Get excited and make things with science

There are many reasons to go to South by Southwest Interactive: meeting up with friends old and new being the primary one. Then there’s the motivational factor. I always end up feeling very inspired by what I see.

This year, that feeling of inspiration was front and centre. First off, I tried to impart some of it on the How to Rawk SXSW panel, which was a lot of fun. Mind you, I did throw some shit at the fan by demonstrating how wasteful the overstuffed schwag bags are. I hope I didn’t get MJ into trouble.

My other public appearance was on The Heather Gold Show which was bags of fun. With a theme of Get Excited and Make Things, the topic of inspiration was bandied about a lot. It was a blast. Heather is a superb host and the other guests were truly inspirational. I discovered a kindred spirit in fellow excitable geek, Gina Trapani.

The actual panels and presentations at SXSW are the usual mixture of hit and miss, although the Cooking For Geeks presentation was really terrific. Any presenter who hacks the audience’s taste buds during a presentation is alright with me.

But by far the most inspirational thing I’ve seen was a panel hosted by Tantek on Open Science. The subject matter was utterly compelling and the panelists were ludicrously articulate and knowledgeable:

The URLs were flying thick and fast: the Signtific thought experiment game, the collaborative Galaxy Zoo—now joined by Moon Zoo—and the excellent Spacehack directory.

I was struck by the sheer volume of scientific data and APIs out there now. And yet, we aren’t really making use of it. Why we aren’t we making mashups using Google Mars? Why haven’t I built a Farmville-style game with Google Moon?

Halfway through the panel, I turned to Riccardo and whispered, We should organise a Science Hack Day.

I’m serious. It would probably be somewhere in London. I have no idea where or when. I have no idea how to get a venue or sponsors. But maybe you do.

What do you think? Everyone I’ve mentioned the idea to so far seems pretty excited about the idea. I’ll try to set up a wiki for brainstorming venues, sponsors, APIs, datasets and all that stuff. In the meantime, feel free to leave a comment here.

I got excited. Now I want to make things …with science! Are you with me?

Have you published a response to this? :

Responses

Relly

I’m in! I mean I couldn’t hack my way out of a wet paper bag with an API shaped like a machete but I love organising stuff.

Venue: aren’t Natalie and Simon best buddies with the Science Museum? Science Museum has done sleepovers in the past there and at the natural history musuem.

# Posted by Relly on Tuesday, March 16th, 2010 at 7:34pm

Igor Schwarzmann

I felt the same way about the Open Science session; it was very difficult to keep up with the note taking on my N1 …

Although I’m not a hacker a Science Hack Day sounds like a very good idea. Right now, I’m not sure if I just want to come to London for your event or if I should try to organize one in Germany as well.

Al Stevens

I’m in - sounds really interesting. A lot of the examples you have shown deal with space exploration. I wonder whether there are any apis or opportunities in the fields of medicine or climate technology (ie developing renewables).

# Posted by Al Stevens on Wednesday, March 17th, 2010 at 10:00am

lewro

This sounds exciting Jeremy! I could contribute some design and front-end dev if needed.

# Posted by lewro on Thursday, March 18th, 2010 at 10:47am

Noel

There’s a fair chance Google would sponsor you with a venue. I haven’t visited the London office, but that’s something MV does all the time.

# Posted by Noel on Monday, March 22nd, 2010 at 5:44pm

Previously on this day

17 years ago I wrote You don't know from fish

Is it a miracle or is it a rewired Billy Bass?

18 years ago I wrote Which HTML tag are you?

Excellent! I am the <style> tag: