Big and Beautiful
1:16 PM

In the past year or two, we've seen dramatic changes to the landscape of the web. Computer screens are getting larger, connections are getting faster, and as a result websites are getting bigger, bolder and brighter.

We've tried to reflect this in our own work. Here's a selection of some of the recent web projects we've designed and built at B&V...

Bettavend
www.bettavend.co.uk
Bettavend install and maintain a complete range of vending machines for hot beverages, cold drinks, fresh water, confectionery and food.

The Coffee Bean Company
www.coffeebeancompany.co.uk
The Coffee Bean Company is a part of Bettavend. They work in Ethical Trading Partnerships in order to provide, as far as possible, sustainable Tea and Coffee.

Titchfield Dental Health
www.titchfielddental.co.uk
A modern and comforable dentist in Park Gate, Hampshire. Titchfield Dental specialise in calming nervous patients, and have an enormous book of testimonials from satisfied customers!

The Friarsgate Practice
www.friarsgatepractice.co.uk
The Friarsgate Practice are a thriving, enthusiastic and friendly Primary Care General Practice with surgeries in three locations: Central Winchester, Badger Farm and Kings Worthy.

Stannah Lifts
www.stannahlifts.co.uk
Stannah provide a range of commercial lift solutions. We approached the redesign of this website with the intention of making the information much easier to find, using a number of "Web 2.0" techniques to enhance the end-user experience.

Peters and May Global Logistics
www.pm-gl.com
Peters & May Global Logistics provides specialist global freight forwarding services, enabling goods to be transported worldwide, including to/from remote areas.

Roger Pimm Marine Surveyor
www.rogerpimm.com
A microsite detailing the range of Marine Surveying and Consultancy Services on offer from Roger Pimm.

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Opinion: The shape of things to come?
2:23 PM
Technology really does seem to have an amazing rate of change, doesn't it? In the studio we're regularly updating software and hardware, getting our heads around new 'can-do's' and 'can't-do-anymore's' as everything shifts yet again.

A recent conversation bought up a fascinating idea regarding how our love affair with all things 'technology' might actually result in changes in human behaviour.
My fellow conversationalist, a chap deeply involved in new media, stated that once uploaded/ posted/ texted, there's no way of knowing if the information is ever lost. Someone 'out there' might have grabbed the info, so it may continue to exist long after we've hit the 'delete' button. His point was that we'll start to adjust our behaviour accordingly, knowing that everything we do or say is perpetually in existence somewhere and might resurface when we least want it to. A society of individual responsibility, self regulation and honest, law-abiding citizens would ensue...

I found the idea interesting - not least of all because I'm a touch cynical (who, me? You'd never guess!), but cannot deny he might have a point.
I wondered... is there anything in history to support his theory? Whilst one could argue that we've never had current technology before, we've had plenty of astonishing inventions and discoveries. Have they changed our nature...or have they simply changed the way we live day by day? It's not so long ago that everyone - all of society - believed utterly in an omnipresent and omnipotent deity...but this did not result in an end to crime or wrong-doing. Will new technology bring about this deep-seated change in our all-too-human nature...or will we just assume that technology is as fallible as the humans who create it and we won't 'get caught'?

I love the belief and optimism that technology might solve anti-social behaviour problems and bring about a safer, better community, but it will have to deal with human nature above all things...and I'm just not sure it's up to the job!