DavePress
A blog about technology, culture and the bits in between, with a focus on government and public services. Written and curated by Dave Briggs, founder and director of Kind of Digital. Find out more.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 UK: England & Wales License.Stay updated!
Recent Comments
- Dave on Ideapad S205
- John Naughton on Ideapad S205
- Dave on Ideapad S205
- John Heaven on Ideapad S205
- Esko Reinikainen on Ideapad S205
Tags
Apple BarcampUKGovweb Blogging cloud collaboration communications Communities community consultation culture data davepress democracy engagement facebook google government ict idea innovation internet it learning learning pool links localgov localgovcamp localgovernment local government localgovweb opendata opengov opengovernment research RSS socialmedia Social Media Software strategy technology twitter Video web 2.0 web24gov wordpressCategories
Archives
Blogroll
- Al Kitching
- barcampUKGovWeb
- Beth Kanter
- CivicSurf
- David Wilcox
- Digital Pioneer
- Dominic Campbell
- Ed Mitchell
- Emma Mulqueeny
- Gallomanor
- James Governor
- Jenny Brown
- Jeremy Gould
- John Naughton
- Justin Kerr-Stevens
- Laura Whitehead
- Lee Hopkins
- Lloyd Davies
- LocalGovGlossary
- Mark O’Neill
- Neil Williams
- Neville Hobson
- Nick Booth
- Owen Barder
- Palimpsest
- Paul Canning
- Rui Grilo
- Sharon O’Dea
- Simon Berry
- Simon Dickson
- SoSaidThe.Organisation
- Steph Gray
- Steve Bridger
- Steve Dale
- The Connected Republic
- the interruption
- Thriving Too
- Tim Davies
- Tom Watson MP
Tag Archives: lottery
Localism needs bespoke, not scale
David Wilcox does his usual excellent summarising and commenting job on the latest snafu involving BIG Lottery funding and the internet. It’s all about a grant of £1.89 million to the Media Trust, to fund the establishment of “connected news … Continue reading
Let’s predict the lottery!
I rather enjoyed the Derren Brown stuff this week around predicting the lottery numbers. It was enjoyable and entertaining, and anyone expecting anything approaching seriousness was always going to be disappointed. But what of averaging out the views of the … Continue reading
