Tag Archive for: events

Electromagnetic Field 2024 – The best yet!

Every two years since 2014 employees from Dogsbody Technology have decamped to a field to attend Electromagnetic Field (EMF Camp).

A pile of broom handles laying on the floor

165 Broom Handles

And this time we brought……..broom handles?!?!

But more on that later..

Now settled in Eastnor Castle, Herefordshire, Electromagnetic Field is “Glastonbury for Geeks” (but it is so much more than that)! Featuring super fast 40 Gb/s symmetrical internet connection and power to your tent –  it is a special and unique event which you have to experience to understand!

Its not all tech – there was also a crochet workshop, blacksmithing, balloon animal making, lock picking and much more! Even the infrastructure is unique with it’s own wired telephony and postal system! Thousands of phone calls were made and people went old school sending 4000 postcards to villages across the event.

picture of a number of people sitting at tables in a tent doing crochet

Crochet workshop

 

To achieve the 40 gigabyte internet connection to the field EMF camp now owns a 61 km piece of fibre that runs all the way from Eastnor to Gloucester – its really is absurd – and that is your introduction to exactly what EMF Camp is!

2024 was a monster year for EMF with 3 times more talks, workshops and installations submitted than any other year and 114 villages across the site.

  • 129 Talks
  • 54 Workshops
  • 95 Installations
  • 220 events in villages

It would take 12 continuous days to watch all the talks and attend all the workshops.

EMF Camp is run entirely by unpaid volunteers, for fun, including the attendees. 1200 attendees volunteered over 142 person days across 1500 shifts over 3 days! A record number of volunteers shifts where filled. Staff from Dogsbody volunteered their time to help with various jobs including, bar work, audio and visual roles for all the amazing talks and admin roles. If this wasn’t enough EMF also raised £3000 for charity at the Swap Shop – A place for old tech, books, LED panels and more to find a new home for a donation to charity.

Screenshot of a scial media post from "Jonty Wareing" saying "Today I explained @emfcamp was a "hobby I did in my free time" and also that the team was "hundreds of people" and they looked at me like I was a lunatic"

One of the main organisers X posts

Sustainability was very much in focus this year, and whilst unfortunately battery technology isn’t advance enough yet to power the site (diesel generators are the only thing that cut it) there were a number of changes this year including re-usable pint and half-pint cups. Amazingly achieving a return rate of just over 95%, which according to their supplier is “unprecedented”……Like we say EMF Camp is a special place!

Every year the ‘Badge’ is a highlight – usually included in the ticket price, this year, to be more sustainable and stop waste, they charged separately for the badge and made this the badge for future EMF Camps. Future events will add bits, swap bits or provide upgrades hopefully leading to less waste for all.

Finally this year they had a food bank collection at the end of event for non perishable goods which was just a awesome idea.

Now…..remember those Broom handles….This year was also special for Dogsbody. For the first time we actually planned ahead and on the first, very late night, built a 3v 5/8 Geodesic Dome, 6m in diameter and 3.5m high! This was constructed with the Dome kit from Build With Hubs using 165 broom handles of three different lengths totalling over 181 metres.

Want to experience a piece of EMF Camp – 90% of talks are recorded and can be found here. You can also see past years talks.

EMF Camp is a non profit, volunteer run event/festival run every two years, that rely heavily on sponsorship. EMF Camp 2024 only had 38% of the sponsorship they had in 2022. On the first day of the event 43 UK festivals had already gone bankrupt/shut down in 2024 and it was only May!

If you think you or your company can help sponsor EMF Camp 2026 or if you think you have some skills you will be wiling to share to help organise the event please email contact@emfcamp.org.

EMF Camp 2024, as always, was an absolute blast. Thank you to all the organisers, sponsors and volunteers for making it one of the highlights of 2024.

EMF will return in 2026. You can  subscribe to their mailing list to be notified when it is announced.

The Dogsbody Camp in our Dome

Introducing Dogsbody Internal Hackathons

hackathon
noun     informal     /ˈhakəθɒn/
An event, typically lasting several days, in which a large number of people meet to engage in collaborative computer programming.

Dogsbody Technology love to attend hackathons, whether they be online or the middle of a field near Wales.  In the past we have attended Over the Air, Hashcode and EMF camp with Mr Dogsbody attending ‘retro’ hackathons such as Campus Party, Hacked and many barcamp’s.

Hackathons take a lot of organisation, planning and of course sponsorship. Unfortunately, over the years the number of hackathon have depleted.

In 2018, at the request of our employees, Dogsbody Technology decided to introduce our own bimonthly Internal Hackathons to the Dogsbody calendar.

The Dogsbody Team take a Friday afternoon and evening break from their usual work schedule to work together on whatever exciting, ad hoc projects they want too  – new technology, internal improvement or that code that just won’t work!

In true hackathon style there is Junk food (pizza, fried chicken, burgers you get the idea) and drink.

We may in the future do a longer more traditional hackathon somewhere but for now Dogsbody HQ with fast internet and all our home comfort gadget works for us.

Projects we’ve worked on so far include:

  • 3D printing
  • A Tea Bot which integrate with Slack
  • Raspberry Pi wildlife camera
  • Raspberry Pi clocking in/out system
  • Getting data from our laptop into grafana (we do love a graph!)

Its a chance for our employees to play with the tech they want which may not come up in their day job and for us to add another great reason to work for Dogsbody Technology.

Don’t worry you will still see us attending events and hackathons when they arise 🙂

Photo credit to Benjamin Ellis - https://www.flickr.com/photos/jamin2/

Over The Air 2015

On the morning of Friday the 25th of September the Dogsbody Technology team set out for the weekend, heading to London for the 7th annual Over The Air event. Over The Air is a combination of a hack day, workshops and talks, giving people the chance to make awesome stuff and learn new things whilst doing it.

Dan (our boss) has attended for the last 5 years, and this year he recommended that we all go along and get in on the fun. We’re always looking to expand and grow our knowledge of anything and everything technology related, and we figured there is no better place than a hackathon! It’s always a good thing to hang out with our fellow geeks, which there was certainly no shortage of, to see what everyone is working on and what they’ve been getting up to.

Friday morning consisted of getting to the venue (St. John’s Hoxton), pitching our tents, grabbing as much free loot as possible (my laptop is now covered in stickers…) and listening to the intro and keynote speeches. The keynote was very interesting with Howard Baker telling us about the BBC’s development of the micro:bit, and making us all very jealous of the year 7 students who will be getting one for free!

The Talks

Over the rest of Friday and Saturday, we all headed off to see some very interesting talks given by some very clever people! From HTML5 to Lego robots, and the Internet of Things to Smart cities, there was just so much to learn. We couldn’t possibly mention all of these talks, so here are each of our favourites…

Alex – The future of mobile identity with Fabric and Digits by Andy Piper -“An independent authentication service that allows people who are new to the internet to have an identity online. It’s completely free and works with 860 mobile operators in countries all over the world. It can even work out where the user is based and send them messages in the correct language!” You can read more about Twitter digits here.

Rob – How To Get New Characters Into Unicode by Terrence Eden – “Because it showcased that something that we take for granted is so complicated, but also very open and community driven” You can read more about Terrence’s efforts here.

Dan – Introduction to the Digital Catapult & our Weightless-N project with Camdenby by Peter Karney – “This new technology gives us the opportunity to put a sensor ~10KM away from a base-station, run it with a 9v battery for up to 7 years, and have it report almost live data. This has massive potential for use with the internet of things…” You can read more about Weightless-N technology here and see the slides from the talk here.

Gary – Ethical design by Laura Kalbag – “With so much data being collected about all of us everyday by so many different entities, this session posed some seriously thought provoking questions on how we can make privacy and security a reality for everyone, and not just the people with technical know-how.” You can see the slides from the talk here.

The Hackathon

Whilst all of these talks were happening, people were hacking away on their entries for the hack day contest. I can genuinely say I’ve never seen such clever things made by so few people in so little time. There were some truly awesome entries in each and every category, meaning there wasn’t a dull moment when it came round to the hack day show & tell. Though I can’t say I’m surprised, given the prizes that were up for grabs. None of the Dogsbody team got round to submitting a hack, so we have nothing to show off. However, you should definitely go and check out all of the categories and prizes that were on offer.

Until Next Time…

To quote Margaret Gold, one of the fantastic organisers of this years Over The Air; “and that’s a wrap!” We’ll (hopefully) be back next year for another 36 hours of awesome code and fantastic discussions. If you see us, come and say hey!

Photo credit to Benjamin Ellis