Our Sponsors
For information on becoming a Sponsor, please view our Sponsor Prospectus.

Torchbox is a web design and development company based in Oxfordshire. Their passion is for providing high-quality, cost-effective solutions to both common web problems - content management, CRM integration, scalability and analytics - and also innovative and ground-breaking solutions to the really complex, cutting-edge issues faced by clients who come primarily, but not exclusively, from the charity, NGO and public sectors - digital marketing and amplification, social media and outreach, and achieving a perfect balance between beautiful design and enjoyable user experience.

OSS Watch provides unbiased advice and guidance on the use, development, and licensing of free and open source software. OSS Watch is funded by the JISC and its services are available free-of-charge to UK higher and further education. If you want to find out more about open source software, we're the people to ask.

The Open Source Consortium represents companies that deliver solutions and advice based on Open Standards and Free & Open Source Software.
- We serve our members as a trade association, giving members greater influence than they could achieve alone, by providing a collective voice to government and other public bodies.
- We serve our members' clients by providing access to independent expertise in Free & Open Source companies.
- We campaign ceaselessly for the use of Open Standards in all aspects of public and commercial life, promoting the unique advantages of Free & Open Source Software.

Some of the BarCamp community's generous supporters don't wish to be identified. Thank you to these anonymous benefactors!

What is Squizzle? Ah, that would be telling, wouldn't it? We're keeping exactly what Squizzle does a closely guarded secret until we launch it later this year.
sus-it.pdf
Sus-IT is a large socio-technical project under the New Dynamics of Ageing programme in the UK. We're seeking to sustain older people's autonomy in ICT use to combat social isolation. We're doing this through measures including the development of "adaptive accessibility" -- techniques to match users to the appropriate assistive technologies, thus combating lack of awareness. We're also developing ways for application and device developers to make their products more able to adapt to users' needs.
For more information, please visit http://sus-it.lboro.ac.uk/