That was the cutting remark from one well-dressed speaker I overheard
backstage at this year's Web Summit which took place in Dublin over the
last week.
Wi-Fi - or the lack of it - was the main talking point among attendees, on Twitter
and even on Irish radio reports throughout the week, which is a shame
as there was so much more interesting things to talk about at the show.
Former Apple CEO spoilt rotten, overpaid, over-nourished rock star."
I met everyone from Liam Casey - the Imonology who travelled 31 hours
to be in Dublin and meet the type of people who could help get them to
the next level.
Add to that 20,000 attendees from companies ranging in size from
Google and Amazon to BaseStone, a UK startup which won the Alpha Pitch
competition - and focusing on Wi-Fi seems petty and insignificant.
Except it isn't.
Growing pains
I arrived at the event on Tuesday morning at 8am and even then, 90
minutes before founder Paddy Cosgrave walked on to the main stage to
open the event officially, the network had crashed.
It just set the wrong impression and for a conference which sells
itself as "Europe's largest and most prestigious international start-up
competition" it didn't strike the right note.
The crumbling Wi-Fi network was less a reflection of Cosgrave and his
team of organisers and more on the speed at which Web Summit has grown.
Four years ago, Web Summit began with 500 people from the burgeoning
Irish tech scene meeting in a house in Dublin. To go from that to 20,000
attendees including some of the biggest names from the worlds of
technology, media and entertainment is a remarkable success and
something to be hugely proud of - but with such rapid growth comes ever
bigger problems.
Along with the Wi-Fi, there were some other growing pains.
I spoke with Drop, a company launching a Bluetooth-connected weighing
scales and recipe platform, on the Food Stage on Tuesday morning and as
Ben Harris and I were preparing for our demo, the stage was still being
built around us.
Control
The Web Summit was made possible by 1,500 volunteers who gave of
their time in return for getting a chance to see people and
presentations that would otherwise would have been off-limits.
Clearly Cosgrave has been able to bring people with him on his
journey but it would have been helpful to give his army of volunteers a
little bit more instruction - or in some cases, any instruction.
In fairness to Cosgrave, he didn't shy away from the problems with
the Wi-Fi at the conference and on Tuesday on the main stage revealed
that this was a problem the organisers tried to head-off but the people
who run the RDS where the event takes place wouldn't allow them to take
control of the network.
Later in the week Cosgrove was reported as saying that the future of
the Web Summit in Ireland was at risk if the Wi-Fi problem wasn't
solved.
And that, for Ireland, would be a disaster.
Stimulating
There would be many countries in Europe who would welcome Cosgrove
and his Web Summit with open arms because, for all the problems which
beset the conference this week, they were insignificant compared to the
wealth of fascinating, stimulating and surprising talks, people and
companies which gathered in Dublin.
Cosgrave clearly has the ability to attract a huge amount of
influential people to his side and for Ireland it is a huge chance to
showcase its potential for companies who may otherwise never consider
setting up in the country.
The story of Uber getting a $26 million investment over a pint of
Guinness at a previous Web Summit may have been told one too many times
by Cosgrave during the week, but it serves as a clear indication of just
how important this conference is, and why sorting out the Wi-Fi is more
important than just allowing people to post selfies on Twitter.
Source : Yahoo
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