Nick Halstead | |
Nationality: | British |
Birth Date: | 1972 4, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Kent, United Kingdom |
Current Series: | British Touring Car Championship |
First Year: | 2021 |
Current Team: | Team Bristol Street Motors |
Car Number: | 22 |
Starts: | 61 (61 entries) |
Wins: | 0 |
Poles: | 0 |
Best Finish: | 22nd |
Year: | 2024 |
Prev Series: | Asian Le Mans Series British GT Ginetta GT4 Supercup Ginetta GT5 Challenge TCR UK Renault Clio Cup UK Dunlop Touring Car Trophy |
Prev Series Years: | 2023 2022, 2021 2022, 2021, 2020 2019, 2018, 2017 2019 2019 2019 |
Titles: | Ginetta GT5 Challenge AM |
Title Years: | 2018 |
Nicholas John Halstead (born 9 April 1972 in Kent) is a British racing driver, software engineer and entrepreneur currently competing in the British Touring Car Championship for Team Bristol Street Motors.[1] Halstead has previously competed in British GT and the Ginetta GT4 Supercup. He won the AM title in the 2018 Ginetta GT5 Challenge, and made his British Touring Car Championship debut at Croft in 2021, substituting for Rick Parfitt Jr. at Excelr8 with TradePriceCars.com.[2]
Halstead is the founder of companies such as Infosum, Datasift and TweetMeme, the latter of which was the first site containing the retweet feature, before it was sold to Twitter in 2010.[3]
In October 2007, the Fav.or.it company was founded, a proposed blog commenting system founded on principle that consumers and businesses both need content curated. The site was launched in 2008, and quickly built to 500,000 monthly users.[3]
In January 2008, the first prototype of TweetMeme was released, a site founded by Halstead which tracked trending topics on the social media giant Twitter. The site would find new topics being talked about, and would track numbers talking about them to rank them, an aggregator.[4] The full site was then launched to the public in July the same year.
In February 2009 the retweet button was released onto the website, a feature allowing you to share posts you liked. Although this feature was founded on the TweetMeme website, it soon became a standard feature of almost all forum and social media sites, with approximately 1.6 billion retweet buttons across different pages on the internet.[5]
On 12 August 2010 the retweet feature was sold to Twitter,[6] and the website was shut down in September 2012, when it still had 3 million users at the time.
Halstead announced DataSift in September 2010 at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference, a social data platform that provides brands and enterprises with access to content from the likes of Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and dozens of other social networks.[7] The software was officially released in November 2011.[8]
Nick stepped down as CEO of the company in October 2015.
In late 2015 Halstead founded Cognitive Logic, a data collaboration company. It was rebranded to InfoSum in September 2017.[3]
In 2017 Halstead would make his professional racing debut in the Ginetta GT5 Challenge with Fox Motorsport. Competing in the AM class, in this year he would pick up ten podiums in the class to finish 3rd in the AM standings.
He would continue with Fox Motorsport in the AM class in 2018, where with four in-class victories he would go on to win the AM title.
In 2019 he made the switch to the Pro class, still competing with Fox Motorsport, where he had a best finish of 11th.[9]
Competing in a handful of races in series such as TCR UK[10] and the Renault Clio Cup UK alongside his Ginetta GT5 campaign across 2019, in 2020 Nick would step up to the Ginetta GT4 Supercup, competing in the Pro-AM class still with Fox Motorsport.[9] Across this season in his class he racked up 3 wins, 15 podiums, 3 pole positions and 4 fastest laps on his way to 3rd in the championship standings.
With Fox Motorsport, he would compete in the rounds at Oulton Park and Brands Hatch in 2021 in the Pro-AM class, scoring a second-place finish at Brands Hatch.
He continued in the championship with Fox Motorsport in 2022 in the G55 Pro class alongside his British GT campaign.
Nick made his British GT debut in 2021, racing a McLaren 570S in the GT4 Pro-AM class alongside teammate Jamie Stanley.[11] The duo achieved 2 wins in class over the course of 7 races to finish 2nd in the GT4 Pro-AM cup and tied 8th overall in the GT4 category.
Halstead continued with Fox Motorsport in the series in 2022, this time switching to the GT3 category.[12]
Halstead made his British Touring Car Championship debut at Croft in 2021, substituting for Rick Parfitt Jr. at Excelr8 with TradePriceCars.com.[2] Over the course of the weekend Halstead finished in a better position every race, driving home to 21st position in Race 3.
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Team | Car | Class | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | DC | Points | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2021 | nowrap | Fox Motorsport | nowrap | McLaren 570S GT4 | GT4 | BRH 1 | SIL 1 | DON 1 | SPA 1 | SNE 1 | SNE 2 | OUL 1 | OUL 2 | DON 1 | 9th | 66.5 | |
2022 | nowrap | Fox Motorsport | nowrap | McLaren 720S GT3 | GT3 | OUL 1 | OUL 2 | SIL 1 | DON 1 | SNE 1 | SNE 2 | SPA 1 | BRH 1 | DON 1 | 7th | 81 |
(key) Races in bold indicate pole position (1 point awarded – 2002–2003 all races, 2004–present just in first race) Races in italics indicate fastest lap (1 point awarded all races) * signifies that driver lead race for at least one lap (1 point awarded – 2002 just in feature races, 2003–present all races)
Year | Team | Car | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | DC | Points | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2021 | nowrap | Excelr8 with TradePriceCars.com | nowrap | Hyundai i30 Fastback N Performance | THR 1 | THR 2 | THR 3 | SNE 1 | SNE 2 | SNE 3 | BRH 1 | BRH 2 | BRH 3 | OUL 1 | OUL 2 | OUL 3 | KNO 1 | KNO 2 | KNO 3 | THR 1 | THR 2 | THR 3 | CRO 1 | CRO 2 | CRO 3 | SIL 1 | SIL 2 | SIL 3 | DON 1 | DON 2 | DON 3 | BRH 1 | BRH 2 | BRH 3 | 34th | 0 | |
2023 | nowrap | Bristol Street Motors with EXCELR8 | nowrap | Hyundai i30 Fastback N Performance | DON 1 | DON 2 | DON 3 | BRH 1 | BRH 2 | BRH 3 | SNE 1 | SNE 2 | SNE 3 | THR 1 | THR 2 | THR 3 | OUL 1 | OUL 2 | OUL 3 | CRO 1 | CRO 2 | CRO 3 | KNO 1 | KNO 2 | KNO 3 | DON 1 | DON 2 | DON 3 | SIL 1 | SIL 2 | SIL 3 | BRH 1 | BRH 2 | BRH 3 | 30th | ||
2024 | nowrap | Team Bristol Street Motors | nowrap | Hyundai i30 Fastback N Performance | DON 1 | DON 2 | DON 3 | BRH 1 | BRH 2 | BRH 3 | SNE 1 | SNE 2 | SNE 3 | THR 1 | THR 2 | THR 3 | OUL 1 | OUL 2 | OUL 3 | CRO 1 | CRO 2 | CRO 3 | KNO 1 | KNO 2 | KNO 3 | DON 1 | DON 2 | DON 3 | SIL 1 | SIL 2 | SIL 3 | BRH 1 | BRH 2 | BRH 3 | 22nd | 7 |
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
2023 | nowrap | Garage 59 | GT | nowrap | McLaren 720S GT3 | nowrap | McLaren M840T 4.0 L Turbo V8 | DUB 1 | DUB 2 | ABU 1 | ABU 2 | 13th | 11 |
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