Saturday, 30 November 2013
International Manifesto
Thursday, 28 November 2013
GCGP LEP Summit
The Greater Cambridge Greater Peterborough Local Enterprise Partnership held its annual summit in Huntingdon today. There was a very positive dialogue and a highly engaged audience of about 100 activists from all over the LEP region.
The "Elephant in the Room" was the infrastructure issue - both transport and broadband. We are one of the worlds leading centres for scientifc and technology innovation being strangled by a 3rd world infrastructure.
The LEP is charged with increasing the number of "significant" businesses from 60,000 to 100,000. Micro Businesses are not included in these numbers which was a huge mistake. Asymmetric engagement between micro business and large business using "Open Innovation" concepts is essential. Partnership relationships rather than procurement relationships is the only way to achieve the disruptive change that is needed. Shared co-working spaces are required as a new way of working.
The skills position is critical and needs to focus on new technologies such as making, 3D printing, printed electronics and the Cloud of Things. New communication technologies such as LTE Advanced, Whitespace, Zigbee IP and Bluetooth Low Energy which are being created in Cambridge should be deployed and field tested within the LEP area.
Our Cleantech and alternative energy technology businesses are suffering under a completely broken energy market. Initiatives are switched on and off on the whim of politicians. We need more stability and control over our local energy and utility provision.
The competition for the GCGP region is not the other British regions - we compete directly with other leading global innovation centres like Boston, California, Barcelona and Shanghai. We therefore need a highly active internationalisation agenda incorporating goods, services and more importantly Knowledge. I am not convinced by the UKTI proposition.
Grahame Nix and his team at the LEP executive should be congratulated on a really positive summit but the test will be delivery.
Witten by Richard Wishart
Thursday, 14 November 2013
Printed RFID
PRINTED RFID IS NOW A PRACTICAL PROPOSITION
This week I attended the Advanced Engineering event at the NEC. In the Printed Electronics pavilion I saw live printing of about 30 passive RFID tags on a single A4 sheet of paper. The individual printed tags were then read using standard RFID technology.
I brought the sheet home and took the picture below of 2 of the tags
The integrated circuit and the aerial are printed using dot-matrix style technology. It is an additive process rather than the etching process used with traditional ICs
The printer looked very similar to the Office printer that I have in my study
The technology was demonstrated by Printed Electronics Ltd and Invotec. To be able to demonstrate so easily in a show environment is really impressive - Well Done
Printed RFID has been around for some time - but seeing it done so easily with office printer (like) technology on A4 paper was brilliant. This could be revolutionary
#postal
#identification
Written by Richard Wishart
Monday, 11 November 2013
video Stamp
AUSTRALIA POST LAUNCH A NEW VIDEO STAMP
A QR Code on the parcel or letter acts as an "Augmented Reality Trigger Image" that when photographed by a smartphone using the Australia Post App will play a video on the Smartphone screen.
I would be really interested in hearing peoples reaction to the new stamp. If my friends in Australia Post would like to send me a video stamp - I will put it up on my social media !!
#augmentedreality
#postal
NFC Market Projections
NFC MARKET PROJECTIONS
Near Field Communication (NFC) is mainly useful in mobile phones and tablets for close range transactions/data exchange. The phone becomes an RFID reader or tag. It can read tags on bottles and posters. Over 200 million NFC-enabled mobile phones have recently been deployed: Manufacturers controlling 85% of the mobile phone and tablet market include it.Despite some substantial adoption for "Point of Sale" applications most Postal and Express Parcel operators haven't realised the potential for customer centric and item tracking applications
IDTechEx have just released updated analysis of this really interesting market
http://www.idtechex.com/research/reports/near-field-communication-nfc-2014-2024-000363.asp