Saying goodbye to my top lip for a month…

Having given it a miss last year due to worries I’d struggle to establish a new business even without a hairy top lip, I’ve signed up for Movember this year.

If you’re one of the few people not aware of it, the campaign raises money for male cancer charities by encouraging men around the world to grow a moustache, and be sponsored for the pleasure of it.

So over the next month you can chuckle, laugh, grimace or whatever else springs to mind when you see my horrific attempt at manly facial hair, but in return you have to donate some money here.

Obviously I’m hoping for something with the macho gravitas of a Reynolds, or even a Lynam. I’d hope for a Selleck, but settle for a Higgins.

Sadly, however, my previous experience in growing a moustache in 2009 means that I can’t expect to even manage a Chuckle Brother.

So to make up for the next 30 days of looking like a dishevelled 70′s drug dealer in a made-for-TV movie, I’m hoping you’ll donate something, here.

Movember registration now open…

It’s likely you may have heard of Movember, the facial-hair based annual charity event, but if not, it’s well worth checking out as it again raises money to help cancer charities – particularly poignant in the tech world at the moment.

Registration for this year is now open – and I figure if I’m going to take part again this year, I need to alert existing and potential clients to the reason why I might be sporting a particularly embarrasing attempt at a ‘Selleck’ in meetings.

Why does the UK budget reward print and punish web?

The new UK Government unveiled their new budget on Tuesday, which is their response to the economic downturn and the increased borrowing which happened as a response.

Most of it is debatable on a more personal level, but there’s one interesting paradox.

Books, magazines and newspapers continue to sold without Value Added Tax (VAT), which is commonly applied to purchases in the UK, and will increase from 17.5% to 20% from 4th January, 2011.

The reason for this is that all of these print materials are valuable sources of information and people should be access them without paying VAT – which I can understand.

But internet access does get VAT charged and will therefore be subject to the increase of 20% in January.

And yet, for a flat monthly fee which I can predict and budget for, I can access the biggest repository of valuable information in the history of the world, which is being added to at an unbelievable daily rate on pretty much every subject imaginable. Even discounting the 99% of content which may be skateboarding dogs on Youtube, that still leaves more valuable information than I will ever have the time to read and access in my lifetime, including the sites run by the UK Government.

Not only that, but access to the internet also allows more people to not only produce content, but also new businesses and business models which can fuel the economy – or to take part in existing job or freelancer markets to get work.

And there are savings for bigger, established businesses and organisations, as they seek to cut back on personal and telephone service and increasingly switch customer interaction to the internet – including a growing range of Governmental departments and services. And that’s in addition to the actual VAT bill itself.

After all, digital was a noticeable part of the election campaign promises for the first time, with a debate over funding a nationwide broadband infrastructure that can support high speed internet access, and I was pleasantly surprised to see that the UK Digital Champion appointed by the last Government, Martha Lane Fox, will continue under the new regime with the aim of aiding universal internet access to all as an enabling tool.

So either the money being raised and the challenge of cutting VAT from one part of telephone/TV/cable/broadband deals was too complicated, the money being raised is too important, or it just didn’t come up during the budget planning (I can understand that there may have been other immediate priorities). But surely if the Government is really serious about providing universal access to broadband internet to boost the economy and help business in Britain, lowering the cost of that access for everyone has to be a good starting point.

Not long to donate to Movember…

The month of Movember is coming to an end on Monday, so if you haven’t donated yet to the worthy cause of raising awareness and funds to tackle male prostate cancer, then maybe this will inspire you.

movember2

Yes, that’s my shameful Mo, taken a week ago. It’s not much more impressive now, although it has filled out a bit to look like a less threadbare broom, and more like a doormat made of wire wool.

So if you want to encourage me to take some suitably foolish pictures over the next 4 days, then you need donate. It only takes a matter of seconds, and many of you will have just been paid – so why not donate one or two Christmas drinks worth, save yourself a bit of a hangover, and feel worthy for the rest of the year.

Donate to Dan’s appalling Mo here.

If you want to know more about prostate cancer, start on the Movember Men’s Health page. But the basic facts are that despite the fact men are embarrassed and quite frankly crap at going to the doctor’s and staying healthy, 35,000 men are diagnosed with prostate cancer in the UK every year. It mainly affects men over the age of 50, and the good news is that if it’s detected early and treated, it’s highly curable.

Go on, donate…