"The Digital Britain Report is the Government's strategic vision for ensuring that the UK is at the leading edge of the global digital economy. It is an example of industrial activism in a crucial growth sector.
The report contains actions and recommendations to ensure first rate digital and communications infrastructure to promote and protect talent and innovation in our creative industries, to modernize TV and radio frameworks, and support local news, and it introduces policies to maximize the social and economic benefits from digital technologies."
Got me watching BBC Parliament to see the announcement.
The Digital Britain was down after the announcement, leading to amusing comments on twitter.
It is available in PDF and MS Word formats
The report itself is 245 pages and the executive summary has 83 points, so here are my notes:
JPEG artifacts by every page number
Chapter 2: Being Digital
Chapter 2 is entitled "Being Digital", same title as a great book by Nicholas Negroponte published in 1995 where he tries to predict how the technologies will evolve. It's far more futuristic than this report, and the rate of change since 1995 is impressive.
P27 "Universal Broadband Service, at a speed of 2 Megabits per second, by no later than 2012"
P30 "The financial savings flowing from an ability to use comparison websites and online-only deals are worth an average of around £23 per month, per individual"
Economic benefits of digital inclusion by UK Online Centres (which disables right-clicks on links so I couldn't copy and paste, sigh)
P32 "It is already increasingly the case that those without access to the Internet suffer economic disadvantage"
P33 "Awareness of the Internet was widespread with only 3% of respondents saying they had never heard it"
P36 "Many of these personal computers could be put to secondary use". Computers are cheaper now, but affordability is key
P40 This figure is pointless and shows consultants were involved
P44-45 Shows how some television programmes can drive people online
Chapter 3a: A Competitive Digital Communications Infrastructure
No, I'm not quite sure why it's 3a either
P47 "The UK’s communications infrastructure is a vital enabler for the country’s society, economy, safety, security and well being"
P47-48 "In the case of broadband, realising the full value of the copper network cost tens of millions of pounds of investment; replacing it with a fibre network will take billions"
P48 "Our communications infrastructure finds itself in continuing and rapid technology evolution, in which the new
generation already looks unambitious by the time is fully rolled out. The Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) promised the ultimate international goal in 1984 of two telephone lines and a 16 Kbps data link to every home. The
Total Access Communications (TACS) mobile networks licensed in 1984 was viewed as the foundation of modern mobile communications, while the Videotex Services heralded as the last word in browsing for information. Not
only were none of them the last word, they were not even the last generation of “modern” networks but the generation before. All have been overtaken."
P48 "Next generation fixed fibre and cable networks offer not just conventional high-definition video entertainment and
games, but potentially more revolutionary benefits for our economy and society – telepresence, e-healthcare in the home and, for small and medium sized businesses, access to cloud computing (which substantially cuts hardware
and application costs and allows much more rapid product and service innovation)" seems rather unambitious and and odd place to hype cloud computing
P49 "The pattern over the past 25 years has been the arrival of more advanced fixed and mobile networks at roughly 8-10 years intervals and it should come as no surprise that the next cycle is coming up fast"
P50 "The areas of the country that are covered by the Virgin Media network already have local optical fibre rings that run through Virgin’s street cabinets serving typically 500-1000 homes. Broadband coaxial cables then connect to individual homes. Coaxial cable can support 4 Gbps bandwidth on a shared basis. Virgin Media will this year extend its 50Mbps offering...". Errr, 4Gbps/500 is 8Mbps, not 50Mbps
P50 "The other half of the country is served nearly exclusively by BT’s copper network as the only fixed network"
P50 "Without action being taken it is possible that entire metro areas could suffer data ‘brown outs’"
P52 "For those households who have it, broadband has become an essential utility as important as electricity, gas or voice telephony"
P53 "Universal availability of today’s network essentially requires incremental upgrades of existing infrastructure and the costs are therefore limited to the hundreds of millions of pounds. Delivering tomorrow’s network essentially involves installing a new network or networks, and the costs are in the billions... We will therefore take action on two fronts. First, we will ensure delivery of the Universal Service Commitment at 2Mbps, and second we will take action separately to address the issue of next generation broadband availability". This is the most important point that
people who have not read the report fail to grasp.
P54 "and wireless network engineered solutions (including satellite)" implies that 330k homes might be able to get 2Mbps but with the high latency of going via satellites in geostationary orbit
P54 "c.11%, or about 2.75m, homes cannot readily get a 2Mbps (or higher) broadband service today"
P56 image showing that Wales is a broadband deadzone
P59: "There are genuine negative consequences for a country still connected to the Internet at 14.4 Kbps today. In twenty years’ time, countries still connected to the Internet at 3.3Mbps (or the 256 Kbps that characterises the up-link speeds for many consumers today) will similarly be left behind" is a rare reference to up-link.
P59 "We welcome the substantial investment already taking place, and are confident that the UK’s competitive markets will provide the stimulus for further investment without any Government intervention, providing competitive coverage of superfast, next generation broadband for between half and two-thirds of the population"
P60-62 has interesting comparisons on how Finland (1Mbps by 2010, 100Mbps to 99% by 2016), Germany (1Mbps by 2010, 50Mbps to 75% by 2014), USA (US$7.2bn investment), Australia (FTTH or wireless by 2017) and
New Zealand (FTTH to 75% proposal) are investing in broadband.
P62-63 show the costs involved rolling out FTTC (£400 per connection) or FTTH (£2000 per connection)
P63-64 "There is no obvious means whereby the market, unaided, will serve the final third of the population. We therefore propose a Final Third Project to deliver at least 90% coverage of Next Generation broadband for homes and businesses by 2017"
P64 "The Government intends to propose a small general supplement on all fixed copper lines... from 2010 for a Next Generation Fund.... of 50p per month on fixed lines" is odd as it is the only price mentioned per month instead of per annum.
P65 "can be expected to raise £150m-£175m a year for the Fund" - it's not that much money.
P67 "there is at present no wholesale offering over Virgin Media’s network, a fact which BT and others have claimed is a factor limiting service innovation"
P69-70 "Today there is near universal coverage of GSM... But the extensive coverage we now take for granted with GSM has not yet happened with 3G networks... For these reasons, if we eventually move to a phasing out of GSM networks in favour of the next generation, we might face the end of universal mobile coverage in the UK. There are strong public policy arguments for wishing to preserve very extensive coverage" so it looks like GSM is here to stay
P79 "The Government... will, as part of its integrated package, convert existing 3G licences from time limited to indefinite" to help get to universal coverage for mobile broadband
P82 "one option is to make the provision of high speed broadband services part of the rail franchise requirements for train operators"
P82 "On the underground, the London Olympics in 2012, which will be the most digital Olympics in history, seems a particularly good reason for the Mobile Network Operators to work with the Mayor of London to provide and fund solutions to take the initiative to improve the broadband mobile access for mobile customers travelling by Tube"
Chapter 3b: Going Digital
P92 "digital offers a number of possibilities for radio to grow"
P93 "Radio services on MW will either upgrade to DAB or, if they are within the ultra-local tier, to FM. This will deliver an upgrade from FM to DAB and from MW to FM... by 2013" so by 2015 we will all need DAB receivers instead of FM
P94 "Digital radio is not now, nor should it be in the future, a single platform medium"
P95 "We are clear that at least for the foreseeable future DAB is the right technology for the UK" but they will hedge their bets with DAB+ or DMB-A
P97 "At a national level we will look to the BBC to begin an aggressive roll-out of its national multiplex to ensure its national digital radio services achieve coverage comparable to FM by the end of 2014..."
Chapter 4: Creative Industries in the Digital World
P109 "a significant proportion of consumers are choosing to access digital content unlawfully, principally via unlawful peer-to-peer file sharing" is a lot of unlawful
P111 "the Government will also provide for backstop powers for... Blocking (Site, IP, URL), Protocol blocking, Port blocking, Bandwidth capping (capping the speed of a subscriber’s Internet connection and/or capping the volume of data traffic which a subscriber can access); Bandwidth shaping (limiting the speed of a subscriber’s access to selected protocols/services and/or capping the volume of data to selected protocols/services); Content identification and filtering– or a combination of these measures.
P117 "introduce exceptional statutory maxima of £50,000 for all IP offences" to match penalties for online and physical copyright infringement
P119 "Industry participants argue that consumers should pay for a ‘right to copy’, reimbursing the copyright holder for the privilege of (a) retaining a recording of the material, and (b) being able to watch the material outside of the linear broadcast window" - but the Government will to add this as a tax on recording devices
Chapter 5: Public Service Content in Digital Britain
P140 "Free is very difficult for any paid-for business models to compete with"
P143 "the Government has therefore decided to consult openly on the idea of a Contained Contestable Element of the
Licence Fee used by or channelled through other organisations, primarily for news" might well lead to the end of the BBC's unique way of funding
Chapter 6: Research, Education and Skills for Digital Britain
P186 "It will soon not be possible to run a business effectively unless it is equipped with high-bandwidth access to the Internet. These are the roads of the 21st Century... the UK Government must seek next generation access that is scalable to 1Gb/s and beyond"
Chapter 7: Digital Security and Safety
P190 "It is not the Government’s policy to react to the challenge of the change the Internet presents by retreating to a position of protectionism or oppressive regulation"
P195 "The Government will carry out a major test in late 2009 of our ability to manage and recover from a major loss of network capacity"
Chapter 8: The Journey to Digital Government
P209 "Almost half of the UK population today have used the Internet in the last year to access information about Government or local council services or completed a Government form or process online, according to Ofcom research"
P212-213 "In addition to the Public Service Network we need to be able to add business applications to create a ‘G-Cloud’, using Cloud Computing... The G-Cloud delivery model would also help make other parts of the Government IT marketplace more cost-effective, flexible and competitive... and it would reduce the barriers to entry to the Government marketplace for application and other IT vendors, including SMEs, who would be able to provide services running on standardised, secure infrastructure without having to incur the costs of establishing and accrediting their own infrastructure"
P216 "Geographical data sets present some of the most valuable assets from which to develop online applications and services" but no changes for the Ordnance Survey
P220 "Concerns over privacy are only multiplied when arms of Government areinvolved in data gathering"
Chapter 9: Delivering Digital Britain
P229 "There is no room for complacency. The Government intends to do all it can to achieve the policy objectives we set out in this report, and urges all others to join it in the effort. The prize on offer is great. It will require a common effort to achieve it"
I found a script by Jan Engelhardt which uses the git blame command to work out who owns how much of bleadperl. Results:
Total lines: 2056059
627291 30.51% Jarkko Hietaniemi
308800 15.02% Nicholas Clark
171558 8.34% Rafael Garcia-Suarez
139288 6.77% Gurusamy Sarathy
73773 3.59% Perl 5 Porters
69452 3.38% Steve Peters
64664 3.15% Larry Wall
60445 2.94% Paul Marquess
31900 1.55% Steve Hay
30166 1.47% Marcus Holland-Moritz
28996 1.41% Ilya Zakharevich
27693 1.35% Nick Ing-Simmons
22334 1.09% Yitzchak Scott-Thoennes
20316 0.99% Andy Dougherty
19755 0.96% Michael G. Schwern
19141 0.93% Jos I. Boumans
18858 0.92% Dave Mitchell
17999 0.88% Yves Orton
12218 0.59% Tels
12120 0.59% H.Merijn Brand
10602 0.52% Andreas Koenig
10544 0.51% Hugo van der Sanden
9918 0.48% Jerry D. Hedden
9614 0.47% Andy Lester
8455 0.41% Jim Cromie
7883 0.38% Abhijit Menon-Sen
7815 0.38% Vadim Konovalov
7705 0.37% John E. Malmberg
6429 0.31% Abigail
6221 0.30% Craig A. Berry
5975 0.29% Radu Greab
5841 0.28% Robin Houston
5195 0.25% Tom Christiansen
5062 0.25% Dan Kogai
4734 0.23% SADAHIRO Tomoyuki
4720 0.23% Charles Bailey
4416 0.21% Jan Dubois
4389 0.21% Tim Bunce
4376 0.21% Stephen McCamant
4290 0.21% *initial checkin
4032 0.20% Malcolm Beattie
3984 0.19% Sébastien Aperghis-Tramoni
3801 0.18% Paul Fenwick
3700 0.18% Richard Foley
3461 0.17% John Malmberg
3452 0.17% chromatic
3266 0.16% Brandon Black
3243 0.16% Steffen Mueller
3111 0.15% Graham Barr
3042 0.15% Jos Boumans
2968 0.14% Gisle Aas
2950 0.14% Peter Prymmer
2947 0.14% Hans Mulder
2671 0.13% Wolfgang Laun
2667 0.13% Sean M. Burke
2652 0.13% Anno Siegel
2482 0.12% Robin Barker
2301 0.11% Simon Cozens
2196 0.11% Ton Hospel
2027 0.10% Brendan O'Dea
2008 0.10% Chip Salzenberg
1774 0.09% John Peacock
1764 0.09% Artur Bergman
1695 0.08% Andreas König
1669 0.08% Spider Boardman
1633 0.08% David Landgren
1565 0.08% Karl
1555 0.08% Steven Schubiger
1512 0.07% Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason
1460 0.07% Stas Bekman
1253 0.06% Dominic Dunlop
1232 0.06% Mark-Jason Dominus
1213 0.06% Slaven Rezic
1178 0.06% Paul Green
1152 0.06% LAUN Wolfgang
1082 0.05% Charles Lane
1069 0.05% Vincent Pit
1042 0.05% Joshua ben Jore
1041 0.05% Prymmer/Kahn
1034 0.05% Abe Timmerman
1018 0.05% Raphael Manfredi
932 0.05% karl williamson
913 0.04% Ben Morrow
899 0.04% Lupe Christoph
895 0.04% Rick Delaney
892 0.04% Ken Hirsch
842 0.04% Ivan Tubert-Brohman
828 0.04% Adriano Ferreira
765 0.04% Kirrily Robert
763 0.04% Jonathan Stowe
758 0.04% Reini Urban
735 0.04% Bram
734 0.04% Tim Jenness
715 0.03% Barrie Slaymaker
707 0.03% Alan Burlison
704 0.03% Ronald J. Kimball
695 0.03% Gerard Goossen
690 0.03% Chris Nandor
673 0.03% Nathan Torkington
671 0.03% Michael G Schwern
645 0.03% Albert Dvornik
630 0.03% Jeffrey Friedl
625 0.03% Yuval Kogman
607 0.03% Adrian M. Enache
582 0.03% Randy W. Sims
579 0.03% Inaba Hiroto
559 0.03% Jeff Pinyan
545 0.03% Juerd Waalboer
544 0.03% Doug MacEachern
536 0.03% Jesse
504 0.02% Molnar Laszlo
491 0.02% Philip Newton
478 0.02% John P. Linderman
473 0.02% Thomas Wegner
469 0.02% Mike Guy
461 0.02% Leon Brocard
458 0.02% Joseph S. Myers
444 0.02% Johan Vromans
432 0.02% Ben Tilly
428 0.02% Audrey Tang
423 0.02% Steven Knight
418 0.02% John Borwick
412 0.02% Olaf Flebbe
410 0.02% Allen Smith
392 0.02% Elizabeth Mattijsen
389 0.02% Ingo Weinhold
388 0.02% Russ Allbery
386 0.02% Tassilo von Parseval
383 0.02% Tye McQueen
377 0.02% Tom Phoenix
375 0.02% John Nolan
372 0.02% Douglas Lankshear
365 0.02% Paul Johnson
356 0.02% Andy Armstrong
345 0.02% Alexander Gough
327 0.02% Norton T. Allen
319 0.02% Dan Sugalski
318 0.02% Edward Avis
309 0.02% Casey R. Tweten
294 0.01% Renee Baecker
294 0.01% Benjamin Sugars
269 0.01% Rainer Tammer
269 0.01% Gabor Szabo
257 0.01% Casey West
254 0.01% Michael Stevens
252 0.01% Kurt D. Starsinic
250 0.01% Wilfredo Sánchez
248 0.01% Sam Vilain
247 0.01% Edgar Bering
243 0.01% Alexey Tourbin
237 0.01% Piotr Fusik
232 0.01% Andreas J. Koenig
232 0.01% Dave Rolsky
229 0.01% Chris 'BinGOs' Williams
228 0.01% Fifer, Eric
226 0.01% Joe McMahon
225 0.01% Mike Hopkirk (hops)
222 0.01% Daniel Chetlin
210 0.01% beau beaucox.com
203 0.01% Stephen Zander
202 0.01% Roderick Schertler
201 0.01% Joshua Pritikin
199 0.01% James Bence
193 0.01% Hal Morris
192 0.01% Shlomi Fish
190 0.01% Sam Tregar
186 0.01% Tom Horsley
186 0.01% François Désarménien
186 0.01% Robert May
181 0.01% Ilmari Karonen
173 0.01% Andrew Savige
171 0.01% Mattia Barbon
170 0.01% Paul Moore
168 0.01% Randy J Ray
160 0.01% anders broadcom.com
157 0.01% Fergal Daly
157 0.01% Hallvard B Furuseth
155 0.01% Mark Fisher
154 0.01% Jens Hamisch
154 0.01% Richard Clamp
148 0.01% Russell Mosemann
147 0.01% Bo Lindbergh
147 0.01% Colin Kuskie
147 0.01% Steffen Müller
146 0.01% Scott Henry
143 0.01% Steve Grazzini
142 0.01% Chris BinGOs Williams
142 0.01% Brian Ingerson
139 0.01% Jari Aalto
139 0.01% Mike Pomraning
133 0.01% Stephen P. Potter
133 0.01% John L. Allen
132 0.01% Damian Conway
131 0.01% Lincoln Stein
129 0.01% Anders Johnson
128 0.01% Salvador Fandiño
128 0.01% John Tobey
127 0.01% Ken Fox
127 0.01% Robert Sebastian Gerus
126 0.01% David Golden
124 0.01% Vishal Bhatia
123 0.01% Laszlo Molnar
122 0.01% Benjamin Smith
121 0.01% David Hammen
119 0.01% Brent Dax
118 0.01% David Muir Sharnoff
118 0.01% Ville Skyttä
116 0.01% Mark Pease
114 0.01% bonefish cs.tu-berlin.de
113 0.01% David H. Adler
113 0.01% Thomas Dorner
109 0.01% Anton Tagunov
108 0.01% Florian Ragwitz
107 0.01% reneeb
105 0.01% Max Maischein
103 0.01% Jesse Vincent
102 0.00% Ilya Martynov
100 0.00% Carl Eklof
100 0.00% Iain Truskett
99 0.00% 0000-Admin (0000)
97 0.00% Daniel S. Lewart
96 0.00% Peter Scott
96 0.00% Jerry Hedden
95 0.00% chocolateboy
95 0.00% 貞廣知行
94 0.00% Ricardo SIGNES
94 0.00% Jon Orwant
91 0.00% Alex Waugh
87 0.00% Gerrit P. Haase
87 0.00% Alex Vandiver
85 0.00% Todd C. Miller
84 0.00% brian d foy
84 0.00% Anton Berezin
84 0.00% Marek Rouchal
83 0.00% M. J. T. Guy
83 0.00% David Mitchell
83 0.00% Juerd
82 0.00% Randy J. Ray
79 0.00% Jerrad Pierce
78 0.00% Green, Paul
78 0.00% Solar Designer
78 0.00% Benjamin Stuhl
77 0.00% Marty Pauley
74 0.00% Andy Wardley
73 0.00% Dmitry Karasik
72 0.00% Chia-liang Kao
72 0.00% Mark Overmeer
68 0.00% David Feldman
68 0.00% Craig A. Berry) <Craig A.
68 0.00% Nigel Sandever
67 0.00% David Dyck
67 0.00% Sherm Pendley
67 0.00% Achim Bohnet
66 0.00% Benjamin Holzman
65 0.00% Tom Wyant
64 0.00% Andrew Pimlott
63 0.00% Rocco Caputo
63 0.00% Father Chrysostomos
63 0.00% Peter Dintelmann
62 0.00% Lucas Holt
61 0.00% Robert Spier
61 0.00% Richard Soderberg
61 0.00% Alexander Smishlajev
59 0.00% Nikola Knezevic
59 0.00% Tony Cook
58 0.00% rabbit+bugs rabbit.us
58 0.00% Lanning, Scott
58 0.00% Marc Lehmann
53 0.00% Simon Glover
52 0.00% Jason Vas Dias
51 0.00% Jeff Okamoto
51 0.00% Garry T. Williams
51 0.00% Roca, Ignasi
51 0.00% Larry W. Virden
50 0.00% Tom Phoenix (with help from M.J.T. Guy
50 0.00% Valeriy E. Ushakov
50 0.00% M.J.T. Guy
49 0.00% Mike Mestnik
48 0.00% Tom Hughes
48 0.00% Marcel Grünauer
48 0.00% David Nicol
47 0.00% Olli Savia
46 0.00% Matthijs van Duin
46 0.00% Matt Kraai
46 0.00% agrow thegotonerd.com
45 0.00% Niko Tyni
45 0.00% Peter Chines
45 0.00% Marvin Humphrey
45 0.00% Daniel P. Berrange
45 0.00% Jan-Pieter Cornet
43 0.00% Niklas Edmundsson
43 0.00% Bill Campbell
42 0.00% RonaldWS aol.com
41 0.00% Moritz Lenz
41 0.00% Nicholas Oxhøj
41 0.00% Ken Williams
40 0.00% Nicholas Clark (sans From field in mail header) <Nicholas Clark (sans From field in mail
40 0.00% Blair Zajac
39 0.00% yves orton
38 0.00% josh
37 0.00% Brian Harrison
37 0.00% Tony Sanders
37 0.00% Pradeep Hodigere
36 0.00% Michael Carman
35 0.00% Todd Vierling
35 0.00% Dan Brook
35 0.00% DH
34 0.00% Stephen Potter
34 0.00% Sascha Blank
34 0.00% Ulrich Pfeifer
34 0.00% Michael Schroeder
34 0.00% Torsten Schoenfeld
34 0.00% Kenichi Ishigaki
32 0.00% nothingmuch woobling.org
32 0.00% Mark Kettenis
32 0.00% Luther Huffman
32 0.00% Peter J. Farley III
32 0.00% Jonathan Hudson
31 0.00% nick babyhippo.com
31 0.00% glasser tang-eleven-seventy-nine.mit.edu
31 0.00% Giroux, Mike (Exchange)
31 0.00% Ovid
30 0.00% david nicol
30 0.00% Rujith S. de Silva
30 0.00% Paul Szabo
29 0.00% Yasushi Nakajima
29 0.00% Martin Hasch
29 0.00% Ronald F. Guilmette
29 0.00% Gwyn Judd
28 0.00% Goro Fuji
28 0.00% johnh isi.edu
28 0.00% Wilson P. Snyder II
28 0.00% Alexandr Ciornii
27 0.00% Jose Auguste-Etienne
27 0.00% David R. Favor
27 0.00% Srezic Iconmobile.Com
26 0.00% Winfried Koenig
26 0.00% Ian Phillipps
26 0.00% Christian Kirsch
26 0.00% Alain Barbet
26 0.00% Jonathan Steinert
26 0.00% James Mastros
26 0.00% Torsten Foertsch
26 0.00% Andy Bussey
25 0.00% Enrico Sorcinelli
25 0.00% perl-5.8.0 ton.iguana.be
25 0.00% Xavier Noria
25 0.00% Christian Winter
25 0.00% Stéphane Payrard
24 0.00% js ddre.dk
24 0.00% Kurt Starsinic
24 0.00% José Pedro Oliveira
24 0.00% Gerben Wierda
24 0.00% Martin J. Bligh
23 0.00% Stephanie Beals
23 0.00% Arthur Bergman
23 0.00% Paul Saab
23 0.00% Kenneth Albanowski
22 0.00% Kay Röpke
22 0.00% Dan Hale
21 0.00% David D. Kilzer
21 0.00% Ash Berlin
21 0.00% kipp shonanblue.ne.jp
20 0.00% Axel Kollmorgen
20 0.00% Owen Taylor
20 0.00% YAMASHINA Hio
20 0.00% Andrej Borsenkow
20 0.00% Bas van Sisseren
19 0.00% Michael De La Rue
19 0.00% Sergey Skvortsov
19 0.00% Christophe Grosjean
19 0.00% Norbert Pueschel
19 0.00% padre elte.hu
19 0.00% Casey Tweten
18 0.00% Archer Sully
18 0.00% abela geneanet.org
18 0.00% Elaine -HFB- Ashton
18 0.00% coral eekeek.org
18 0.00% Ian Goodacre
18 0.00% Norton Allen
18 0.00% Unknown Ricoh Contributor II
18 0.00% Aaron J. Mackey
18 0.00% Michael Cummings
17 0.00% matthew green
17 0.00% Brad Hughes
17 0.00% Spiros Denaxas
17 0.00% Chuck D. Phillips
16 0.00% jdhedden 1979.usna.com
16 0.00% Joe Buehler
16 0.00% Steve Purkis
16 0.00% Matthew Sachs
16 0.00% Chris Pepper
15 0.00% Boyd, Brooks D
15 0.00% Devin Heitmueller
15 0.00% daniel biz.bitpusher.com
15 0.00% Richard Hitt
15 0.00% Tkil
15 0.00% John Holdsworth
15 0.00% Matthias Ulrich Neeracher
14 0.00% Martti Rahkila
14 0.00% Anatoly Vorobey
14 0.00% unknown
14 0.00% Tim Sweetman
14 0.00% Dave Bailey
14 0.00% Earl Hood
14 0.00% Ed Allen Smith
14 0.00% Redvers Davies
13 0.00% ian.goodacre xtra.co.nz (via RT)
13 0.00% Steven N. Hirsch
13 0.00% ilmari vesla.ilmari.org
13 0.00% Neil Watkiss
13 0.00% Krishna Sethuraman
13 0.00% Philippe M. Chiasson
13 0.00% Brian McCauley
13 0.00% Offer Kaye
13 0.00% Paul David Fardy
13 0.00% Jan Starzynski
13 0.00% Mark Kvale
13 0.00% Dorner Thomas
13 0.00% Chun Bing Ge
13 0.00% John Hughes
12 0.00% Thomas Conté
12 0.00% Max Baker
12 0.00% Marcel Grunauer
12 0.00% Shinya Hayakawa
12 0.00% Greg Matheson
12 0.00% kaminsky math.huji.ac.il
12 0.00% Rajesh Vaidheeswarran
11 0.00% Daniel M. Quinlan
11 0.00% ian dial.pipex.com
11 0.00% Martien Verbruggen
11 0.00% Charles F. Randall
11 0.00% John Peacock via RT
11 0.00% Sisyphus
11 0.00% Sven Verdoolaege
11 0.00% Iain Spoon Truskett
11 0.00% Jay Hannah
11 0.00% David Cantrell
11 0.00% Nikolai Eipel
11 0.00% Claes Jacobsson
11 0.00% root
11 0.00% Alexey Toptygin
11 0.00% Wilson, Doug
10 0.00% Joe Smith
10 0.00% Joe Schaefer
10 0.00% grommel sears.com
10 0.00% James Jurach
10 0.00% ml1050
10 0.00% Per Einar Ellefsen
10 0.00% Information Service
10 0.00% Mark Fowler
10 0.00% Mike Hopkirk
10 0.00% Kriton Kyrimis
10 0.00% arbor al37al08.telecel.pt
10 0.00% Andrey Sapozhnikov
10 0.00% Jon Eveland
10 0.00% Rich Morin
9 0.00% Adam Krolnik
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[Note: I'm looking for non-Perl lightning talks for the following event. Please contact me: acme@astray.com]
London Perl Mongers organises technical meetings every two months. The technical meetings are a chance to find out what has been going on in the Perl community, what techniques people are using and how Perl integrates with other software.
The next technical meeting will be on the Wednesday 10th June 2009 from 6.30pm to 9pm and the theme is “Dynamic”. Space is limited, you have to sign up to attend, see below.
There are many dynamic programming languages out there, and the difference between them is quite small. These evening will consist lightning talks from many dynamic language user groups: Perl, PHP, Ruby and Django and a few more surprises.
It will be held at the British Computer Society, First Floor, The Davidson Building, 5 Southampton Street, London WC2E 7HA. Many thanks to Billy Abbott, the BCS and everyone involved for allowing us to use this wonderful venue.