October Net Tuesday SF (10/14) will explore Alternate Reality Game (ARG) Superstruct, a project of the nonprofit Institute For The Future with Jane McGonigal. Join Us!
I tag the hand that feeds me: examining aggregation and tagging in the nonprofit world
Free and low cost wireless: Beyond coffee house loitering
Turning communication technologies into tools for free speech and free culture
These are mostly powerpoints, with a few converted to pdf.
The $100 laptop: simplicity can be complicated
I tag the hand that feeds me: examining aggregation and tagging in the nonprofit world
Sorry that it's taken so long to get these up, but I'm finally getting these up. The presentations listed below are on the netsquared website. I expect to get the rest of them up next week. Please note that many speakers did not prepare a formal powerpoint presentation, so we don't have files to post for them.
Anyone could call: cellphones in the global south
The state of open source software for nonprofits
Watch the video, then read the book? Video and illiteracy
Surfing the rolling cloud of connectivity: ICT and the developing world
How do you plan to deal with the problem of expensive internet access?
In many areas high bandwidth Internet access is unavailable or cost-prohibitive. How do you plan to deal with this issue?
"In March, Philanthropy News Digest spoke with Daniel Ben-Horin, founder and president of CompuMentor, one of the largest nonprofit technology assistance organizations in the world, about the emergence of this so-called "social Web" and what nonprofits can and should do to tap its revolutionary potential...."
The Social Web is making it into the mainstream press more and more - See the NYTimes article from May 23, 2006, "Making Friends Was Easy. Big Profit Is Tougher" http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/23/business/yourmoney/23myspace.html?_r=1...
The bulk of the article is about the MySpace business model (or models). But the article notes that after Yahoo!, MySpace is a relatively close #2 in page views, and significantly ahead of MSN, Time Warner (which I assume means AOL), and EBay.
Thanks to Scott Case, who pointed this site out to me. Looks interesting - a compilation of mashups and APIs. What's most popular? Mapping mashups and the GoogleMaps API.
Hong Euntaek will speak on citizen journalism at the NetSquared conference.
Euntaek is the Editor-in-chief of South Korea-based OhmyNews (English language), one of the most successful citizen journalism projects in the world. Founded in 2000, OhmyNews is the first news website in the world to accept, edit and publish articles from its readers, in an open source style of news reporting. Only about 20% of the site's content is written by the 55-person staff, while the majority of articles are written by 41,000 freelance contributors who are mostly ordinary citizens.
Michail Bletsas was director of computing at the MIT Media Laboratory, where he led the team that developed the $100 laptop computer, and where he also designed and deployed most of their Internet network infrastructure systems. His research involves experimenting with wireless networks that are implemented using off-the-shelf, low-cost components to provide broadband Internet access to underserved areas.
One Laptop per Child (OLPC) is a non-profit association dedicated to research to develop a $100 laptop — a technology that could revolutionize how we educate the world's children. This initiative was first announced by Nicholas Negroponte at the World Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerland in January 2005. OLPC's goal is to provide children around the world with new opportunities to explore, experiment, and express themselves.