Kate Russell | |
---|---|
Born | Hertfordshire, England | 22 May 1968
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Technology reporter |
Known for | Webscape on Click |
Kate Russell (born 22 May 1968) [1] is an English technology journalist, author, speaker, gamer and streamer. [2]
Russell was brought up in Harpenden, Hertfordshire. [1] She made her first TV appearance with her family in a pilot episode of the game show, Johnny Ball Games, presented by Johnny Ball. [3] [4] She appeared on children's television in the show Fish and Chips on Nickelodeon in 1995, [5] but moved on to present on technology a few years later, fronting a show called Chips with Everything on The Computer Channel (later renamed to .tv). [5]
Russell has previously featured regularly on CNBC Europe as both a reporter and producer. [5] She has also appeared on GMTV and The Pod Delusion.
Russell was a freelance reporter on the Webscape segment of the BBC technology show Click , which is broadcast in the UK on BBC News and internationally on BBC World News. [6]
Kate left Click during the first UK Coronavirus lockdown in 2020 as she was going to try streaming as a source of income and this would be a conflict of interest with the BBC. After a chance encounter with a poorly ferret she had found while walking, Kate turned her shed into a ferret palace with the thought of having a rescue home for ferrets later.
The viewers of the stream named the ferrets. The darker one is called Lady Nibblington Chewington Wrigglesbury the First (Wriggles) and the pale one is called Lady Scrufflington Wigglebottom, of the Hertfordshire Wigglebottoms (Scruffles).
The ferrets are on several social media platforms. The complete backstory of how this came to be is on YouTube The back story of FerretTubeTV.
She writes a column called Tech Traveller [7] in National Geographic Traveller magazine. [8] She has previously written columns for Web User , [8] and the Original Volunteers website.
Russell's first published book Working the Cloud (2013) is a collection of tips and resources to help businesses better use the Internet. [9]
She self-published her first short story, Taken (Scary Shorts Book 1), as a trial of Kindle Direct Publishing on 5 August 2011. [10]
Russell's second book and first novel Elite: Mostly Harmless (2014), [11] a story set in the Universe of the Elite computer games, [12] was the result of a successful Kickstarter campaign which raised over 400% of its funding goal. [12]
A third book and second novel A Bookkeeper's Guide to Practical Sorcery, [13] a children's fantasy, was published in 2016. An audiobook version read by Charles Collingwood was the subject of another successful Kickstarter campaign. [14]
In the 2015 UK Blog Awards, she won the individual digital and technology category. [15] [16]
In 2016, she was voted the 13th most influential woman in UK IT by Computer Weekly. [17]
Catherine Bush is an English singer, songwriter, record producer and dancer. Bush began writing songs at age 11. She was signed to EMI Records after Pink Floyd's David Gilmour helped produce a demo tape. In 1978, at the age of 19, she topped the UK Singles Chart for four weeks with her debut single "Wuthering Heights", becoming the first female artist to achieve a UK number one with a solely self-written song. Her debut album, The Kick Inside, was released that same year.
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a comedy science fiction franchise created by Douglas Adams. Originally a 1978 radio comedy broadcast on BBC Radio 4, it was later adapted to other formats, including novels, stage shows, comic books, a 1981 TV series, a 1984 text adventure game, and 2005 feature film.
Mostly Harmless is a 1992 novel by Douglas Adams and the fifth book in the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series. It is described on the cover of the first edition as "The fifth book in the increasingly inaccurately named Hitchhikers Trilogy". It was the last Hitchhiker's book written by Adams and his final book released in his lifetime.
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Harpenden is a town and civil parish in the City and District of St Albans in the county of Hertfordshire, England. The population of the built-up area was 30,674 in the 2021 census, while the population of the civil parish was 31,128. Harpenden is a commuter town, with a direct rail connection to Central London.
Click is a weekly BBC television programme covering technology news and recent developments in the world of technology and the Internet, presented by Spencer Kelly and Lara Lewington. It was created by then BBC presenter Stephen Cole.
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