My year in 12 lines and photos
Wednesday, January 6th, 2010
Photo by Niamh Redmond
For the first post of 2010, I thought I would keep it short and sweet. Here are some of the highlights of my year, in 12 lines and photos. (more…)
Digital strategist that writes about online strategy, user experience, design and web marketing. You can read about me, contact me or follow me.

Photo by Niamh Redmond
For the first post of 2010, I thought I would keep it short and sweet. Here are some of the highlights of my year, in 12 lines and photos. (more…)

“Refresh Dublin is an event that promotes design, technology, usability and standards. It is a part of and inspired by the Refreshing Cities movement. The intent of Refresh Dublin is to provide a cross-discipline insight into all things design, interactive, creative and technical, so that different disciplines can learn from each other.” – RefreshDublin.org
How did Refresh Dublin start?
I noticed that Jared Spool was speaking at a Refresh Seattle event last May. The Portland and Boston events looked really good also. Refresh Belfast started earlier this year and that’s doing great – growing to over 200 attendees at the most recent event. Before long, the word was out and there was no turning back – Refresh Dublin was born. After a few tweets, e-mails and an initial meeting, a few people from the web and interactive media community in Dublin came on board.

The “Stanley Kubrick: Taming Light” website was launched last week. The exhibition runs until October 31st in the Lighthouse cinema. I was asked to design and develop the site, in keeping with Kubrick’s taste and style. (more…)

I really like this simple but elegantly designed site copypastecharacter.com (⌘C ⌘V Character) by Martin Ström and Konst & Teknik, a graphic design office based in Stockholm, Sweden, that deals with “art, technology and things in between”.

FITC (Flash in the Can) is one of the largest and longest running events for the design and technology community. The 2009 Toronto event celebrated what it means to “live, think and play outside the lines” this year, with three days packed full of inspiring sessions focused on the art and craft of interactive design and technology.
Interestingly, the “Flash in the Can” name is a reference to Adobe’s Flash software and CAN – taken from Canada. The inaugural festival previously focused strictly on Flash. However, the scope of events has broadened to include motion design, creative inspiration, mobile and gaming technologies as well as other forms of interactive and digital media technologies such as Flex, Air and others.