|
[Printer Friendly Version]
News for December 2003
|
29 December 2003 |
|
| Prix Ars Electronica 2004 |
|
The Prix Ars Electronica 2004 has added a new prize category for "Digital Communities". The focus seems particularly appropritate to nonprofit efforts since it is intended to "spotlight bold and inspired innovations impacting human coexistence, bridging the digital divide regarding gender as well as geography, or creating outstanding social software and enhancing accessibility of technological-social infrastructure".
Posted: 12/29/03; 12:09:24 PM # |
|
28 December 2003 |
|
| Essays by Margaret Wheatley |
|
I am an admirer of Margaret Wheatley's work on leadership in the contexts of organizations as living systems. I have been rereading some of her essays, many of which are collected online. I recommend them.
Posted: 12/28/03; 10:38:53 PM # |
|
23 December 2003 |
|
| Markup and Emergence, Yin and Yang |
|
I have been refining some of my strategies for an upcoming knowledge management project. I have been an advocate for organizing information by emerging patterns, rather than emphasizing markup and metadata. But I think Jon Udell got it just right when he wrote Markup and Emergence, Yin and Yang, in which he sees the tension itself as creative and useful.
Posted: 12/23/03; 8:50:05 AM # |
| The Selfish Generation |
|
There is this tendency in the nonprofit sector to think that the for profit world does everything better. While I agree that civil organizations have things to learn from business (and vice versa), there are many dangers to trying to make nonprofits more like business. Here is one example: In The Selfish Generation, Jenni Russell looks at what happens when we substitute market values for social values, something that I see progressing at a terrifying pace in the nonprofit world.
Posted: 12/23/03; 8:49:30 AM # |
|
22 December 2003 |
|
| The Internet in a Cup |
|
In The Internet in a Cup, The Economist looks at the social networking role played by the coffee houses of the 17th and 18th centuries. There are interesting tidbits about the response of authorities to the social disruption of such establishments and it closes with the obvious evolution of coffee houses in the 21st century: free wireless.
Posted: 12/22/03; 5:36:53 PM # |
| Nonprofits Move On in Fundraising |
|
In Nonprofits Move On in Fundraising, Katie Dean looks at the techniques employed by the Howard Dean Campaign and by MoveOn.org. Frankly, I see both organizing efforts as examples of what I call "large followers" rather than leaders. They are both implementing on a large scale techniques that have been pioneered for years by smaller and medium sized nonprofit efforts. They are to be commended for that, of course, but I prefer to give due credit to the innovators, rather than those who get the most attention.
Posted: 12/22/03; 5:35:59 PM # |
| MySociety Launch Projects |
|
MySociety has picked five launch projects for new nonprofit software development. The working titles are: Fax Your Representative, Give It Away, Not Apathetic, Pledge Bank, and Your Constituency Mailing List. They are pretty simple projects and frankly, that is probably smart.
Posted: 12/22/03; 5:35:02 PM # |
| HTML Email Isn't Rich |
|
Although I do believe there are scenarios where HTML email can be quite effective, I still think it is overused. Hence I recommend this great piece at Evolt called HTML Email Isn't Rich.
Posted: 12/22/03; 5:34:38 PM # |
|
|