Blog | Archive for the ‘Events’ Category
10BigThings Global Forum
By Trampoline Systems | Thursday, October 9th, 2008
Sheraton Grand Hotel, Edinburgh, Scotland
The 10BigThings Global Forum brings together software and ICT professionals with cutting-edge ideas, and insights from leading industry figures. It consistently attracts high-level decision-makers, providing an exceptional forum to meet and explore industry trends and opportunities.
Charles Armstrong, Trampoline’s CEO, will be speaking alongside Martin Sadler, Director at Hewlett-Packard’s Systems Security Lab; Duncan MacTear, Marketing Director for 4Projects; Mark Taylor, Director of Developer and Platform Evangelism at Microsoft; Greg Papadopoulos, Chief Technology Officer and Executive Vice President of Research and Development at Sun Microsystems and Stuart Cosgrove, Director of Nations & Regions at Channel 4 with David Mitchell, Senior Vice President IT Research at Ovum chairing the event.
10BigThings is organised by ScotlandIS who aim to foster a world-class technology environment in Scotland that propels the ICT industry to maximise its impact locally, to exploit global opportunity, and to achieve growth and success.
Posted in Events | No Comments »
Network Roundtable
By Trampoline Systems | Friday, September 5th, 2008
Hyatt Dulles, Washington DC, USATrampoline CEO Charles Armstrong is participating in a panel on the afternoon of Monday 8 September exploring how strategically-applied technology can increase the effectiveness of organisational networks.
Posted in Events | No Comments »
Tapping the Mainline at SXSW
By mike | Wednesday, August 20th, 2008
I’ve always meant to go to SXSW. Next year I just might make it. My proposal made it to the Panel Picker stage, which is nice, but with the popularity contest now well and truly afoot I should probably have a go at getting the word out. So:Tapping the Mainline: Designing for Learned and Evolved Responses
We love stories, recognise patterns in fractions of a second and have a set of highly developed social behaviours. In this talk Mike will be running through a collection of these hard-wired influence points and exploring how they can be used in the design of products, interfaces and experiences.
http://panelpicker.sxsw.com/ideas/view/1144
And while I’m about it I might as well have a bit of a poke at the process…
The Panel Picker seems like a good way to engage with the conference audience but I can’t help thinking that the execution is lacking. There are currently some 1,273 proposals in the mix. That’s an awful lot of reading for anyone wishing to participate. With that sort of volume I really wish they’d put more thought into the desired outcome: unbiased participation, which will involve discovery, weighing and rating in volume.
My main problem with the Panel Picker interface is the clunky tabular layout. The addition of keyboard shortcuts is a fantastic addition but I need to read the title, summary and maybe name to reach any sort of informed rating decision. There just isn’t enough horizontal real-estate available for all that in a single row. Why not have a Hot-or-Not style view? Let me focus on one thing at a time and make it as painless as possible to contribute? Or just break the title and summary onto separate lines?
I also feel that the 1-5 scoring system is unnecessarily complex. How can I judge the quality of a proposal to that sort of accuracy from 50 words? A yardstick of interest is all that’s required and with 1,000+ proposals to get through speed and ease should be the highest priority. I’d go with a simple thumbs up/thumbs down widget.
Anyway, them’s the breaks! Tapping the Mainline is version 2 of the Ego to Ergo talk I gave (and thoroughly enjoyed) at SkillSwap last month. If you’d like to hear it, go give me a rating.
Posted in Events | No Comments »
WorkTech North
By Trampoline Systems | Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008
The Lowry, Salford Quays, Greater Manchester
WorkTech08 North brings together some of the biggest and brightest names in workplace and technology to debate, discuss and divulge the latest thinking on the future of workplace and technology. This year’s theme is Creative Places, New Media, Future of Work. Leading global speakers will come together to offer a unique insight into case studies of innovation and visions of the future. Philip Ross, CEO of Cordless Group, and Charles Armstrong, CEO of Trampoline Systems, will discuss The Connected Enterprise. The session looks at technology trends that empower employees to connect, collaborate and innovate; and examines ways of strengthening informal employee networks across departments and geographies.
Learn more here.
Posted in Events | No Comments »
Skillswap Brighton
By mike | Tuesday, July 8th, 2008
I have the pleasure of speaking at Skillswap in Brighton tomorrow evening. It’s a long-running, grass-roots, community event that has hosted a large collection of my favourite speakers so I’m very excited! My talk is called “From Ego to Ergo: Using Influence in Design” and will be a loose ramble through a whole bunch of my favourite mind-related trivia, facts and effects.I was turned on to “influence” by some online marketing friends; few in design circles seem to be aware of it even though they use aspects of it daily. I hope people enjoy it…Posted in Events | No Comments »
WorkTech08 North
By rebecca | Friday, June 20th, 2008
Charles Armstrong, Trampoline’s CEO, will be speaking at WorkTech08 North in a few week’s time. WorkTech, organised by the Cordless Group, is a forum on the future of work and the workplace and is in it’s fifth year. The theme this time is Creative Places, New Media and The Future of Work, so it’s likely to be very interesting to anyone working with new enterprise technologies.Charles will be speaking with Philip Ross, CEO of Cordless Group, on the topic The Connected Enterprise. They will look at technology trends that empower employees to connect, collaborate and innovate, and examine ways of strengthening informal employee networks across departments and geographies.
WorkTech08 North will be held at The Lowry, Salford Quays, Greater Manchester on 23rd and 24th July. Learn more here.
Posted in Events, Organisations & Technology | No Comments »
E2 Wednesday: The Toaster-Killing Cloud, E2 Clusterfage, You Give Good Boothage, There’s Such a Thing as Too Much Stuphs, Great Party
By peter | Wednesday, June 11th, 2008
It’s Wednesday afternoon at Enterprise 2.0. In spite of a few frustrating failures in infrastructure, it’s been a really great two days here at E2 for Trampoline.

Right now I’m sitting in the EMC booth stealing their hardline because WiFi is down (again) and our hardline is down (again). Evidently Enterprise 2.0 still doesn’t mean reliable internet connections or badge readers which, like, read badges.
Ironically even the toasters on the breakfast bar this morning were teh fail and I had to steal one and jack it into a power strip inside one of the breakout rooms to toast my bagel. (Which, by the way, was artfully sliced to look like the victim of a drunken accident with a chainsaw. Not that I am in the least bit picky about my toasting. Oh no, not me.)
The deepest irony about the toasters was that during the “Evening in the Cloud” event several speakers likened cloud computing to needing to be as predictable, reliable and standards-driven as our electricity supply, clearly tempting fate and cursing the event and my breakfast toasting.
New England is in the middle of one of the weirdest early June weather fronts in history with temperatures in the high 90’s and huge thunder-storms and even tornado warnings, and really, there’s only one company on the planet to blame all of this on…
I blame google, of course.
I hereby declare that cloud computing evangelists are no longer to be taken seriously if they liken their services to electricity. In fact you should probably immediately take proactive de-cursing actions lest you find yourself suddenly in a region-wide freak weather phenom, total blackout or starring in a real-life version of I Am Legend.
Adrian, Steve Ardire and I worked the booth yesterday (with occasional support from Rebecca and Jules, who had lots to do on the party and so were constantly jetting about the hotel alternatively solving herculean problems and looking wistfully out the window at the sailboats).
The booth experience was very, very interesting. As always Adrian was the companies greatest low-key evangelist and gave great demo while Steve managed little micro-demos on his mac off on the side. (The people Steve talked to all left with a very pleased but somewhat dazed look in their eyes.) We were 2 or 3 rows deep for most of the day, even when all we had was Rebecca’s awesome slide deck because our hardline to the internet was dead (as were most booths) Tuesday morning.
The people who have visited us at the booth have been uniformly smart and enthusiastic and ask really great questions. While some folks are clearly still just looking and thinking (which is fine) the interest level at this show in real solutions to current enterprise problems is very high. So ++ on SONAR Server, Dashboard and Flightdeck.
When I joined Trampoline we were still supporting a product called “Collaboration Engine” which dated back to the earliest days of the company. It did what our customers wanted it to and it was also decent revenue, however when I looked at the product, talked with the team about it and then looked around at the marketplace and compared it to where other folks seemed to be headed, I recommended that we should cut it completely.
Why? Because I thought then that everybody would be doing “collaboration software” and it would become increasingly difficult to clearly differentiate our collaboration offering from others in this space. Collaboration in an enterprise means getting many many things right and it means potentially competing with experienced and/or entrenched competitors. There are clearly vendors here who are doing this well (IBM Connections is looking very slick, while Jive is here as well) and others who are highly entrenched (MS is here with SharePoint).
Most of the people I’ve spoken with told me “wow. Everyone else showing here is doing the same thing as eachother except for you. Your stuff is cool!” This was a really important bit of feedback and was very rewarding to hear. It’s nice to be told that you don’t look exactly the same as everybody else and to be appreciate for what you think you are doing well. People seem to really appreciate that we don’t build wiki, group, IM, email, workspace and blogging software but that we do make it much easier to build profiles to find people, skills and interests across large groups of people, and to visualize networks in interesting and engaging ways.
Wikis are clearly hot and there are lots of wiki companies here doing some neat stuff and again, glad they are doing it and doing it well, also very glad to not be “another wiki company”.
I don’t think that anyone one else at this show is eating email and automagically producing and maintaining user profiles of themes and connections, and lots of potential customers are noticing that this is what we do and they like it. It’s really refreshing.
Many of the vendors here at the show have come by and asked us about our upcoming API as they see what we are doing as very complimentary to their offerings. We can make collaboration tools like email and wikis work better. All cool.
The party last night was very good. Massive props to Rebecca; she kept her cool and created a really nice event. It was probably the nicest conference drinking event I’ve ever been to (and really, I’ve been to LOTS. Like, way more than 100), and that’s in spite of having to “work it” in the sense that we paid for it and so it was clearly soft marketing for us. It was really chill and fun and intimate and the music was good and people really seemed to be having a good time. Charles did a neat presentation on St. Agnes that was as interesting and low-key as the rest of the party.
As near as I can tell folks had lots of fun, and when Boston’s finest came they didn’t see the burned furniture or the donkey, so it was all good. (Okay, just kidding about some of that.)
Note to conference party planners – more money and more drinking and famous bands don’t always make for a better party. Try for intimate and fun and get fun smart people to show up. Think of the best non-work parties you’ve ever been to – they probably were way less over the top than the next conference party you are planning.
So – despite the hiccups it’s been a great event. I’m really glad we are here.
We’ve all been on our feet all day again, but for the booth at least we are in the home stretch – just one more session on the demo floor for of boothy goodness! W007!
Posted in Events, Organisations & Technology, SONAR, Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
Enterprise 2.0 Conference
By Trampoline Systems | Monday, June 9th, 2008
Boston, USALearn more about Enterprise 2.0 Conference 2008
Posted in Events | No Comments »
Web 2.0 Expo
By Trampoline Systems | Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008
San Francisco, USA
Meet Trampoline at O’Reilly’s Web 2.0 Expo, San Francisco. Visit us at the Oracle booth and hear Charles Armstrong, CEO of Trampoline Systems, discuss enterprise social computing on Wednesday 23rd April at 1:20pm.
Find out more about Web 2.0 Expo
Posted in Events | No Comments »
Red Herring Europe 100
By Trampoline Systems | Tuesday, April 15th, 2008
Malta, 15/04/2008
Charles Armstrong will be giving an introduction to Trampoline, a Red Herring 100 Europe 2008 company.
Find out more about Red Herring Europe 100
Posted in Events | No Comments »








