Enda Crowley | Dublin, Ireland.

dublin 2

This is a follow-up to a post I’d made 8 months ago after dropping out of UCC to move to Dublin. I’ll keep this trend going and follow up again in a few months.

I’m still here! Although I’m technically writing this from beautiful Lisbon right now, I do still live in Dublin!

I moved out of HSQ. Then I moved out again. Soon after arriving to Dublin, full-time employment at the age of 19 started to become, well, depressing. Especially when most of my customers were college students all around my age, all much happier than I was. It didn’t help that the pay sucked.

Through some of its alma-mater, I discovered IADT and their Enterprise degree. While first year isn’t exactly what I thought it would be, its still pretty fucking awesome. Its a hands-on approach to business and management and I absolutely love it! I’m in my element in the few lectures I do attend.

The support I’ve received from the college in relation to our big project (more on that later) has been phenomenal. This is an institute that actively encourages their students to start businesses during the course. I just need to learn to manage my time between the two a little better and I’ll be, to pardon the phrase, sucking diesel. There’s also a top-class incubator on-campus, if you weren’t already convinced enough.

When I moved out of HSQ, I lucked into a room in my friend Simon’s gaff, nethaus. I’ve known Simon for years, though we’d only ever met once or twice and only quite briefly so it was a little odd at first to be living with this guy who I’d mostly known as an avatar and some very witty tweets.

Awkwardness aside, holy freaking Jobs. I’ve lucked into this fantastic Trinity CS/metal/gay scene. A strange combination, but it works! I’ve made some awesome friends thanks to my time spent at nethaus. It’s unreal to have people to be able bounce ideas off  and them watch them get built! Just watching these guys, my love for Rapid Development was born. I even tried to teach myself Ruby!

Anyway, no more news. Still in Dublin. Living on the edge of the Docklands and East Wall with my heterosexual life partner of 11 years. The area sounds like Baghdad during Halloween and we recently learned, it floods like a motherfucker. But its central and the apartment is deadly.

See y’all in 8 months for dublin 3.

This entry was written by enda, posted on November 3, 2011 at 6:49 am, filed under life. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.



An idea.

As some of you may remember, I ran an event a few years back called TeenCamp Ireland.

The idea was for it to be a BarCamp-style event which brought teens together to talk about the topics they liked, but sort-of focus on the web and tech at the same time.

It gained a bit of traction, I think maybe 60 people attended and it was pretty good fun. I thought it was a great idea and enough people seemed to agree for us to call it a success.

I always thought I did a crappy job of it though. It wasn’t what I initially thought it would be but I never really knew how to explain why, because I didn’t know what I wanted from TeenCamp.

So here’s what I’ve got so far:

get a rake load of young professionals and lock ‘em in a room together

Take some established young professionals: students, bloggers, techies, Young Scientists from all around Ireland and give them a platform to address their peers, the press and professionals.

Give everyone who wants it the opportunity to pitch, discuss or share ideas.

Provide people with the resources to help them develop ideas and to meet others – an issue I know I’ve stumbled with on projects.

Set a challenge for the room, and a prize for the group that develops the best solution.

We could run a few of these events a year, focusing on a different topic and holding it in a different part of Ireland each year.

Its going to be cheap, so this won’t be glamorous. Ideally, it should be free but I hear sponsorship is just great in the middle of a global economic crisis.

Most importantly though, I want everyone to leave feeling like I do when I see my peers: that anything is possible and that help is always available.

This entry was written by enda, posted on at 5:13 am, filed under Uncategorized. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.



Dublin

I realize the large majority of my blog posts are me talking about how I’m terrible at blogging, but I suppose I should blog news this big.

I moved to Dublin.

There were many reasons for this, many too personal to be blogged, but I think the largest contributor was my genuine disappointment with university. Going in as an undergraduate to UCC I could not wait to meet more people like myself. I was promised these great minds, the people I’ll befriend and work with for the rest of my life and I found fuck all.

I did try though, hard. I joined clubs, I joined societies, I was even tempted by the Students Union and their fantastic website. I found the societies (and definitely the Students Union) to be small, self-congratulatory circle-jerk who’s main function was to just give everyone another reason to go out and get pissed on a weeknight. Usually involving some kind of mystery tour and giving out terribly cheap condoms.

So I moved to Dublin. I moved into a kick-ass apartment with two driven and intelligent people. I took out a wicked overdraft and am currently living on a credit card to afford it, but I know its going to be worth it.

**sidenote: AIB Student Accounts rock**

In my last week here, we have watched TED talks, pitched ideas, talked business and started a business (more to come on that later).

I’m currently working in Compu b, my position is somewhere between the social media guy and a technician – its fantastic. The company is booming, the atmosphere is amazing – like anything is possible, the people are all intelligent and driven – its like what I would imagine working in a start-up is. The policy is simple: if you’ve an idea, go do it. If it works – it works! If not? It probably didn’t cost an awful lot.

Dublin right now is where everything seems to be happening. As a Cork-man, it depresses me to say that and I’d love to go home, but right now – it doesn’t really make an awful lot of sense, there’s a disproportionate amount of money/energy/opportunity up here.

So Dublin is my new home,. I’ve been so busy with work I haven’t even walked up the top of Grafton Street yet, but my god, I’m delighted to be here.

This entry was written by enda, posted on February 24, 2011 at 1:05 am, filed under life. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.



Nissan LEAF test drive

I can’t recall another day I was this excited about something. I mean, I was really, really excited. Possibly when I got to see and drive a real-life Honda Insight from Japan but in hindsight now, it wasn’t nearly as momentous an occasion as this was for me.

Today was the day I got to test-drive Nissan’s new LEAF, the worlds first mass-market production EV (electric vehicle). I’ve followed the LEAF before was even revealed to the public this time last year when its internals were hidden inside a Nissan Cube (EV-01) and then a Nissan Tiida (EV-11).

Since watching Who Killed the Electric Car roughly two years ago, I’ve always had quite a bitter optimism towards EV’s. I understand how they work, I think they make sense for about 80-90% of the population and I want one myself but figured we’d never see them again. So you can understand how sitting in a mass-market, production EV was quite an experience for me. Not only that but also the first EV you can own (not counting the 109,000€ Tesla Roadster) – the first generation of EV’s were lease only, meaning that when your lease was up, they took the car back and (that time) they crushed them.

Fast forward to 2010. Rising petrol prices, motor tax prices, the BP oil spill, the “green revolution”, improvements in lithium-ion battery technology and you’ll see that many fully-electric cars have been announced for production and general release in 2011/2012. The Chevrolet Volt, Mitsubishi iMiEV, Th!nk City, CODA, Tesla and the Renault Fluence EV to name but a few. Volkswagen, BMW/Mini, Saab and Volvo have all pledged to be working on release cars too.

I had a short (but sweet) test-drive at Windsor Motorwold in Cork, as part of the Nissan LEAF Roadshow that’s touring over the major areas of Ireland right now. In the passenger seat was Gary from the Nissan Technical Centre in the UK. Gary has been working on the LEAF since its first prototype (the EV-01). He’s met all the EV-rockstars (in my mind) and accompanied Robert Llewellyn from Fully Charged on his test-drive of the same LEAF that I drove in the UK.

The Drive.

Two very important things stuck out for me as I drove the LEAF. The first was just how pleasant a car it is. There’s no noise, no rumble, no jerky feeling or anything really involved in turning it on or driving it. The cabin is large, light, airy and spacious.The whole car seems to be designed in a manner to make the driver feel relaxed and comfortable. This is reflected in the way the car drives too. Its so smooth. The heavy battery gives the car a nice planted feeling so it sticks to the road quite well, the steering is light and the lack of any transmission (because of the electric motor) means its smoother than any CVT-equipped car. You just put your foot down and watch the speedo race upwards. I wasn’t used to the silence of the car and I quickly forgot I was doing (well) over the Irish speed limit.

Having 100% torque from 0 gives the car a very nice bit of oomph too, good for putting boy racers in their place.

The second thing that stuck out for me was that this is a car. Its not a concept or a prototype, it has no weird design, its just a 5-door Nissan car that happens to run on electricity as opposed to petrol. There’s no learning curve to the car, you just hit the start button and go! Anyone can drive this and this is key for Nissan if  they plan on selling many.

I could talk some more about the satellite navigation which shows you not only how far you can drive on the map, but also where all the chargers are located. Or I could talk about how you tell it when to charge at night to draw cheaper electricity, how it e-mails you when its fully charged, how you can tell it to turn on the air-conditioning or heating while its plugged in as it draws electricity from the mains and means you don’t need to use it while you’re driving.

This car is awesome, simple as.

My test-drive wasn’t long enough for me to comment properly on real-world range or charging times but I know a journey from Cork city to Tralee, Kerry (121km and the furthest I’ll ever drive without taking a train or flying) is perfectly do-able, the range didn’t seem to drop very much even when I booted it to 83km/hr on the drive back to the dealership. Driving in ECO mode (which limits your accelerating aggression and increases regenerative braking, thus recycling more energy) will give you a few more kilometers but I doubt the majority of people will need them. Cork – Dublin will be possible when the fast chargers (which provides 80% or ~120km in 25 minutes) are installed on all national roads (one roughly every 60km).

Nissan are marketing the LEAF as the new car. I absolutely believe it is. Its the iPod to the internal combustion engine’s Walkman. Its not intimidating, its easier to drive, easier and cheaper to fuel but its still a car. Its still 5 doors on 4 wheels with pedals and a steering wheel. Its the car 2.0 and it will put the biggest grin on your face.

The specs:

Price: 29,995€ after a 5,000€ government rebate.
Range: 160KM according to the LA4 driving cycle
Running cost/yr:
232€ (based on 19,000km a year)
Top speed: 140km/hr
0-60km/hr: no-one has timed it but it seems nippy!

This entry was written by enda, posted on August 14, 2010 at 9:16 pm, filed under Electric Cars. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.



Chris

Chris was diagnosed with Grade-4 brain cancer in November 2009. He’s been blogging and tweeting his experiences all the way. We’ve been reading  his heartbreaking posts about his worsening condition lately and are now trying to raise funds for Chris and his family in their time of need.

Many of us in Cork came to know Chris due to his past position at O2, through twitter he helped us all get our hands on iPhones. Beyond the iPhone, it’s fantastic great to connect with someone else who has interests in tech over twitter and facebook – it really shows the power of social networking.

All we’re asking for is considering a small donation to cheer Chris up as his condition worsens and to help out his family.

Thanks.

This entry was written by enda, posted on April 9, 2010 at 3:45 pm, filed under Uncategorized. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.



Everybody Get Dangerous

The three best people in the world and myself there. Having no clue what they were getting into they all agreed to help me out being “experts” for a show on TV3.

I owe them all steaks.

This entry was written by enda, posted on March 14, 2010 at 7:03 pm, filed under Uncategorized. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.



first.

Powered by my love/hate relationship with WordPress, this blog/website will not be updated much, maybe monthly (still more than my “official” blog, contrar.ie) with what I’m up to.

The point of this site is to merely introduce myself to people who don’t already know me, tell them what I’m up to and point them to more specific areas of my online life.

So yeah. Welcome. Read my Colophon and Contact me about stuff.

This entry was written by enda, posted on September 6, 2009 at 10:52 am, filed under Uncategorized. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink and follow any comments with the RSS feed for this post.