Irish Techie Table Quiz 2025

🎄 It’s beginning to look a lot like… quizmas!

We’re delighted to be joining in with the wider tech community for the Irish Techie Table Quiz. Being organised by long-time champions Declan McGrath, Michael Twomey and Vicky Twomey-Lee (Irish Geeks).

​Even better, this event will be in aid of the Dublin Simon Community, with all proceeds going directly to those who need it this winter season.

​What began as a grassroots gathering has become a festive favourite bringing together developers, designers, founders, and enthusiasts for an evening of light-hearted trivia, friendly rivalry, and charitable giving. We’re excited to keep the tradition thriving by joining us as Dogpatch Labs open up their Urban Garden for a special Christmas edition.

​Dust off your cheesiest Christmas jumper, gather your sharpest teammates, and get ready for a fun, festive night of community and connection.

🎁 Event Details

  • ​📅 Date: 16 December 2025
  • 📍 Location: Urban Garden, Dogpatch Labs, CHQ Building, Dublin
  • 💶 Cost: Free — voluntary charity donations encouraged via our gofundme page
  • 🔗 More info and registration: https://luma.com/puz1brmc
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New “TogWeb” HF Antenna for EI0TOG

We have a shiny new addition to our amateur radio setup at Tog Hackerspace.

A huge thanks to Niall Donohue EI6HIB, from our friends in South Dublin Radio Club, for the generous donation of a cobweb antenna. In true Tog fashion, it has already been renamed the “TogWeb”.

Over the next few weeks we will be installing the TogWeb at the space and getting it tuned up for our HF station. The cobweb design gives us multi-band HF coverage in a compact footprint, which suits our city location nicely.

Once it is up in the air, it will:

  • Improve our HF receive and transmit performance
  • Give us more reliable contacts across Europe and beyond
  • Make it easier to demo HF to visitors during open nights and events

If you are interested in amateur radio, HF operation, or you are curious what all the wires and boxes are about, drop by the space on one of our open evenings. We are always happy to show people the station and talk radio.

We hope to log many more QSOs under our club callsign EI0TOG using the TogWeb. With a bit of luck, you might even end up in the log yourself.

Last TouchDesigner Ireland Meetup in 2025

Join us for the third in our series of monthly meetups for anyone interested in TouchDesigner, from complete beginners to experienced creators. Whether you’d like to learn the basics, share your projects, or connect with others using the software, this meetup offers a welcoming and supportive space to do so.

Each session runs for around two hours in a relaxed, hands-on setting. With multiple rooms available at Tóg Hackerspace, we can host beginner and advanced activities simultaneously, ensuring everyone gets the most out of the evening.

Expect an informal, community-driven environment where the format adapts to participants. You’re welcome to bring a laptop to follow along, showcase your work, or simply join the discussion. The event is a great opportunity to meet other creative technologists and artists, and to continue building the growing TouchDesigner community in Ireland.

Join us on our Discord to share ideas for future sessions or to express interest in presenting your work: https://discord.gg/6s3WMdH2

https://www.tog.ie

The meetups are hosted each month by a group of artists and creative technologists:

Ciaran Eaton
Ciaran Eaton is a Creative Technologist and Educator based in Dublin. With a background in audio and visual arts production, Ciaran integrates visual programming environments such as TouchDesigner with open-source software and aims to foster an active community around creative workflows.
Website

Serdar Buhan
Serdar is a software engineer based in Dublin with a curiosity for creative technology and building interactive experiences. In his spare time, he explores tools such as TouchDesigner, Processing, Blender, AR, photogrammetry, pen plotters, and generative AI.
Instagram

Cailean Finn
Cailean Finn is an Irish media artist, researcher, and creative technologist from Waterford, Ireland. His practice investigates the idiosyncratic nature of human–machine relationships, drawing from computational histories and engaging with technologies and practices such as creative coding, artificial intelligence/life, game development, and physical computing.
Website

Pauric Freeman
Pauric Freeman is a multidisciplinary artist based in Dublin, working across audiovisual performance, sound, and installation. His practice explores translation, using data collected from live instruments as the basis for real-time audiovisual compositions.
Website
Instagram

Louise Nolan
Louise Nolan is a multidisciplinary artist and designer working in glass, print and digital media. Her work is transmedia integrating digital techniques with physical installations to create an interactive multi-sensory experience for the viewer. She is a visiting lecturer at NCAD and TU Dublin in physical computing, creative coding and emerging media practice.
LinkedIn
Instagram

Gwen Stevenson
Gwen Stevenson is a multidisciplinary artist exploring memory, loss, and resilience through interactive installation, experimental film, and durational performance. She uses digital technologies, motion capture, and generative systems to create immersive experiences reflecting ecological fragility and transformation. Collaboration with communities, artists, and organisations is central to her practice. Gwen is preparing for artist residencies in 2026 at the Central Academy of Fine Arts, School of Experimental Arts, Beijing, and Art Arcadia, Derry.
Instagram
Website

Let us know if you can make it on our Meetup page here:
https://www.meetup.com/tog-dublin-hackerspace/events/312369261/?slug=tog-dublin-hackerspace&eventId=312369261

Repair Café At Leixlip Library

Bring broken bits from home to Leixlip Library for a morning of repair, chat and climate action with volunteers from TOG Hackerspace.

On Saturday, 13 December 2025, from 10.00 to 13.00, Leixlip Library will host a Repair Café in partnership with TOG Hackerspace and the Kildare County Council Climate Action Office. Skilled volunteers will help you give worn and broken items another shot at life, instead of sending them to the landfill.

Multiple 30-minute slots run through the morning. Booking is through Leixlip Library, so contact the library desk or check the library website for full details.

What you can bring

• Clothes and accessories
• Toys
• Small electrical appliances and electronics
• Small furniture

If you are unsure about an item, bring it along on the day. Volunteers will take a look and see if a repair is possible. Safety testing (PAT) for electrical devices will be in place.

What happens at a Repair Café

You arrive with an item, sign in, then wait for a fixer to free up. A volunteer sits down with you, opens things up, and talks through options. You get to see how the repair works, ask questions, and pick up a few skills for next time.

The aim is not a drop-off service. It is a shared repair session where everyone learns something, has a chat, and heads home with more confidence and, hopefully, a working item.

Why take part

Repair Cafés support a circular economy in a simple, local way. Every item repaired keeps resources in use for longer, cuts waste, and saves money. Events like this also build up local skills and give people a chance to share knowledge across the community.

Where and when

Date: Saturday 13 December 2025
Time: 10.00 to 13.00
Venue: Leixlip Library, Captains Hill, Leixlip, Co Kildare
Cost: Free, booking required for a 30-minute slot

If you would like to help out as a fixer on the day, drop us an email at TOG and we will be in touch.

This event runs in partnership with Leixlip Library, TOG Hackerspace and the Kildare County Council Climate Action Office as part of local climate action work in Kildare.

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📚 TOG Sci-Fi Book Club — A Look Back at Our Reading Year

What a fantastic year of reading it’s been at the TOG Science Fiction Book Club! From far-future civilisations to classic monsters, philosophical puzzles, military epics, and the occasional extremely opinionated cat, we travelled across a huge range of worlds together. As always, it wasn’t just the books that made it great, but the chats, the debates, and the friendly faces around the table each month.

Here’s the full list of what we read in 2025:


📅 Our 2025 Reading Journey

January — Children of Time, Adrian Tchaikovsky

An epic opener to the year, full of evolution, uplifted spiders, and big moral questions.

February — A Canticle for Leibowitz, Walter M. Miller Jr.

Post-apocalyptic monks preserving knowledge through centuries. Deep, thoughtful, and surprisingly lively in discussion.

March — The Peace War, Vernor Vinge

Physics, rebels, and pocket universes. A classic slice of high-concept sci-fi.

April — Memoirs Found in a Bathtub, Stanisław Lem

Confusion, paranoia, and bureaucracy — nobody knew what was happening, and that was half the fun.

May — Starter Villain, John Scalzi

Light, clever, and funny. An absolute hit — especially the unionised cats.

June — The Freeze-Frame Revolution, Peter Watts

A revolution unfolding over millennia on a ship that never stops moving. Short, sharp, and dense with ideas.

July — Pattern Recognition, William Gibson

Branding, conspiracies, and early-internet noir. Very different from Gibson’s usual fare, but a brilliant read.

August — The Forever War, Joe Haldeman

A timeless anti-war classic that sparked one of our biggest discussions of the year.

September — Service Model, Adrian Tchaikovsky

A polite robot butler tries to keep civilisation together. A funny, thoughtful crowd-pleaser.

October — Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus, Mary Shelley

The original science fiction novel — perfect for spooky season and still incredibly relevant.

November — The Word for World Is Forest, Ursula K. Le Guin

Short but powerful. Ecology, colonialism, and dreamers refusing conquest.

December → January — The White Plague, Frank Herbert

A chilling biothriller that bridges our reading year into 2026.


A Community of Readers

We had new faces, returning regulars, and plenty of evenings where the chat ran long past closing time. And as always at TOG, nobody minded if you hadn’t finished the book — it’s the conversation that matters.

If you’re thinking, “I should go to one of those…” you absolutely should.

No need to be a sci-fi expert, read every month, or even like spiders (Children of Time tested a few of us!). Just bring your curiosity — biscuits optional.


🚀 Join Us in 2026 — First Book of the Year: The White Plague

We’re kicking off the new year with Frank Herbert’s The White Plague:

📅 Monday, 27 January 2026
🕢 7:30 pm
📍 TOG Hackerspace

A dark, gripping tale of biotech and obsession — and the perfect start to another year of great chats.

Come along, bring a friend, and help us grow the book club in 2026.
Here’s to another year of stories shared around the table at TOG.

A Real Jam

We’re big into our jams at TOG….. Linux, Python, Finish-a-thons… you name it. Last Saturday at our regular monthly Open Social, we ran a real jam… blackberry and apple to be precise!

With 3.2kg of blackberries collected from the Royal Canal in Dublin and Kildare, and apples from one of our members’ trees, we made a huge pot of jam which filled about 24 jars.

Our Open Social is usually a foodie affair anyway, with our pizza oven going. This one was especially busy with both the pizza and jam. Everyone got to have a stir of the pot, and we all got to take a jar home…. still piping hot.

If jam making and other foodie things interest you, get in touch. We might do another session soon. Check out our gallery for even more photos.