I am a passionate entrepreneur, digital strategist, social scientist and farmhand / vineyard cultivator.
6 Feb
As I have shared in previous posts, I have been enjoying participating in, learning from, and collecting my thoughts on the part longstanding part burgeoning-emerging DC new media/tech community. As I have said before, there are undoubtedly many many groups that meet, organize, take action, support one another, etc. that I have yet to discover, but am excited to do so. One such group is OLPC-LC-DC, introduced to me by Jesse and his ownership and philanthropy around the XO laptop (aka, One Laptop Per Child). Photo credit to JESS3 as well
Jesse repping the XO-team here:

Going to events in DC and talking with the passionate users, developers, strategists and community organizers NEVER CEASES TO AMAZE ME. What wonderful people, aspirations and action.
And so, without further a-do… here are my thoughts + a quick plug: please check out these organizations and individuals… super amazing, wonderful, awesomeness.
WSSSSSSTTT! PSSSSSSSHHHHHT! No, my caps lock button did not sabotage the keyboard whilst randomly selecting keystrokes. That is literally the sound made when one XO laptop (a.k.a., the One Laptop Per Child [OLPC]) speaks to, well, another One. Warning: A lot of acronyms will be thrown around in this article. Wherever possible, I have hyperlinked them to a source that has infinitely more wisdom on the subject than I.
Back to it… WSSSSSSTTT! PSSSSSSSHHHHHT! On Thursday night last week, the OLPC Learning Club of DC (OLPC-LC-DC… I am not making this up) had dozens of these computers “talking” to WSSSSSSTTT! PSSSSSSSHHHHHT! one another. In a room filled with over 50 OLPC LC DC members, these sounds signaled an exciting moment: the laptops that hold the promise of community building, “off grid” journaling and educating in the first, second and third worlds were getting to know one another via their measure software for the first time in a group that large.
Of the group’s goal and purpose, group organizer and long-time “user grouper” Mike Lee said it best (paraphrasing from my handwritten, low-tech notes): “Some have bought the XO because it’s a cool new gadget, others are parents with children, or educators who have expert areas. This group is about bringing all of these folks together to understand the possibilities and limitations of the technology and to build useful and interesting things for the XO.”
Although they refrained from talking in WSSSSSSTTTs and PSSSSSSSHHHHHTs, they spoke a language almost as cryptic and intriguing to the outside ear. Mike fielded and facilitated questions about Sugar, Python, Pippy, Jabber and Pygame, and storage and charging devices. As insightful as they were articulate, Luke (who started with Linux in 2nd grade), Mackenzie (who blogs about Ubuntu Linux Tips & Tricks) and Herbert (interning at NASDAQ and experimenting with XO’s Pippy, TamTam and Turtle Art) assisted Mike and others in answering a lot of questions, as well as helping the crowd troubleshoot their machines. Here they are telling us all what is up!

In sum: It was nothing short of amazing.
And so, for a non-tech, but pro-community strategist/social scientist-type… for me to wrap up an extremely complicated topic that has most interesting cultural and social implications, I have put together a set of shout-outs and resources:





3 Responses for "What are the sounds a Web Community makes? Jabber, Jabber… WSSST! PSSSHHT!"
It was a fun night! Most of the DC Tech events I go to you don’t get a chance to see such a wide variety of folks (young/old) at an event. I think there is a lot we can learn from the younger kids.
Justin, thanks for stopping by
Yes to the above… so so true. I was extremely inspired by the experience and hope to stay in touch with the two younger gals… we gots to band together
Also, since the event, I have a chance to sign up to volunteer with young alum from my school… OLPC-LC-DC reminded me of how awesome it is to learn from/help out/be around thoughtful, smart youth that hold the promise — and perspective — our world desperately needs.
Cheers!
[…] If you scroll down Leslie Bradshaw’s blog entry about the meetup, you’ll see a picture of the one I got. It came in very handy during our test attempt and the presentation itself, because the Wifi […]
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