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Mojofest Dublin 2025: Mobile Content Creation Festival, this preview by Marie-Clare Byard Mojofest is back in Dublin for 2025 in UCD, it is a two-day festival on April 28th and 29th aimed at mobile content creators and industry professionals. The event offers keynotes, panels, hands-on workshops, and networking opportunities focused on the future of mobile storytelling and digital engagement, giving attendees a great opportunity to network and connect to learn from the best in the industry. Attendees can expect to learn from over 30 speakers, including recognised creators like Hannah Wilson and Jacque (Jacqueline) Smith, VP of digital video CNN and explore the latest mobile technology Comment on what to expert as I would have described it as a former attendee: For attendees, words cannot describe the motivation and inspiration you will get from this event, along with the global community of creatent creator connections and the amazing opportunity to learn hands-on from these industry experts in the workshops. Mojofest, Dublin, 28th, 29th April When and where is it on? 28th & 29th April, 2025 - UCD, In the O'Reilly Hall Conference Centre, University College, Belfield, Dublin 4 How many years has it been going? It started as RTÉ Mojocon in 2015 when I was head of innovation. It ran for 3 years until I took an exit package and started Mojofest in 2018. This is the 4th Mojofest (disrupted by Covid) but also the 10-year anniversary of our first Mojocon event which was at the CCD in Dublin. What was the inspiration to start it? Mainly frustration to be honest. I'd started training media organisations in Mobile Journalism in 2011 and was getting great feedback on the training but not much progress on implementation and transformation. After meeting several other early adopters like Nick Garnett and Marc Settle from BBC, John Inge Johansen from NRK, Illico Elia formerly Reuters and Len Clarke from Notre Dame University it became clear that there was a need for a network and an event seemed like the logical way to create one. That network, started after RTÉ Mojocon as a group on Facebook in 2015 now has over 7500 members from over 100 countries. What exciting things can people look forward to? We are just about to announce Jacque (Jacqueline) Smith, VP of digital video with CNN will be keynoting on day one and day two we have Hannah Wilson who has a social following of 750k across platforms both of whom speak about the top trends and tips for success with social/digital/vertical storytelling. We have 16 workshops already announced and expect there will be even more over the event. Many of these are practical hands-on learning sessions will be of real value for attendees who want to acquire/perfect new skills. The expo will be full of the leading brands making apps and accessories for professional grade mobile content creation. Many will have special event only prices and offers. What opportunities are on offer for those attending? We are hosting a networking event on Monday night in the city centre and I'm hoping to run a quiz with prizes and giveaways at it also. Who will be speaking? https://mojofest.eu/alllspeakers Keynote speaker, day 1: Jacque (Jacqueline) Smith, VP of digital video CNN Keynote speaker, day 2: Hannah Wilson, Content Creator / Influencer And unlike so many other events we have almost no "commercial" speakers. Our speakers are predominantly on stage, some for the first time, because they have a great, inspiring story to share. What tips would you give to people attending to get the most out of? Our motto has always been Inspire | Equip | Educate so to make the most of the experience attend as many sessions as you can. Grab some bargains and network like crazy! How can people book tickets? https://mojofest.eu Anything else you'd like to add / we should have asked? We have several sessions on AI this year as that has been the big new development in the last two years. If you have only a vague idea of the creative p...
In the aftermath of his halting debate performance, the editorial boards of some of the major US newspapers have called on Joe Biden to withdraw from the race for re-election. We ask why this issue is only being discussed so widely now, talking to a journalist who raised a comprehensive set of concerns but faced a backlash from others in the media and a former Executive Editor of The New York Times. Also in the programme, we explore how the disappearance of teenager Jay Slater in Tenerife has drawn the attention of online sleuths and the problems this creates for conventional reporters. Plus we hear what it's like reporting from Glastonbury, as well as what Ros and Katie got up to while they were there.Craig Oliver, former Downing Street Director of Communications; Jill Abramson, former Executive Editor, The New York Times; Annie Linskey, White House reporter, Wall Street Journal; Nayeema Raza, Co-Host, Semafor's Mixed Signals podcast; Nick Garnett, Senior Journalist, BBC; Robyn Vinter, north of England correspondent, The Guardian; Craig Jackson, Professor of Psychology, Birmingham City University; El Hunt, Commissioning Editor, The Evening Standard. Presenters: Katie Razzall & Ros Atkins Producer: Simon Richardson
Ukraine's President makes a surprise visit to the UK. We get reaction from one of the people who shared the stage with President Zelensky at Westminster Hall, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, the House of Commons speaker. Chris and security correspondent Frank Gardner are also on hand to chew over what this means in foreign policy terms. And we discuss the latest on missing 45-year-old mother-of-two Nicola Bulley with Marianna Spring, disinformation and social media correspondent, and BBC reporter Nick Garnett. Today's episode was presented by Adam Fleming and was made by Tim Walklate with Cordelia Hemming and Rufus Gray. The technical producer was Mike Regaard. The editor was Damon Rose.
Wipe away your tiers - Newscast is here to answer your questions! Can you still visit others in their support bubbles? Where is the virus spreading? What’s going on with Nightingale Hospitals? Here to answer your corona queries - Deputy Political Editor Vicki Young, Health Editor Hugh Pym, Newscast’s favourite virologist Dr Elisabetta Groppelli and 5 Live’s Nick Garnett. Studio Director: Emma Close Producers: Ben Wesiz and Jo Deahl Editor: Dino Sofos
In this weeks show Glen chats with Nick Garnett of BBC Radio 5 Live who has been pioneering mobile production for over a decade and Courtney chats with the amazingly talented Director/Editor/Cinematographer Valentina Vee. Connect with us http://www.linktr.ee/mobilecreatorpodcast
"Recording into the couch might get you the best result." Nick Garnett is a legend in mobile reporting. He has been using his iPhone 3 GS to go live for the BBC more than a decade ago, and since then he has hardly done anything else than reporting from where the stories happened. In the first episode of the Mobile Storytelling Podcast, he shares his best tipps and tricks on how to report indepentendly from whereever you are - like not sitting on the couch but talking into it for better sound . We also asked Nick about his views on how journalism is changing during the #Corona pandemic and if home production with mobile tools finally sees its breakthrough: "We won't go back to working the way we did before."
Dr Karl joins Nick Garnett to answer your science questions including whether moonlight is more powerful than wifi, and how to weigh astronauts in space.
In this special edition, Nick Garnett investigates ‘The Music of Mo’. James’ lead singer Tim Booth and Dodgy’s Nigel Clark explain how they felt when they learnt Sit Down and Good Enough were being borrowed by fans wanting to sing songs about Salah. Also, the Egyptian rapper Mahmoud Sabber explains how songs about Salah might bring about big changes in Egyptian society.
Nick Garnett discovers how Mo Salah is building bridges everywhere he goes and giving a new sense of pride in Liverpool’s Arabic community. The red and blue halves of Merseyside are now working with local Muslims to collect food for the city’s poor. Nick goes on a tour of where he grew up to find how the children at his old school love their new hero.
Nick Garnett begins an epic journey from Liverpool to Egypt and back as he tries to track down the ‘real’ Mo Salah. Nick bumps into ‘another Mo Salah’ outside the Kop and chats to George Sephton, the voice of Anfield, who has to turn up the volume to 11 whenever Salah scores. And he travels to London where the King of Egypt’s golden boots are the latest exhibit to be displayed at the British Museum.
A simple ‘just say no’ message from Salah has increased calls to drug charities in Egypt by 400%. He’s everywhere - from billboards to TV adverts. Nick Garnett travels to Cairo in his search for the ‘real’ Salah and wears a Liverpool shirt with the footballer’s name on and gets mobbed at the pyramids. Somehow he ends up on a camel...
The ‘real’ Salah is found. Nick Garnett travels to Nagrig where the footballer grew up to find his charity is single handedly saving hundreds of people from poverty. The dream of winning the World Cup may not have happened, but Salah is treated as a hero by all who know him.
Conor McNamara from BBC 5 Live, Marc Gaier from BBC Radio Merseyside and Dan Kay from the Liverpool Echo tell Nick Garnett where they think Mo Salah is heading. Meanwhile Wael Hussein El Sayed in Cairo tells Nick never to use his first name in an Arabic speaking country ever again (it means ****)!
Dr Karl joins Nick Garnett to discuss uranium binoculars, how twins can age at different rates, and could shrink rays ever become science fact.
Nick Garnett is a broadcast journalist at the BBC and has been for a journalist and news reporter for 30 years. Nick's reports are broadcast on local and regional TV as well as the BBC world service. He has reported on a number of stories from around the world including Nepal, Tunisia, Paris, Malta, Jordan, Hungary, Austria, Germany, Switzerland, France, Ireland, Scotland, Turkey, South Sudan and Iraq. Nick has won a New York radio festival award and a United Nations award. Nick Garnett of BBC Radio 5 Live is now a digital-first journalist after many years in radio storytelling. CONNECT WITH NICK Nick on Twitter Nick on Instagram CONNECT WITH nine dots Email Geoffrey Website nine dots on Twitter nine dots on Instagram nine dots on LinkedIn nine dots on Facebook
Nick Garnett is a broadcast journalist at the BBC and has been a journalist and news reporter for 30 years. Nick’s reports are broadcast on local and regional TV as well as the BBC world service. He has reported on a number of stories from around the world including Nepal, Tunisia, Paris, Malta, Jordan, Hungary, Austria, Germany, Switzerland, France, Ireland, Scotland, Turkey, South Sudan and Iraq. Nick has won a New York radio festival award and a United Nations award. Nick Garnett of BBC Radio 5 Live is now a digital-first journalist after many years in radio storytelling. CONNECT WITH NICK Nick on Twitter Nick on Instagram CONNECT WITH nine dots Email Geoffrey Website nine dots on Twitter nine dots on Instagram nine dots on LinkedIn nine dots on Facebook
Fevzi Turkalp, the Gadget Detective, joins Nick Garnett on BBC Radio 5 Live. From laptops to virtual machines, virus scanners to VPNs, Fevzi is on hand to answer listeners' questions. This week, Fevzi answers questions on: ○ Backing up a large number of photos to an external drive ○ Running Win98 software on a 64bit Win8.1 system ○ The differnce between different types of backup ○ Problems connecting to websites ○ Issues backing up Mac files on an old operating system ○ Are Fixme Sticks worth using? ○ Creating a dual boot to run Windows and Linux on the same system ○ Looking for a free alternative to Excel for accounting ○ Choosing a VSP(VPN?) app for a mobile phone ○ Fitting Wifi to a camper van ○ Issues with an iPhone 5 battery ○ Choosing a VPN for an Android ○ Is Bullguard Antivirus any good? ○ Do Apple Macs require security software? ○ How does Avast's free antivirus measure up? ○ Problems with Freeview breaking up Gadget of the Week 1 is LumaFusion, a video editing application for iOS devices. Offering a full feature set, including 4K editing, this app rivals high end rivals at a fraction of the cost with multi-track editing, full audio mixer, lossless exporting and a lot more. Definitely one for anybody interested in video editing to consider. Listen in for more details. Gadget of the Week 2 is the Transcend DrivePro 230 dashcam. Offering very high quality video recording and featuring GPS to track your speed and location, lane departure warning, forward collision warning, Wifi streaming, and parking mode, this model scored 4.5 out of 5. Listen in for more details. You can hear Fevzi evert 1st and 3rd Friday morning on BBC Radio 5 Live at 2am, plus you can follow him on Twitter @gadgetdetective #Fevzi #Turkalp #Gadget #Detective #Tech #Technology #News #Reviews #Help #Advice #Nick #Garnett #BBC #Radio #5L #Backup #Photos #External #HD #Drive #Photos #Computer #PC #Laptop #Win98 #Win8 #Software #Virtual #Machine #Thunderbolt #Firewire #Linux #Mirroring #Ghosting #Acronis #True #Image #Reinstall #Recover #Recovering #Internet #Connection #Firewall #Security #Mac #Software #Apple #Fixme #Stick #USB #Security #Antivirus #Browser #Firefox #Chrome #Box #Parallels #VMWare #Excel #Quickbooks #VSP #VPN #Smartphone #Phone #Encryptian #Wifi #iPhone5 #Battery #iOS11 #Android #Avast #Freeview #TV #Signal #GadgetoftheWeek #LumaFusion #Video #Editor #Audio #4K #Multitrack #iPhone #iPad #iOS #iMovie #Ubunto #Transcend #DrivePro #230 #Dashcam #GPS #Collision #Detection #Lane #Departure
Fevzi Turkalp, the Gadget Detective, joins Nick Garnett on BBC Radio 5 Live. From laptops to virtual machines, virus scanners to VPNs, Fevzi is on hand to answer listeners' questions. This week, Fevzi answers questions on: ○ Backing up a large number of photos to an external drive ○ Running Win98 software on a 64bit Win8.1 system ○ The differnce between different types of backup ○ Problems connecting to websites ○ Issues backing up Mac files on an old operating system ○ Are Fixme Sticks worth using? ○ Creating a dual boot to run Windows and Linux on the same system ○ Looking for a free alternative to Excel for accounting ○ Choosing a VSP(VPN?) app for a mobile phone ○ Fitting Wifi to a camper van ○ Issues with an iPhone 5 battery ○ Choosing a VPN for an Android ○ Is Bullguard Antivirus any good? ○ Do Apple Macs require security software? ○ How does Avast's free antivirus measure up? ○ Problems with Freeview breaking up Gadget of the Week 1 is LumaFusion, a video editing application for iOS devices. Offering a full feature set, including 4K editing, this app rivals high end rivals at a fraction of the cost with multi-track editing, full audio mixer, lossless exporting and a lot more. Definitely one for anybody interested in video editing to consider. Listen in for more details. Gadget of the Week 2 is the Transcend DrivePro 230 dashcam. Offering very high quality video recording and featuring GPS to track your speed and location, lane departure warning, forward collision warning, Wifi streaming, and parking mode, this model scored 4.5 out of 5. Listen in for more details. You can hear Fevzi evert 1st and 3rd Friday morning on BBC Radio 5 Live at 2am, plus you can follow him on Twitter @gadgetdetective #Fevzi #Turkalp #Gadget #Detective #Tech #Technology #News #Reviews #Help #Advice #Nick #Garnett #BBC #Radio #5L #Backup #Photos #External #HD #Drive #Photos #Computer #PC #Laptop #Win98 #Win8 #Software #Virtual #Machine #Thunderbolt #Firewire #Linux #Mirroring #Ghosting #Acronis #True #Image #Reinstall #Recover #Recovering #Internet #Connection #Firewall #Security #Mac #Software #Apple #Fixme #Stick #USB #Security #Antivirus #Browser #Firefox #Chrome #Box #Parallels #VMWare #Excel #Quickbooks #VSP #VPN #Smartphone #Phone #Encryptian #Wifi #iPhone5 #Battery #iOS11 #Android #Avast #Freeview #TV #Signal #GadgetoftheWeek #LumaFusion #Video #Editor #Audio #4K #Multitrack #iPhone #iPad #iOS #iMovie #Ubunto #Transcend #DrivePro #230 #Dashcam #GPS #Collision #Detection #Lane #Departure
La stabilité, c’est le premier critère de qualité des vidéos “pro”. Trépied et grip sont les deux accessoires de base. La stabilisation est l'une des évolutions les plus notable depuis quelques années ans le domaine de l’image. La stabilisation matérielle Les origines : le steadicam (un peu plus lourd qu'une poignée stabilisée) Les stabilisateurs à contrepoids (Steadycam Smoothee utilisé pour Tangerine) Les stabilisateurs à gyroscopes (gimbal) : deux axes, trois axes… Dji Osmo Mobile [329 €] (caméra stabilisée pour les drones avant de venir une caméra/gimbal, puis un gimbal tout seul -avec suivi de personnage-) (avec ou sans app accompagnante qui utilise le bluetooth pour que la poignée et le smartphone communiquent) Feiyu Tech SPG Plus [335 €] (deux poignées) LanParte HHG-01 [223 €] (un des moins chers, des plus universels et des moins fragiles) Steadicam Volt, promis plus efficace que tout le reste, par l’inventeur du steadi. Pour boucler la boucle. La stabilisation 5 axes des DSLR… Surenchère commerciale ou réalité ? Le test du DJI Osmo Mobile par 01net avec la video qui va bien La stabilisation logicielle Stead XP, la stabilisation logicielle pour (presque) tous les appareils de prise de vue. Le boîtier arrive avec un an de retard : un gimbal 100% logiciel pour la GoPro et toutes les caméras dotées d’un micro, une sorte de gimbal 100% logiciel plus fort que la stabilisation logicicielle des applis smartphones. La démo de PGN au CES. Aujourd’hui ça tient dans un petit boitier, demain dans une puce. Des applications proposent une stabilisation logicielle intégrée : Filmic Pro [iOS][Android] City producer et la video démo entre deux chaises captée aux rencontres par Bertrand Samimi Vee, tourne, stabilise et monte Steady Les limites de la stabilisation Désactiver la stabilisation quand on est sur pied. ça vaut pour Filmic Pro mais aussi pour les optiques des DSLR Les gimbals empêchent généralement l’utilisation d’un microphone externe dont le câble altère la fluidité de mouvement Comment fonctionnent les différents types de stabilisation logicielle, une video de Tom Scott Les gens Nick Garnett et son Osmo (presque) pris pour cible Les radars Laurent : Moment Lens pour iPhone 7 Plus. Et l'exemple en video de la qualité de la macro. Capital Dock : la plus haute tour de Dublin, reportage de Philip Bromwell pour RTE News Guillaume : auto edit 2 : monter ses interviews en sélection Galluscam, le must Airpods et leur puce W1 (expliquée), utilisée dans les beats audio PowerBeats3 Wireless les beats audio Solo3 Wireless les beauts audio BeatsX Et depuis l'enregistrement du podcast, les dévelopeurs de Filmic Pro m'ont confirmé travailler sur une utilisation des Airpods comme micros sans-fil. Nous retrouver Le site de VMP, vmp.fm Sur Twitter Philippe Couve @couve Laurent Clause @laurentclause Guillaume Kuster @_gkuster Les applications pour profiter au mieux des podcasts iOS Overcast Castro Apple podcasts Android Pocket Casts Podcast Republic
BBC Radio 5 live reporter Nick Garnett first visited Sousse in the aftermath of the terror attack in 2015. The mass shooting by a gunman in the resort left 38 people dead, including 30 British holidaymakers. A year-and-a-half on he returns to Tunisia to see how the resort of Sousse has changed, and how the events have affected people living there.
Nick Garnett is a BBC reporter with BBC Radio 5 Live. He uses his iPhone for recording and editing audio. He also shoots video and uses live-streaming to bring the big stories to his audience. Last year he faced big reporting challenges while covering the Nepal earthquake and Paris terror attacks. In this show Nick tells Mark Egan the apps and accessories he uses. He also explains how mobile content creation is changing his job....and possibly even threatening it.
5 live reporter Nick Garnett looks back at some of the biggest stories he’s covered in 2015, and explains what it takes to get them on air as he is sent around the world at short notice
James Phelan got the chance to sit down and talk about the future of mobile journalism with BBC's Nick Garnett, live from Mojocon 2015.
Interviews with the speakers of the standout sessions of the Next Radio ideas conference. We hear from Absolute Radio's Geoff Lloyd on never underestimating your listeners and BBC Radio 5 Live's North of England reporter Nick Garnett on how to do an outside broadcast from anywhere Plus how the BBC's digital Glastonbury was put together and some ideas on innovative radio straight out of Africa.