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Living with Mangee

4th Nov, 2007

00:00:00 - Who let the brakes off the internet?

Actrix have recently been offering what they call "FreeTime" between 18:00 and 20:00 each day for their CyberJet Broadband customers. Unlimited, if but for a moment. It's very cool.... ) It is a subtle plug for their ~$500 unlimited plan. (soon to be ~$600/mo), and they soon realise NZ communities are crying out for truly unlimited, boundless connectivity.

Current Mood: [mood icon] awake
Current Music: Internet Relationships - MC Lars

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11th Aug, 2007

09:24:00 - GoLarge -> CyberJet (5Gb/day to 350Mb/day)

After 263 days and at least 400 Gigabytes of traffic, I've switched back from a Telecom Go Large plan (unlimited traffic, but shaped) to an Actrix Cyberjet plan (daily allowance, and 64K after that reset at 2am each day) for ADSL. Go Large was the ideal plan for me - some days using 5G of traffic, and others a bare 200MB - however it was totally the wrong plan for [info]cabbettenz who prefers her internet interactive. She'll be browsing Trade Me or The Nappy Network Forums and hates the shaped slow speeds of Telcoms' GoLarge.

While I can't connect any faster than 1000Kbps (Line speed currently 896Kbps/160Kbps - a combination of modem and 4.2 km from exchange) at least now my 130 KB/s will be available on demand, and not shaped, lagged and frustrated.

I'm going for the 350 Mb/day plan at $49/mo - but might drop that back and fire up the dial-up modem again. at $8/mo for 17 gig of traffic, all you can eat dial-up is still cheaper than broadband.

Current Mood: [mood icon] awake

7th Jul, 2007

19:07:00 - Wellington hosts first New Zealand SuperHappyDevHouse event

The Southern Cross bar on the corner of Cuba Street and Abel Smith in the Creative Capital, Wellington, played host to 40 or more developers today, in a pilot of a SuperHappyDevHouse. SHDH is a concept pioneered in the US, where developers gather in a monthly meeting to loosely collaborate and share ideas, or just code in the company of other geeks.
Photo by Taniwhaiti on FlickrA successful meeting similar in concept to a BarCamp was held and attendees were reported to be keen for more of the "monthly hackathon event that combines serious and not-so-serious productivity with a fun and exciting party atmosphere". Despite the good turnout, it was reported almost $900 was left on the bar tab, boding well for those staying past the 5pm end time.

The Wellington event was a pilot, with invited attendees only due to initial funding concerns, but was well attended. Event sponsors quickly came on board, including Google, Microsoft New Zealand, Mindscape - the Wellington-based think tank, Actrix Networks - the first commercial, leading technology-based ISP in New Zealand and Catalyst IT, the Open Source IT specialists.

Attendees were seen clustered around laptops, wearing distinctive brown and green SHDH NZ Aotearoa T-shirts, and received CafeNet vouchers from Citylink to allow them to freely use the wireless connectivity available at the Southern Cross Bar, a popular hangout for Wellingtons' high concentration of software developers.

The pilot event was organised by Brenda Wallace and Penny Leach of Catalyst IT, along with Mauricio Freitas of geekzone.co.nz and Microsoft developer, Darryl Burling.

Wellington reportedly has the most intense concentration of software developers in New Zealand, with a number of incubator projects, and development firms. Many ex-pats from the US and UK report they moved to Wellington because of the vibrancy and culture the city hums with. Trade Me, the New Zealand auction site, grew in Wellington, utilising the networks available. Wellington has a unique 'world rare' fibre connectivity in the city and some suburbs, resulting in one of the highest uses of internet in the country.

A number of prolific networking groups have seen success in Wellington including Unlimited Potential - the ICT professionals network, ThursdayNightCurry, the Wellington Incubator network WIN and others. Wellington is home to a host of successful ICT enterprises and start-ups

Jo Booth, facilitator for the Wellington Macintosh Society New Media Group, WelMac NMG, founded around the concept of "Meet and Geek", is says he is pleased to see the pilot a success and sees the SHDH as an ideal way to bring together Wellingtons' fragmented developer community:

"I attend a number of networking events in Wellington, each focussed on a small subset of the larger community of ICT workers and hobbyists. It takes something like [SHDH] to introduce the PHP developers to the ASP coders, the Apple people to the Microsoft gurus, and the designers to the developers."
"In any industry, a collaborative environment, free from the competitive corporate hush is important to the growth of ideas and flourish of creativity. Being able to bounce ideas off peers, irrespective of their corporate affiliations, and to discuss advantages and disadvantages, to learn from others mistakes, and to work for common goals across different businesses is what comes of this kind of collaboration" he said.
Jo is keen to attend the next SHDH, admitting he has been wanting to release his inner geek for some time.


By Jo Booth, Mesh|net