I thought I would do a blog post (through Posterous) about what I hope to do this year.
At the moment I am a editor of Android (FTW), Web and Windows on the every growing Gapps.me (http://gapps.me) which I love doing as I get to speak to amazing people who develop cool applications on many platforms. I hope to continue this.
This year I want to get my name out more into the tech community and get involved in more tech events around the UK.
If you have any information on any sort of tech events in the UK or anything else, comment on my blog (http://www.johnville.co.uk) or email me at john@johnpauldickie.co.uk.
Sent from my T-Mobile Pulse.
My mobile phones through the years.
Left to right
Oldest to newest excluding my new phone.
Sent from my T-Mobile Pulse.

Now testing: “Read More” breaks
Inserting a break will truncate your post so readers need to click “Read More” to view it in its entirety.
Themes can even style them using the new
{block:More}tag!{block:More} <a href="{Permalink}" class="big_ass_button">Read More</a> {/block:More}You can add a break with the plain text and Markdown editors with the simple tag:
These are only available in Text Posts at the moment.
juvenilia iv
How about this as my next tumblr theme on my blog at http://johnville.co.uk?
Comment or @reply http://twitter.com/johnpauldickie. Preview: http://safe.tumblr.com/theme/preview/363
The FCC says the internet is at a crossroadsA group of the world’s largest internet companies has written a letter of support to the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
The letter is the latest in an ongoing debate about “network neutrality” - or how data is distributed on the web.
Some internet providers have called for a tiered system, in which bandwidth-heavy data like videos travel slower.
The FCC is opposed to this and wants to preserve an open internet in which all data is treated equally.
The letter, signed by the chief executives of Google, Ebay, Skype, Facebook, Amazon and Sony Electronics among others, says that maintaining data neutrality helps businesses to compete on the basis of content alone.
“An open internet fuels a competitive and efficient marketplace, where consumers make the ultimate choices about which products succeed and which fail,” the letter read.
“This allows businesses of all sizes, from the smallest start-up to larger corporations, to compete, yielding maximum economic growth and opportunity.”
Other signatories included community websites Digg, Flickr, LinkedIn and Craigslist.
Last month the FCC said that net neutrality should be applied to wireless traffic as well.
Some internet providers and telecommunications companies argue that a tiered system is going to be the only way to keep internet traffic flowing smoothly in the future.
Sent from my iPod Touch.
©2010. Postage by Greg Cooper. Icons by P.J. Onori. Thanks to Jamie Cassidy & Panic.
*Unlikely to find your lost post using this but you can try...
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