Monday, October 13th 2008 2.33am GMT

Digital Scotland Debate: Next event on the starting blocks

The Sunday Herald's events team finally succeeded in nailing me to a chair for long enough this week to get the ball rolling on the next stage of our campaign to create a national technology strategy for Scotland.

The first event revealed broad agreement that any such strategy should be broken down into three distinct areas: Innovation, Infrastructure & Education. In light of this the next debate - scheduled for April 24 at Glasgow's Lighthouse - will focus on the category of innovation.

It's a broad title, and one that could encompass anything: Encouraging innovation amongst entrepreneurs, fostering technical invention, marketing Caledonia as a top rank location for business & investment or simply coming up with innovative ways to implement, nurture and sustain such strategies.

To avoid turning our campaign into yet another pointless talking shop, the plan for this round of events is to invite both an expert panel and audience members to submit proposals for inclusion in our putative strategy document. On the day itself, we'll debate as many of these as time allows.

Using transcripts of the debate, I will then attempt to lace together a draft strategy paper. This will be presented online for a period of consultation and wiki-style peer review which, though fraught with possible complications, should produce something approaching a representative document.

The jury's out on what to do after that and I'm open to suggestions, but when all three events have been completed we should have a trio of documents drawn from the best minds in the business and, hopefully, some form of popular technology mandate for putting them in front of the Scottish Government.

That's the plan so far, but I'm calling upon the entire geek diaspora to pitch in and tell me where I'm going wrong or what could be done better. Although ambitious, I believe this is a campaign that could ultimately actually achieve something, but only if we work together.


Comments


Fri, 07/03/2008 - 5:41pm — Ewan McIntosh (not verified):

It's a noble aim, Iain, though I've seen no involvement or proposed involvement of those working in education to help put together proposals on that front. Nor have I seen any cogniscence of what is already being done in education, along with Ofcom and national education bodies, every local authority, teacher unions, research groups, teachers, parents and children, to formulate strategies for new technologies in learning, both in the classroom and outside it.

We would be more than excited to help in what you're proposing - and my team and I have been working around the world to help countries get to grips with their new technologies, new education strategies. It would also be brill to include you and your colleagues in the work that we have been undertaking with great vigour over the past year or so.

I'd love to show some of what we've managed to do already in helping education seize new technologies. Arguably we've done more in that respect already than business has managed.


Fri, 07/03/2008 - 10:16pm — iainbruce:

Thanks Ewan. I had planned to hold an entire event based on the Education theme, but would be delighted to talk to you about bringing you guys in earlier.

As I've said before I want other people to take ownership of this campaign and work with me, so I'm taking your comment as the noble step forward of the brave volunteer. I'd like us to hook up soon and hatch a scheme. Are you up for it?


Tue, 18/03/2008 - 9:31pm — Craig McGill (not verified):

Iain, the obvious question is that are you holding this in the right country for innovation? I'm actually starting to come to the conclusion that Scotland - in business, in schools, in media, in everywhere is of the opinion that it's doing fine and getting by without any new hassles, thank you very much.

And I hate to be that pessimistic as you know I'm normally the guy championing the digital bit.


Tue, 15/04/2008 - 6:15pm — David Petherick (not verified):

Of course the phrase "putative strategy document" has me reaching for the barf bucket, but wait...

"... pitch in and tell me where I'm going wrong or what could be done better..."

OK. Here's one geek from the diaspora coming along to share some ideas. There are a lot of people plowing the same furrow here, so putting the heads up and looking around is a very simple, fine idea. And it has to be a wiki (open to all, not open to 'insiders') that is the container - and I'd go as far as to say the proposals should state "we're already out of date - listen further" somewhere above the title.

Is this the right country for innovation? Aye. As long as you realise it's not a country, it's a state of mind, and a set of possibilities that an enlightened and listening government can help to prime and grow.

By the way - it's starting at what time, and where do I sign up? If you do wish people to engage, join up those dots in terms of organisation, lists and logistics. Who what when where and how?

David

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EVENTS

Shaping Scotland's digital future
[Glasgow Royal Concert Hall: 12 Dec 2007 - 9:00am until 11:30 am]
Radio Debate: Software piracy
[BBC Radio Scotland: 12 Nov 2007 - 12:00pm until 1:00 pm]
Radio Debate: Censoring YouTube
[BBC Radio Scotland: 16 Oct 2007 - 12:00pm until 1:00 pm]
Microsoft Skills Roundtable
[Radisson Hotel, Glasgow: 21 Sep 2007 - 7:30am until 9:00 am]