fresh length and the wineglass with his electric certainty of touch, talked. Knowing that, since the principal business of my employment was to invent the plots of television commercials, I was to some extent a humourist, he told me of a parody he had seen of the B.B.C. Third Porgramme. It involved Bertrand Russell reading the first five hundred decimal places of π, followed by twenty minutes of silent meditation led by Mr. T. S. Eliot, and then Bertrand Russell reading the next five hundred places of π."

They don't make 'em like that anymore.

(From Updike's collection, Pigeon Feathers and other stories.)

April 12, 2004

Takeover Radio

If you're reading this between 10am-8pm GMT on Easter Monday 2004, right now there's a system we've built at BBC Radio & Music Interactive which is driving Radio 1. During this time, those of you in the UK can text your choice of artist and track into Radio 1 and they'll play it. More or less. Basically, they have no scheduled playlist whatsoever, and every track Radio 1 plays over a 10 hour period will be chosen by the listeners. This is the Radio 1 10-hour takeover, letting listeners really shape the broadcast. And we built the system that's running it: aggregating texts, doing fuzzy matching on artist and song names, looking for and learning from patterns etc. When I say "we" I in no way mean "me", of course, as I haven't coded in anger for years. The credit should go to my fab software team.

For more on the super-situated software that the team wrote (i.e. written to work for about 3 people in a small studio, albeit handling tens of thousands of incoming txts), check Matt Biddulph's story of what we built for Radio 1. Some good choice words in Matt's description: "foundation of components", "interop(erability)", "loosely-coupled layers", "resilient", "clusterability", "generic and useful in other contexts". For some of you, this software design will be of interest long after the listeners have handed control back ...

Hack diary: Moyles-proof code

April 08, 2004

Free speech(es)

'Scuse the plugs, but it's been a relatively big day at work today. That is, at BBC Radio & Music Interactive.

An iteration (v1.6 if you're counting) of our Radio Player (radio on demand 'console'), which should mean it works better in Macs, fixes a few major usability flaws (though not all, yet), offers better nav, and some stuff like "mail this show to a friend" kind of functionality. Well done to our fine Tech & Design team (take a bow: Dawn Budge, Jason Cowlam, Nat Darke, Claire Griffiths, Michael Koderisch, Bronwyn van der Merwe, Russell Miller, Kate Rogers, who've all worked on it at various stages) + the mighty Dan Taylor. Much much more to follow here, as we get cracking on version 2. You can get at it via BBC Radio.

But an equally big deal ('till v2) is that we managed to push through offering this year's BBC Reith Lectures as DRM-free, mp3 downloads. They'll be added to the site after each lecture (looks like first one will go up Thursday morning). This may not sound like a big deal to folks, but this 'trial' is something we haven't managed to do before - so we're hoping there's a good reaction from punters. If the trial's successful (in terms of downloads and public reaction) we hope to be able to do more of this stuff. This year's lectures are by playwright Wole Soyinka, concerning "The Climate of Fear". Go have a listen, and let me/us know what you think. I'd be interested in your thoughts.

BBC Radio 4: Reith Lectures 2004

April 01, 2004

Eno puts the arch into Archers

April fool! Our Today programme joined forces with The Independent to try to wind up middle England this morning, as an elaborate April Fool based around Brian Eno remixing The Archers theme tune [non-UK context: The Archers is a long-running popular radio-based daily soap about everyday country folk; non-music context: Brian Eno is a genius who has changed the face of popular music several times over the last 30 years]

"In recent years Ambridge has become a racy hotbed of affairs and scandals. To the extent that the jovial, uplifting tune is deemed to be out of date - not reflecting the new urban problems facing the local residents. To increase the appeal to a younger audience, BBC executives have commissioned composer and musician Brian Eno to remix the existing tune."

BBC Radio 4: Today: New Archers Theme Tune
The Independent: Tum-ti tum-ti tum-ti tum... kerrang. Ambridge in uproar over Eno's 'new-wave' theme tune
MediaGuardian: Were you fooled?

March 16, 2004

Job, BBC R&Mi

Software Engineer job at BBC Radio & Music Interactive.
BBC Jobs: Software Engineer

[NOW CLOSED]

February 20, 2004

Broadcast assassins

Are new technologies changing the way you consume traditional media? (I'd imagine the answer is yes...) If so, a post at m'learned colleague Tomski's site may be of interest, particularly if you want to a) help the BBC learn more about bleeding edge media consumption, and/or b) earn 50 quid.

Tomski: BBC looking for scary future folk

November 20, 2003

Room 101

Rachel Whiteread's Room 101 sculpture is unveiled at the Victoria & Albert museum. Think I might go and check this this weekend. This is a plaster cast of the interior of room number 101 in the BBC's Broadcasting House building, supposedly part of the inspiration for George Orwell's Room 101 in 1984. I sought out this room as soon as I started working at BH ... but it was locked. Probably just as well.

As I've mentioned before, I live opposite the supposed inspiration for the Ministry of Truth, UCL's Senate House building. I'm hemmed in.

November 02, 2003

IllNation on adaptation

Over at IllNation, IA Steve Hunt picks up on the BBC homepage design and further investigates how it relates to the adaptive design ideas I've been kicking around. I had the pleasure of meeting Steve when he worked on the homepage team (I mainly remember making the case that the link to the BBCi Music site should be 'above the fold', so hardly as full of "knowledge and expression of ideas" as Steve remembers! But thanks ...) and I'll return the compliments. His work at the BBC exhibited all the attention to detail and ability to see a bigger picture that he's now demonstrating on his fine IllNation blog. I'm enjoying the read ...

Steve details how the homepage works adaptively - in my presentation, I did place it closer to the personalisation end of a 'continuum of adaption' (notes viewable in the .ppt), but in no way meant that it wasn't as subtly clever a piece of work that Steve and others had achieved. He's right to pick out how it actually quite different to 'conscious' personalisation. It's very smart indeed, and in its emphasis on behaviour, a landmark piece of work. As Steve says:

"Adaptation should be more organic than (simple personalisation). It needs to learn the behavior of it's audience. By all means, indicate the learning process by offering feedback to it's user, but I really believe that the adaptation should be gentle by design"

Quite so.

IllNation: Congruousness

October 18, 2003

Elite, tiny Acorns, and Britain in the 80s

Excellent article in The Guardian today, actually an extract of the forthcoming book Backroom Boys, by Francis Spufford. Took me right back to 1982, when the 12-year old me started fiddling about with a BBC microcomputer at school (yes, for those who weren't in the UK, the BBC actually made a computer (in conjunction with Acorn computers) to accompany a TV series about the new 'home computer revolution'.) The key game, even key informational product, of the era was Elite, and Spufford tells the story of how David Braben and Ian Bell made it.

Spufford is very good at distilling the way the game was devised, coded, and eventually picked up by the prescient Acorn ("a coder's company", significantly). But also on the seemingly unlimited potential of those early machines, akin to crystal radio-like boxes, loading programs off cassette tapes into 2kb of RAM. Remember this feeling?

"If you had a certain kind of mind, as Braben did, the muteness of the machine, when you turned it on, was full of promise, not disappointment. It meant that it was going to do whatever you told it to do; whatever you could think of to tell it to do. It was a slicer, a condenser, a heaper-up, a puller-down, a sorter, a randomiser, a multiplier, a weaver, a mirror-image maker, and far more."

Braben and Bell developed the game almost despite the culture they were situated in (by then, Cambridge University), where some of the more useless aspects of British culture would be intensified - particularly a suspicion of technological progress, of Two Cultures not talking, little idea of how innovation could be commercialised, and a problem with aspects of 'the modern' in general:

"They had come to a place where the arts/science split in British education (and British culture, for that matter) manifested itself as a social split ... There was a wider dimension to the split as well. In 1982, popularised science hadn't yet risen above the horizon in Britain as a cultural phenomenon. No chaos theory as a universal reference point; not much evolutionary biology, since Richard Dawkins and Stephen Jay Gould were only then beginning to make their mark on public consciousness; no cosmology deployed à la Stephen Hawking as a modern replacement for religious truths. In particular, computing in its DIY phase didn't resonate as it would later. You wouldn't have found French literary theorists writing about cyberspace in 1982, any more than they'd have written about household plumbing. Computers weren't glamorous."

That I remember well. Despite the promise offered, as noted above, when staring at those strangely compelling virtually blank screens (Oh how different to today's cluttered desktops and their workaround fixes), this was not a glamorous business. It was, to all intents and purposes, invisible. Spufford makes further interesting connections with wider cultural shifts at the time, placing the game in the context of the Thatcher years and  the associated 'libertarian' instinct - something which may have stunted meaningful development of this culture as much as enabled it:

"(In Elite,) one thing you couldn't do was cooperate with anyone. All the other apparent actors in the game universe were ingenious mathematical routines in paper-thin disguise. You were on your own with your enemies and the market prices. In this, of course, the game was beautifully in sync with the times. Margaret Thatcher had recently declared that there was no such thing as society; in the game universe, that was literally true. Bell and Braben were creating a cosmos of pure competition. It was a kind of reflection, not of the reality of 1980s Britain, but of the defiant thought in the heads of those who were benefiting from Thatcherism, who wanted to believe that behaviour not much more complex than the choices you got in the game was enough to satisfy the country's needs. Bell and Braben got a lot of the inspiration for the game's universe from the "libertarian" American sci-fi they were reading, but at that time they also shared a broadly Conservative outlook. If Thatcher represented clear ideas with hard edges, they were on her side. Soon after they signed up with Acornsoft, she won the 1983 election."

Non-politically, perhaps the clearest indicator of how the times have a-changed is exemplified by Thorn EMI's reaction to Braben and Bell's offer:

"(Thorn EMI) sent a rejection letter that missed the point with almost comical thoroughness. "It said," remembers Braben, "'The game needs three lives, it needs to play through in no more than about 10 minutes, users will not be prepared to play for night after night to get anywhere, people won't understand the trading, they don't understand 3D, the technology's all very impressive but it's not very colourful'."

Ah, again, you feel there must be light years between that quote and our world of MMORPGs (most people thought Star Wars was a film!), PC Baangs, and the titanic video games industry. It is 20 whole years, but the connection between then and now is Elite.

The Guardian: Masters of their universe
Amazon.co.uk: Backroom Boys: The Secret Return of the British Boffin
Google directory: Elite

October 15, 2003

The Radio Player in fiction

Minor walk-on part for the BBCi Radio Player in Jonathan Raban's Waxwings (rough notes on this book), as chief protagonist Tom, splitting from his wife (who works for fictional real-estate site Getashack.com), wiles away the wee small hours in Seattle:

"Although Tom sometimes bought books via Amazon or Bibiofind and hid dickered around on the Getashack site, he'd never spent much time on the Internet, yet every night now he crossed the Atlantic by mouse. He printed out crosswords from The Guardian and The Times, then holed up in the kitchen, trying to figure out 'In the past, you once strayed disastrously (9)'. At 10p.m. he'd go up to the study with a glass of wine, to click through to the BBC and listen to tomorrow's news, live on the Today programme with Sue MacGregor and John Humphreys." [p.122-123]

We tend think of the Radio Player as timeshifting radio content i.e. enabling you to 'listen again' if you missed a show, or catch a post-broadcast show at your convenience. Raban inadvertently reminds me that distance can seem to timeshift content forward; as in delivering 'tomorrow's news'.

October 12, 2003

Desert Island iPod

Desert Island Discs is one of radio's longest running shows, well, anywhere. It's been on air continually since 1942 (I believe), perhaps due to the simplicity of its format: each week a guest is invited to choose the eight records they would take with them to an imaginary desert island, plus one book, and one luxury, which must not be practical (i.e. not a rubber dinghy).

Coupla weeks ago, I heard Nick Hornby, writer of the excellent Fever Pitch, the not bad High Fidelity, and not much else (again, imho). His records were ok-ish, but his luxury item was genius: you got it, an iPod. He pretty much called into question 60 years of radio show format - the 8 records he'd chosen paled into insignificance compared to the 10000 he'd just snuck on to the notional island in his pocket (leaving aside problems of power supply, sand in firewire port etc.). I think Hornby and Sue Lawley (the host) agreed that it should be banned from that point on.

BBC Radio 4: Desert Island Discs: Nick Hornby

September 17, 2003

Jones the city

Some great stuff over at Matt's place (though his rss feed is broken I think).

September 11, 2003

Slippy city

As Yoz suggests, possibly the coolest page on the internet. Underworld's Karl Hyde talking about the lyrics to Born Slippy, as part of a English course over at the BBC World Service site. I thought these quotes were apposite here too:

"Where do you get the inspiration for your lyrics from, Karl?"

"For me, there is an inherent beauty in the city. I see the city  as a very very beautiful place. Even the underside of it. There's  a beauty even in the kind of... the forceful presentation of something.  As long as it's meant with no malice or anger or violence, there's  a beauty in its energy."

"What is 'Born Slippy' - a dream? A dream come true? Or is  it your view of reality?"

"In the simplest form, it's me walking through the streets of Soho  trying to get back home to Romford in Essex. I was referring  to myself reduced to a piece of meat, due to the fact  that I'd drunk too much. The bigger story is that I'm fascinated  by the kind of snapshots that  one retains when you've had a couple of drinks. These kind of very  precise snapshots one has of  a little piece of street, or of a rubbish bin, or of a tape-recorder...  I'm talking about being like a hoover, hoovering up all the images  and the sounds and the smells of the city. Because after all it's  cities that would inspire me."

August 29, 2003

The Register on BBCi

Despite being littered with misreadings, mishearings, inaccuracies, and guff, in my humble opinion, there's arguably some useful thoughts and some fair commentary in there. Oh what it is to be the centre of so much attention right now. Lucky we're not arrogant or anything ...
The Register: BBC news site facing extinction?

August 28, 2003

Creative archive, and archiving blogs

Two articles in The Grauniad strike particularly close to home today.

First up Danny O'Brien with more on the BBC, and particularly the Creative Archive idea.

"And if the BBC takes this route, it will have the biggest, most responsive file-distribution on the planet to help shift this treasure trove of material: the file-sharing networks. Presenting its archive material without restrictions would allow the BBC to occupy a niche that no other commercial company would dare to assume. It would allow them to tap a vast distribution system that no other company feels confident enough to use. It would serve a public good, in refilling the public domain diminished by companies attempting to restrict their customers' use of their works."

Can't say too much about this at the mo, for obvious reasons, but the situation is slightly more complex than Danny makes clear - but that's probably a problem with the format of the newspaper article rather than any failing on Danny's part. He clearly gets the opportunity afforded by this idea, that's for sure.

The Guardian: Auntie's digital revelation

M'colleague Tom Coates writes about blog aggregation. We had a quick chat about this at work the other day, and I think he's bang on in the assertion that the next challenge will be one of aggregation, filtering, and pattern recognition across a multiplicity of blogs - but beyond Google and its smart but even-handed treatment of blogs as simply pages, towards something that takes into account the particular characteristics of blogs themselves.

The Guardian: Second sight

Oh, and Tom's right - he doesn't look like that. Honest.

August 27, 2003

BBC Creative Archive

"We intend to allow parts of our programmes, where we own the rights, to be available to anyone in the UK to download so long as they don't use them for commercial purposes. Under a simple licensing system, we will allow users to adapt BBC content for their own use. We are calling this the BBC Creative Archive."

Amidst the mire of a really crappy day at work, this was a shining light. Great news to have the boss stand up there and deliver, while we're trying to work out how we do it right now, in terms of our very basic (currently) Radio Player. I keep promising more info on the Radio Player, its future development, and how you can have your say in that, I know. I will do, soon ...

As Matt points out, there's some great analysis at Oblamovka and Hanging Day. There's some doubt too, and it's certainly non-trivial, but Cory knows a bit more as he, like Lessig, came to talk to us recently and we talked him through some problems and opportunities. Watch that space.

BBC News: Dyke to open up BBC archive

Tories would close BBC website

Very interesting comments emerging over at Tom's place. I can't comment for the same reasons Tom can't but go read the debate if you care about the notion of public service and the web.

Plasticbag: Tories would close BBC website

August 08, 2003

Reviving a medium

"The future may lie in radio not television"

So says The Guardian. Couldn't have put it better meself.

"It may be too soon to be talking about a new golden age of radio, but it is fascinating that three new technological platforms - mobile phones, digital television and the internet - have revived the fortunes of a medium that was once thought to be in terminal decline."

MediaGuardian: Making waves

July 29, 2003

Through the round window

"The BBC has always called itself a temple of the arts. Now it's getting the buildings to match. By Jonathan Glancey."

Glancey writes a nice piece in The Guardian today. I've said a couple of things about the BBC's buildings programme recently, particularly in terms of the new Broadcasting House, where I work. I hadn't mentioned the new Music Centre though, but will be involved in the work directly there too, I hope. Here's more (John Smith is the BBC's Finance Director, btw):

"The most hotly debated of the new BBC buildings is the Music Centre at White City. Due to open in 2006, this will house the BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Symphony Chorus, BBC Concert Orchestra and BBC Singers in two concert hall studios. As this will be the gateway to the vast White City campus, the BBC is looking for an eyecatching design, "an iconic building", says John Smith, "which makes a statement and creates a buzz both inside and outside the BBC. We're not afraid to champion a controversial design; indeed, we relish the opportunity to rise to this challenge. We already attract the very best broadcasters, writers, actors and technicians. Now we want to add architects to the list ... Architects shortlisted for the Music Centre are Foreign Office, Future Systems, MVRDV (from Holland), Ushida Findlay and Zaha Hadid. Any one of these is capable of shaping an "iconic" building. All five have submitted what Smith describes as "thrilling" designs, and all five have been told to have another go because Smith and his team of judges believe they have all gone way over budget ... The point about the BBC is that it belongs to all of us. It is, in a cynically privatised world, a public corporation. Nothing, Lord Reith liked to say, "is too good for the public". Whether standards of broadcasting or of architecture, art and design."

The Guardian: Through the round window

July 01, 2003

Hugo Young on BBC

Hugo Young: BBC standing up for "special British principle that public ownership does not have to endorse a single public version of reporting."

June 27, 2003

Challenge to an architect

"To give tangible, architectural, expression to an ideal is a fascinating and daunting challenge. And when that ideal embraces powerful, yet essentially abstract, actions such as the gathering and dissemination of news, and has at its core the mission to inform, inspire, educate and entertain the public, then the challenge to the architect is truly awe-inspiring."

From Dan Cruickshank's foreword  to Nicola Jackson's new book "Building the BBC", accompanying the aforementioned exhibition at RIBA.

The book and the exhibition made me (even more) proud to work for the BBC, actually. It's not perfect, nor is it an easy place to work, but if you engage with the ideals behind it, it can be truly inspiring - as in the challenge described by Cruickshank. More on this later, including how we're interpreting the notions of 'transparency to the public' exemplified by the exhibition.

June 14, 2003

Learning govt; Interactivity at opendemocracy

LEARNING GOVERNMENT
GEOFF MULGAN, head of Tony Blair's Strategy Unit, describes how Whitehall's bureaucracy has learnt to learn from international examples
http://www.opendemocracy.net/debates/article-3-52-1280.jsp

A NEW WAY FOR GOVERNMENT?
openDemocracy editor, ANTHONY BARNETT, on why Mulgan's piece is more radical than it may appear
http://www.opendemocracy.net/debates/article-3-52-1285.jsp

YOUR TV IS NOT WATCHING YOU
David Burke's notion of interactivity as a threat to freedom and democracy is paranoid and misplaced argues ANDY MAYER
http://www.opendemocracy.net/debates/article-8-41-1286.jsp

June 09, 2003

Bricks and mortar at the BBC

New exhibition on the BBC's "new approach to architecture" at the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), 66 Portland Place, London W1, a few minutes walk north of Broadcasting House. Called Building the BBC: A Return to Form, the exhibition looks at the highs and lows of the BBC's architectural history as well as the current building programme ... Should be very interesting, given the new Broadcasting House project (going on around me as I write!) and new buildings at White City etc.

From the Beeb's intranet:

"The exhibition, which runs at Riba until June 28 before moving on around the country, is accompanied by a new book by architecture writer Nicola Jackson. 'I think that the book and the exhibition will make BBC employees really proud of the fact that their organisation is showing a real understanding of where architecture is at the moment,' says Jackson. 'The BBC is showing that it is possible to commission really thoughtful, efficient and friendly architecture without it costing the earth."

Radio 3's flagship arts programme, Night Waves, will also be broadcasting a debate on the value of architecture on June 12, marking the beginning of the network's year-long focus on the theme. Hurrah!

I'm off up the road right now ...

June 06, 2003

In which Tom discovers Radio 4

"I know that everyone else in the UK is going to look at me funny and point out that I should have been paying more attention several months ago."

Tom, I'm looking at you funny and pointing out you should have been paying more attention several months ago ;)

There's loads we (BBC Radio and Music Interactive, where I'm the Technology and Design Manager) aim to do with this kind of content, as we ramp up our audio on demand service, think about new platforms/distribution methods, redesign the BBCi Radio Player. I will get round to opening a discussion around the redesign of our audio on demand services here shortly, such that you have a chance to directly affect the design process of these products ...

Plasticbag: In love with Radio 4

March 29, 2003

Public Service Futures

Again, a self-indulgent post of things I need to check out - although enjoy if you're also interested in thinking about public service media, the BBC etc..

From OpenDemocracy's series on Public service futures. All the hits and more, including:

"Quality not profit", by Andrew Graham

"A leading British economist takes on the free market argument, and insists public service broadcasters are as necessary for a healthy society as fresh air."

"The BBC no longer washes whiter", by David Elstein

"Andrew Graham?s argument is seductive but wrong. The British experience shows public service broadcasting is wasteful, patronising and too close to power. A diverse, efficient future is coming ? thanks to the market."

"Purpose first, value second - but only if you mean it", David Elstein

"Social purpose is indeed essential to broadcasting ? something ignored in the recent ?market farces? of the UK sector. But funding sources and methods are still crucial in judging performance and value when the public?s money is being spent. The emotional preference for the public over the commercial sector inhibits the rational assessment of either."

"Turn on, tune in ? pay up?", by Todd Gitlin

"Democracy needs probing and accessible broadcasting news sources which commercial stations are unlikely to provide. David Elstein?s strong case for marketplace virtue remains at the level of potential. But, concludes the media co-editor, the shadow of audience tune-out threatens us all."

"He who pays the piper...", by Caspar Melville

"McKinsey's report on public service funding is an useful read and very supportive of the BBC - I wonder who paid for it?"

"Bringing oxygen into the magic circle", by Richard Collins

"The debate about public service broadcasting has been conducted in a pre-web frame. The whole argument is being altered by the experiences of new forms of public information as we go digital, says the British Film Institute?s head of education."

"Neither history nor mystery but reality", by David Elstein

"The core arguments against the way public sector broadcasting operates in the UK are restated by the media section co-editor: excessive cost, inefficiency, and (in the context of a fragmenting audience) anachronism. By the valid criterion of good value for public money, BBC and Channel 4 simply do not cut the mustard."

"Money can?t buy you broadcasting value", by Steven Barnett

"The old David Elstein understood what the new one has seemingly forgotten, that an obsession with cost leads to the worst of both worlds ? inefficiency as well as an erosion of the creative spirit. It is time to rethink."

Interactive TV in Britain

Thinking a lot about this stuff at the moment, so this and the following entry are markers for myself as much as anything. Sorry!

"Interactive television will bring the internet to the poor. At least that is one of the ways the British government accounts for massive spending on digital terrestrial television. But the silence is deafening as technological decisions are taken which will make delivery of this vision impossible, says the editor of Inside Digital TV."

OpenDemocracy: One-way traffic: the failed promise of iTV

March 28, 2003

Navigation is a political issue

"In a briefing note prepared for the House of Lords, (the BBC) concedes that BSkyB could legally consign the regional services to obscure parts of its on-screen channel menu, making them more difficult for viewers to find."

MediaGuardian: BBC may lose local listing on BSkyB

March 17, 2003

Sunday Papers I

Aaronovitch puts the BBC 'on trial' in The Observer today. It's a well-meaning and broadly balanced piece, which ends up generously optimistic - but then blows it all by wearing its N1/EC1 media luvvy credentials so visibly on its sleeve that any claim to objectivity is negated; any claim to relevance outside of those postal districts compromised.

The Observer: The people vs. the Beeb

Further, there's a lengthy piece on the changing nature of Saturday night viewing in British TV.

The Observer: The weekend stops here

There's also a nice piece on Art Deco in the Sindy today but though they may have the world's best designed newspaper, their website is such that I can't find it online.

"It created the 24-hour city, a world of constant illumination, fast-food dining and metropolitan living"

The Independent On Sunday