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17:19:10 01/24/12
Jordie Lane - "Not From Round Here"
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 17:19:10 01/24/12
Jordie Lane - "Not From Round Here"
Jordie Lane was conceived on the muddy banks of the Murray River in Albury, Victoria, Australia. He grew up in the Northern suburbs of Melbourne in a fairly normal neighbourhood, but a not so normal household. With a 'comedian' mum and an actual 'clown' dad, they had the family in a travelling community Circus by the time Jordie could walk. Starting on the ukulele at 4 years old, and moving to 6-string electric guitar soon after, Jordie began learning Beatles songs and penning his own tunes before he had finished Primary School. Playing in a mixture of Jazz, Rock and Funk bands that won a bunch of awards throughout his teens, Jordie retreated to the bedroom after finishing High School, to really hone his unique finger picking guitar style, and find his voice and a story to tell. It wasn't till an offer from his mum Denise Scott, to collaborate in their 2004 'Barry' Nominated hit show "Scotty & Son" at The Melbourne International Comedy Festival, that Jordie came out of the bedroom and took to the stage. He quickly developed the reputation as one of Melbourne's hardest working musicians, playing 6 nights a week in every little crap bar, all the while fashioning his own style of Suburban Blues-Folk and rich, honest lyricism. It's this brutally honest songwriter that is now being recognised as one of the country's best live touring artists in the Singer-songwriter/Roots genre, selling out headline shows right across Australia's premier music venues and Festivals. Two EPs ... From: sxsw Views: 148 3 ratings Time: 05:29 More in Music
0 Views
17:19:10 01/24/12
Jordie Lane - "Not From Round Here"
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 17:19:10 01/24/12
Jordie Lane - "Not From Round Here"
Jordie Lane was conceived on the muddy banks of the Murray River in Albury, Victoria, Australia. He grew up in the Northern suburbs of Melbourne in a fairly normal neighbourhood, but a not so normal household. With a 'comedian' mum and an actual 'clown' dad, they had the family in a travelling community Circus by the time Jordie could walk. Starting on the ukulele at 4 years old, and moving to 6-string electric guitar soon after, Jordie began learning Beatles songs and penning his own tunes before he had finished Primary School. Playing in a mixture of Jazz, Rock and Funk bands that won a bunch of awards throughout his teens, Jordie retreated to the bedroom after finishing High School, to really hone his unique finger picking guitar style, and find his voice and a story to tell. It wasn't till an offer from his mum Denise Scott, to collaborate in their 2004 'Barry' Nominated hit show "Scotty & Son" at The Melbourne International Comedy Festival, that Jordie came out of the bedroom and took to the stage. He quickly developed the reputation as one of Melbourne's hardest working musicians, playing 6 nights a week in every little crap bar, all the while fashioning his own style of Suburban Blues-Folk and rich, honest lyricism. It's this brutally honest songwriter that is now being recognised as one of the country's best live touring artists in the Singer-songwriter/Roots genre, selling out headline shows right across Australia's premier music venues and Festivals. Two EPs ... From: sxsw Views: 71 2 ratings Time: 05:29 More in Music
0 Views
17:28:36 01/18/12
Young Magic - "Sparkly": SXSW 2012 Showcasing Artist
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 17:28:36 01/18/12
Young Magic - "Sparkly": SXSW 2012 Showcasing Artist
This is a beautiful story. Three vagabonds travel across the world with no direction home, record music whilst on the road, meet up in New York City, and form a band. Drawing a symbiotic balance from the soundtracks of West Africa, Turkey and beyond, Brainfeeder hip-hop, UK Bass and 60s psychedelic soul, Young Magic is an ethereal exploration into past and future. Appearing at Iceland's Airwaves festival in October 2011, New York's CMJ festival in the same month and touring as main support for Youth Lagoon throughout America and Canada this November, Young Magic's sound is spreading far and wide in the lead up to the release of their debut album Melt on Carpark Records February 14th 2012. Young Magic began with singer and producer Isaac Emmanuel. In early 2010 he quit his world and left his hometown in Australia with all of his belongings packed into a suitcase. He wandered through northern Europe, across the UK, over to New York City then down to Mexico, recording with a microphone, his voice and whatever instruments he would find along the way. There were no plans, no accommodation: instead, couch surfing with friends, always low on coin, always high on the thrill of it all. Whilst living in a small Mexican town called Tepoztlan, Isaac had been in touch with an old friend from Melbourne who was on his own world adventure, Michael Italia. A musician and photographer who was also traveling around the world with little more than a backpack, and some portable recording gear ... From: sxsw Views: 69 5 ratings Time: 03:40 More in Music
1 Views
17:28:36 01/18/12
Young Magic - "Sparkly": SXSW 2012 Showcasing Artist
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 17:28:36 01/18/12
Young Magic - "Sparkly": SXSW 2012 Showcasing Artist
This is a beautiful story. Three vagabonds travel across the world with no direction home, record music whilst on the road, meet up in New York City, and form a band. Drawing a symbiotic balance from the soundtracks of West Africa, Turkey and beyond, Brainfeeder hip-hop, UK Bass and 60s psychedelic soul, Young Magic is an ethereal exploration into past and future. Appearing at Iceland's Airwaves festival in October 2011, New York's CMJ festival in the same month and touring as main support for Youth Lagoon throughout America and Canada this November, Young Magic's sound is spreading far and wide in the lead up to the release of their debut album Melt on Carpark Records February 14th 2012. Young Magic began with singer and producer Isaac Emmanuel. In early 2010 he quit his world and left his hometown in Australia with all of his belongings packed into a suitcase. He wandered through northern Europe, across the UK, over to New York City then down to Mexico, recording with a microphone, his voice and whatever instruments he would find along the way. There were no plans, no accommodation: instead, couch surfing with friends, always low on coin, always high on the thrill of it all. Whilst living in a small Mexican town called Tepoztlan, Isaac had been in touch with an old friend from Melbourne who was on his own world adventure, Michael Italia. A musician and photographer who was also traveling around the world with little more than a backpack, and some portable recording gear ... From: sxsw Views: 69 5 ratings Time: 03:40 More in Music
0 Views
11:36:38 01/13/12
Fans Gather in Sydney for Elvis Express
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 11:36:38 01/13/12
Fans Gather in Sydney for Elvis Express
Elvis fans were flocking to Australia's annual festival celebrating the King of Rock and Roll. Hundreds boarded a special train in Sydney Friday to travel to the event. (Jan. 13) From: AssociatedPress Views: 117 6 ratings Time: 01:16 More in News & Politics
0 Views
11:36:38 01/13/12
Fans Gather in Sydney for Elvis Express
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 11:36:38 01/13/12
Fans Gather in Sydney for Elvis Express
Elvis fans were flocking to Australia's annual festival celebrating the King of Rock and Roll. Hundreds boarded a special train in Sydney Friday to travel to the event. (Jan. 13) From: AssociatedPress Views: 165 6 ratings Time: 01:16 More in News & Politics
24 Views
23:44:51 01/04/12
YOW! 2011: Nigel Dalton - On Being Agile, Lonely Planet, and Lean Development
[LESS INFO] 24 VIEWS | ADDED 23:44:51 01/04/12
In early 2000, having survived Y2K in the role of Software Development Manager at AXA Australia, Nigel Dalton fled to the USA to be CTO and COO of an Australian dot com startup in San Francisco - which later moved to New York, then finally Minnesota. The 4th Winter at -40C finally drove him and his family back down under, re-igniting his career in behavioral economics in New Zealand, eventually returning to Melbourne to work as General Manager IT at Lonely Planet in early 2007.
This is not a technical conversation like all of the other YOW! interviews you've seen. Instead, Nigel takes us through how he thinks about agility (lean product development, agile methodologies, etc...) and the application of agile practices to building products and running businesses that can succeed for extended periods of time (did you know that most companies that existed in 1950 no longer exist?).
So, what does agile really mean, anyway? Talk to us, Nigel. Explain.
Thanks for joining us on C9, Nigel! Fascinating conversation.
Nigel's YOW! speaker page
The YOW! Developer Conference offers outstanding opportunities to learn more about the latest practices, technologies, and methodologies for building innovative software solutions as well as the chance to meet and network with international software experts and other talented developers in Australia. Thanks to Dave Thomas and the event's excellent staff - Mary Catherine (MC), Lisa, Aino, Melissa , and others - for inviting me to this excellent pure developer event and thanks to all of the speakers for letting me take some of their time to record conversations for Channel 9. If you live in Australia, or aren't too far away, or just like to travel (who doesn't?), then you need to go to this yearly event. It's outstanding. There are many great developers down under. That's for sure. The speakers are exceptional—Dave and team set a high bar!
27 Views
23:44:51 01/04/12
YOW! 2011: Nigel Dalton - On Being Agile, Lonely Planet, and Lean Development
[LESS INFO] 27 VIEWS | ADDED 23:44:51 01/04/12
In early 2000, having survived Y2K in the role of Software Development Manager at AXA Australia, Nigel Dalton fled to the USA to be CTO and COO of an Australian dot com startup in San Francisco - which later moved to New York, then finally Minnesota. The 4th Winter at -40C finally drove him and his family back down under, re-igniting his career in behavioral economics in New Zealand, eventually returning to Melbourne to work as General Manager IT at Lonely Planet in early 2007.
This is not a technical conversation like all of the other YOW! interviews you've seen. Instead, Nigel takes us through how he thinks about agility (lean product development, agile methodologies, etc...) and the application of agile practices to building products and running businesses that can succeed for extended periods of time (did you know that most companies that existed in 1950 no longer exist?).
So, what does agile really mean, anyway? Talk to us, Nigel. Explain.
Thanks for joining us on C9, Nigel! Fascinating conversation.
Nigel's YOW! speaker page
The YOW! Developer Conference offers outstanding opportunities to learn more about the latest practices, technologies, and methodologies for building innovative software solutions as well as the chance to meet and network with international software experts and other talented developers in Australia. Thanks to Dave Thomas and the event's excellent staff - Mary Catherine (MC), Lisa, Aino, Melissa , and others - for inviting me to this excellent pure developer event and thanks to all of the speakers for letting me take some of their time to record conversations for Channel 9. If you live in Australia, or aren't too far away, or just like to travel (who doesn't?), then you need to go to this yearly event. It's outstanding. There are many great developers down under. That's for sure. The speakers are exceptional—Dave and team set a high bar!
29 Views
21:51:13 01/01/12
YOW! 2011: Bjorn Freeman-Benson - Software Psychology
[LESS INFO] 29 VIEWS | ADDED 21:51:13 01/01/12
Bjorn Freeman-Benson is the Vice President of Engineering at New Relic - which produces cross-platform application and server performance monitoring software as a service (SaaS). He's been an engineer for many years and has focused on building tools.
Here, we talk about client and cloud monitoring tools, Bjorn (of course!) and more. Bjorn describes himself as a Software Psychologist - he listens to software and makes it better after understanding it's deepest needs and problems. I like the sound of that! Another thing I like about Bjorn's optimistic outlook on software complexity is the notion of "drinking our own champagne" versus "eating our own dog food" when it comes to using the software you build - in a real world context, daily - before you unleash it on the world.
Thanks for joining us on C9, Bjorn! Keep on listening to software's deep issues and help correct them (hopefully without the need of powerful "medication")!
Bjorn's YOW! speaker page
The YOW! Developer Conference offers outstanding opportunities to learn more about the latest practices, technologies, and methodologies for building innovative software solutions as well as the chance to meet and network with international software experts and other talented developers in Australia. Thanks to Dave Thomas and the event's excellent staff - Mary Catherine (MC), Lisa, Aino, Melissa , and others - for inviting me to this excellent pure developer event and thanks to all of the speakers for letting me take some of their time to record conversations for Channel 9. If you live in Australia, or aren't too far away, or just like to travel (who doesn't?), then you need to go to this yearly event. It's outstanding. There are many great developers down under. That's for sure. The speakers are exceptional—Dave and team set a high bar!
24 Views
21:51:13 01/01/12
YOW! 2011: Bjorn Freeman-Benson - Software Psychology
[LESS INFO] 24 VIEWS | ADDED 21:51:13 01/01/12
Bjorn Freeman-Benson is the Vice President of Engineering at New Relic - which produces cross-platform application and server performance monitoring software as a service (SaaS). He's been an engineer for many years and has focused on building tools.
Here, we talk about client and cloud monitoring tools, Bjorn (of course!) and more. Bjorn describes himself as a Software Psychologist - he listens to software and makes it better after understanding it's deepest needs and problems. I like the sound of that! Another thing I like about Bjorn's optimistic outlook on software complexity is the notion of "drinking our own champagne" versus "eating our own dog food" when it comes to using the software you build - in a real world context, daily - before you unleash it on the world.
Thanks for joining us on C9, Bjorn! Keep on listening to software's deep issues and help correct them (hopefully without the need of powerful "medication")!
Bjorn's YOW! speaker page
The YOW! Developer Conference offers outstanding opportunities to learn more about the latest practices, technologies, and methodologies for building innovative software solutions as well as the chance to meet and network with international software experts and other talented developers in Australia. Thanks to Dave Thomas and the event's excellent staff - Mary Catherine (MC), Lisa, Aino, Melissa , and others - for inviting me to this excellent pure developer event and thanks to all of the speakers for letting me take some of their time to record conversations for Channel 9. If you live in Australia, or aren't too far away, or just like to travel (who doesn't?), then you need to go to this yearly event. It's outstanding. There are many great developers down under. That's for sure. The speakers are exceptional—Dave and team set a high bar!
28 Views
21:31:39 01/01/12
YOW! 2011: Aslak Hellesøy - Web Sockets and Webbit
[LESS INFO] 28 VIEWS | ADDED 21:31:39 01/01/12
Aslak Hellesøy is a Senior Software Engineer at DRW Trading in London and the creator of Cucumber . Aslak is also a contributor to Webbit , a Java event based WebSocket and HTTP server (and the subject of his YOW! session).
Here, we talk about Webbit and Web Sockets and learn a little about Aslak, of course. Thanks for joining us on C9, Aslak!
Aslak's YOW! speaker page
The YOW! Developer Conference offers outstanding opportunities to learn more about the latest practices, technologies, and methodologies for building innovative software solutions as well as the chance to meet and network with international software experts and other talented developers in Australia. Thanks to Dave Thomas and the event's excellent staff - Mary Catherine (MC), Lisa, Aino, Melissa , and others - for inviting me to this excellent pure developer event and thanks to all of the speakers for letting me take some of their time to record conversations for Channel 9. If you live in Australia, or aren't too far away, or just like to travel (who doesn't?), then you need to go to this yearly event. It's outstanding. There are many great developers down under. That's for sure. The speakers are exceptional—Dave and team set a high bar!
16 Views
21:31:39 01/01/12
YOW! 2011: Aslak Hellesøy - Web Sockets and Webbit
[LESS INFO] 16 VIEWS | ADDED 21:31:39 01/01/12
Aslak Hellesøy is a Senior Software Engineer at DRW Trading in London and the creator of Cucumber . Aslak is also a contributor to Webbit , a Java event based WebSocket and HTTP server (and the subject of his YOW! session).
Here, we talk about Webbit and Web Sockets and learn a little about Aslak, of course. Thanks for joining us on C9, Aslak!
Aslak's YOW! speaker page
The YOW! Developer Conference offers outstanding opportunities to learn more about the latest practices, technologies, and methodologies for building innovative software solutions as well as the chance to meet and network with international software experts and other talented developers in Australia. Thanks to Dave Thomas and the event's excellent staff - Mary Catherine (MC), Lisa, Aino, Melissa , and others - for inviting me to this excellent pure developer event and thanks to all of the speakers for letting me take some of their time to record conversations for Channel 9. If you live in Australia, or aren't too far away, or just like to travel (who doesn't?), then you need to go to this yearly event. It's outstanding. There are many great developers down under. That's for sure. The speakers are exceptional—Dave and team set a high bar!
16 Views
07:18:23 01/01/12
INDIAN DANCE
[LESS INFO] 16 VIEWS | ADDED 07:18:23 01/01/12
"?GET YOUR FREE TRAVEL SECRETS http://bit.ly/idEoO5 ? http://facebook.com/positiveworldtravel http://twitter.com/positivetravel We were travelling through Pondicherry in India and we came across this small little festival and we watched this Indian Dance. It was more contemporary dance than the traditional Indian Dance. Indian Dance is something that we usually relate to Bollywood, but as you will see that this Indian dance is very much like many dance companies in Australia, America and UK."
15 Views
15:00:00 12/30/11
YOW! 2011: Tony Morris - Functional Programming and Functional Thinking
[LESS INFO] 15 VIEWS | ADDED 15:00:00 12/30/11
Tony Morris is a developer who has deployed functional programming techniques in industry for over 10 years. He's also a teacher and key player in Australia's increasingly vibrant functional programming community. Tony actively programs in Scala and Haskell so he possesses a well-rounded view of the functional world (from hybrid to pure functional).
Here, we talk about functional programming—when to go functional and why—and Tony addresses some of the problems that face developers who want or need to go functional but possess only an imperative way of thinking when it comes to designing and writing software. It's the functional way of thinking that most newcomers to functional programming find most difficult. Of course, there's no conversation about functional programming without talking about monads, so we talk about monadic design (and definition).
Thanks for joining us on C9 Tony!
Tony's YOW! speaker page
The YOW! Developer Conference offers outstanding opportunities to learn more about the latest practices, technologies, and methodologies for building innovative software solutions as well as the chance to meet and network with international software experts and other talented developers in Australia. Thanks to Dave Thomas and the event's excellent staff— Mary Catherine (MC), Lisa, Aino, Melissa , and others—for inviting me to this excellent pure developer event and thanks to all of the speakers for letting me take some of their time to record conversations for Channel 9. If you live in Australia, or aren't too far away, or just like to travel (who doesn't?), then you need to go to this yearly event. It's outstanding. There are many great developers down under. That's for sure. The speakers are exceptional—Dave and team set a high bar!
22 Views
15:00:00 12/30/11
YOW! 2011: Tony Morris - Functional Programming and Functional Thinking
[LESS INFO] 22 VIEWS | ADDED 15:00:00 12/30/11
Tony Morris is a developer who has deployed functional programming techniques in industry for over 10 years. He's also a teacher and key player in Australia's increasingly vibrant functional programming community. Tony actively programs in Scala and Haskell so he possesses a well-rounded view of the functional world (from hybrid to pure functional).
Here, we talk about functional programming—when to go functional and why—and Tony addresses some of the problems that face developers who want or need to go functional but possess only an imperative way of thinking when it comes to designing and writing software. It's the functional way of thinking that most newcomers to functional programming find most difficult. Of course, there's no conversation about functional programming without talking about monads, so we talk about monadic design (and definition).
Thanks for joining us on C9 Tony!
Tony's YOW! speaker page
The YOW! Developer Conference offers outstanding opportunities to learn more about the latest practices, technologies, and methodologies for building innovative software solutions as well as the chance to meet and network with international software experts and other talented developers in Australia. Thanks to Dave Thomas and the event's excellent staff— Mary Catherine (MC), Lisa, Aino, Melissa , and others—for inviting me to this excellent pure developer event and thanks to all of the speakers for letting me take some of their time to record conversations for Channel 9. If you live in Australia, or aren't too far away, or just like to travel (who doesn't?), then you need to go to this yearly event. It's outstanding. There are many great developers down under. That's for sure. The speakers are exceptional—Dave and team set a high bar!
32 Views
20:34:58 12/29/11
YOW! 2011: Dave Thomas on YOW!, Technoculture, Modern Programming, and More
[LESS INFO] 32 VIEWS | ADDED 20:34:58 12/29/11
Dave Thomas is the godfather of YOW!, a platform-agnostic developer conference that spans three cities in Australia once a year (Melbourne, Brisbane and Sydney(workshops only)). Australia is home to a very vibrant and talent-rich developer community. It was great to have the chance to spend time at YOW! and attend several excellent sessions ( you've met some of the speakers here on C9 ). Dave is well known for his work in object oriented and dynamic programming language design (SmallTalk) as well as virtual machines. He's a compiler guy. Dave is currently the CEO of Bedarra Research Labs .
Let's see what the godfather has to say about YOW!, JavaScript, HTML5, concurrency, modern development methodologies, technoculture and more. It's always a pleasure to get the chance to talk to Dave and we hope he'll make many more appearances on C9. Thanks again for inviting C9 to YOW!, godfather!
The YOW! Developer Conference offers outstanding opportunities to learn more about the latest practices, technologies, and methodologies for building innovative software solutions as well as the chance to meet and network with international software experts and other talented developers in Australia. Thanks to Dave Thomas and the event's excellent staff— Mary Catherine (MC), Lisa, Aino, Melissa , and others—for inviting me to this excellent pure developer event and thanks to all of the speakers for letting me take some of their time to record conversations for Channel 9. If you live in Australia, or aren't too far away, or just like to travel (who doesn't?), then you need to go to this yearly event. It's outstanding. There are many great developers down under. That's for sure. The speakers are exceptional—Dave and team set a high bar!









