[Ssf] Re: FWD [INFO] Webcast: How the Internet & New Media are Reshaping Tsunami Relief Efforts

Microsyster Admin admin at microsyster.org.uk
Wed Jan 12 13:18:12 GMT 2005


Hi '2%'

Did you mean to re-send this to Microsyster - or was it to let us know that
you have also forwarded it?

Or maybe you never got it of the UK Online Centres list?

Deborah
microsyster
a women's computer group
no 43, 136-138 kingsland high street, london e8 2ns
020-7241 3492 - our new phone number as from 1st may 2004
reply email as above

women in london
an internet directory of london based women's groups
and other groups working for women in london
http://www.womeninlondon.org.uk
info at womeninlondon.org.uk

Women's Events London:  http://www.calsnet.net/womeninlondon
Women's Events Countrywide:  http://www.calsnet.net/countrywide
Linked Public Notice Board:  http://www.quicktopic.com/19/H/nV4WDtdd6iMqf
Receive Public Notices by Email:
http://www.quicktopic.com/cgi-bin/emailme.cgi?forum=19&topic=nV4WDtdd6iMqf
Women's Training E-group:
http://uk.groups.yahoo.com/group/womeninlondontraining/
Subscribe to Women's Training E-group:
womeninlondontraining-subscribe at yahoogroups.co.uk

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "2 %" <adam at diamat.org.uk>
To: <ssf at lists.aktivix.org>; <socialsoftware at jamkit.com>
Sent: Tuesday, January 11, 2005 12:59 PM
Subject: FWD [INFO] Webcast: How the Internet & New Media are Reshaping
Tsunami Relief Efforts




Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2005 11:00:41 -0500
To: The Digital Divide Network discussion group
<digitaldivide at milhouse.edc.org>
Subject: [DDN] Webcast: How the Internet & New Media are Reshaping
Tsunami Relief Efforts


Webcast: How the Internet & New Media are Reshaping Tsunami Relief Efforts

Wednesday,  January 12, 10:00 EST/ 15:00 GMT
http://www.digitaldivide.net/community/disaster-relief/

You are cordially invited to participate in a live webcast hosted by the
Digital Divide Network this Wednesday, January 12 at 10am EST (15:00
GMT, 7:00 California time) on the role of the Internet  and new media in
tsunami relief efforts. The webcast will examine how blogs, RSS feeds,
SMS text messaging and other tools are being used in response to the
tsunami, their strengths and limitations, and the role these
technologies may play in future natural disasters.

Guest Speakers:

Dina Mehta, co-founder of tsunamihelp.blogspot.com, Mumbai, India
Dina Mehta is a qualitative researcher and ethnographer based in Mumbai.
  In the hours following the tsunami, she and a group of South Asian
bloggers created the Southeast Asia Earthquake and Tsunami Blog
(http://tsunamihelp.blogspot.com), the Internet's largest
volunteer-driven portal for tsunami relief news and resources. For the
last 16 years she has been a market researcher with a special interest
in youth markets and in longitudinal ethnographic research and
user-design studies.

Taran Rampersad, Internet activist and coordinator of Alert Retrieval
Cache (ARC), Trinidad & Tobago A former hospital corpsman in the U.S.
Navy, Taran Rampersad is an Internet activist and writer based in
Trinidad & Tobago.  Taran serves as editor of the Linux Gazette and
contributor to WorldChanging.com, among other blogs and online
magazines. As part of the team of volunteers contributing to the
tsunamihelp blog, Taran proposed the development of a tool that would
allow SMS text messages from mobile phones to be routed to email lists
and other SMS users, using key words to connect relief workers on the
ground with sources of materials and supplies. This led to the
development of Alert Retrieval Cache (ARC), which has been covered by
the BBC and other media in the last week.

Moderator: Andy Carvin, Digital Divide Network

Andy Carvin is director of the Digital Divide Network
(http://www.digitaldivide.net), the Internet's leading online community
for news and information on the digital divide. In late December, Andy
published Tsunami-Info.org, a news website that aggregates
tsunami-related headlines from blogs and news wire feeds from around the
world. On September 11, 2001, Andy created SEPT11INFO, the first online
discussion group for sharing resources and information on the terrorist
attacks that had occurred that morning. For the first 24 hours, the list
processed emails at a rate of one new messages a minute, one of the
highest-traffic discussion groups to date.

The webcast is free and open to the public. To participate, please visit
http://www.digitaldivide.net/community/disaster-relief/ and click on the
link "Virtual Meeting Room." You'll then be asked to enter your name; at
this point, the website will download the e-conference tool onto your
desktop. The process may take several minutes, so participants are
advised to enter the virtual meeting room 15 minutes prior to the event.
Users experiencing technical problems are encouraged to email
help at learningtimes.net for assistance.

Andy Carvin
Program Director
EDC Center for Media & Community
acarvin @ edc . org
http://www.digitaldivide.net
http://www.tsunami-info.org
Blog: http://www.andycarvin.com
_______________________________________________
DIGITALDIVIDE mailing list
DIGITALDIVIDE at mailman.edc.org
http://mailman.edc.org/mailman/listinfo/digitaldivide
To unsubscribe, send a message to digitaldivide-request at mailman.edc.org
with the word UNSUBSCRIBE in the body of the message.





More information about the ssf mailing list