We've been appointed by BBC Northern ireland to design the first Ulster Scots website. The site will be launching in the early part of next year. Stayed tuned for more information. In the meantime take a look at one of the projects we'll be working on, [A Kist O' Wurds](http://www.bbc.co.uk/northernireland/radioulster/a_kist_o_wurds/).
BBC,
Strategy,
Web design
08.12.2009
Corporate success!
We are pleased to announce that our website for Westminster City Council won best website at this years CorpComms awards.
Save Our Sounds has won gold for Best Cross-Media Promotion or Campaign at the The Radio Academy Promotions & Marketing awards. The project was produced in conjunction with the BBC World Service and AudioBoo, allowing users from around the world to upload endangered sounds directly to the site for playback online and in broadcast.
*From left to right: Steve Martin - World Service Promotions and navigation editor, Colin Babb - Save Our Sounds website producer, Kate Goldberg - Save Our Sounds website editor*
The nominations for this year's BIMA awards have been announced and we're happy to say that for the second year running we're up for an award. Battlefront has been nominated in the best website category. The competition is stiff (we're up against the iPlayer!) but we reckon we've got a shot at it.
If you have been working too hard or even if you haven't you need to let Original Travel sort out your next travel plans. Original Travel is an award winning travel specialist that provides tailor made holidays across the globe. The new site has a simplified navigational structure, makes use of hi-res imagery and integrates mapping as a central navigational mechanic. The site is driven by the Symphony CMS. It's definitely worth checking out.
The insight is simple - there are numerous ways to capture the visual world, but barely anything in sound. The BBC World Service is trying to put that right and is asking people to help preserve 'endangered sounds' by recording and sharing them. The recordings are all displayed on an interactive map, developed by Airlock, that allows you to upload audio and place it exactly where it was captured. Other users can then click around and travel the world in sound.