News & Announcements

Aspiration Nonprofit Software Development Summit

On Feb. 21-23, Aspiration will be holding its first "convening to bring together the range of developers, technologists, managers, eRiders, integrators, users and other practitioners who self-identify under the umbrella of 'nonprofit software development,'" in Oakland, CA. I will be attending on Thursday and Friday and hope to network with the many pioneers of this niche sector. It's a loosely organized event, but it aims to base its content on the following themes:

  • Practices, Processes and Community will address concepts, themes and essential issues in the nonprofit software development realm.
  • Software Engineering Topics and Trends will dive deep on a host of technical and strategic issues relevant to nonprofit software developers.
  • Going Vertical: Application Focus Areas will explore specific “vertical” categories of nonprofit software.

Check out the website for more details, and I'll be sure to report on how my experience went.

Call for Papers for Journal of IT in Social Change -- deadline: tomorrow

Please see the posting below for a call for papers relating to innovative uses of technology in the non-profit sector. I encourage you to participate if you have relevant research! * * * * * * *

Organizations in the nonprofit and voluntary sector have recognized that information technologies are a vital part of their effective mission achievement. While a large and growing body of practical knowledge already exists, practitioners, managers, and policy makers still lack systematic scholarly research about how information technologies are changing the nonprofit sector and the organizations within it.

NTEN and Nonprofit Online News are seeking research papers for a panel and a publication. The panel will be held at the Nonprofit Technology Conference, in Washington DC April 4-6, 2007 and will focus on "The State of the Art in Nonprofit Technology." We will publish papers in the inaugural issues of "The Journal of Information Technology in Social Change." We are seeking rigorously designed research that explores all facets of ICT implementation, use, and innovation in nonprofit and grassroots organizations and sectors. We are interested in research that engages with these and similar themes:

  • Technology adoption in the voluntary sector
  • The relationship between open ICT ecosystems and civil society
  • Issues around the use of technology platforms, e.g., free/open source software and proprietary systems
  • How nonprofits and grassroots organizations use information technologies
  • Organizational change and technology implementation
  • The unique technological needs of nonprofit and grassroots organizations
  • The role of technology in promoting social change

We are taking a multidisciplinary approach. Original papers and proposals are sought from researchers in all relevant subject areas. Proposals submitted should address facets of nonprofit technology, broadly construed.

Complete papers are strongly encouraged and will be given priority over abstracts or proposals. Two to three page proposals that include a summary of research findings and methods used will also be considered.

Send submissions including the author's contact information, position, and affiliation as PDF, RTF, or DOC files to research@nten.org.

Timeline:

  • Deadline for Submissions (complete papers preferred): December 15, 2006
  • Author notification (and editorial requests) by: February 15, 2007
  • Complete Papers Due: March 10, 2007
  • Journal Publication Date: April 5, 2007
  • Conference: April 4-6, 2007

Partners:

Digital Time Capsule

On October 10, Yahoo! launched the Yahoo! Time Capsule project, a brainchild of the artist Jonathan Harris. For 30 days, Yahoo! users worldwide can contribute photos, writings, videos, audio files, and drawings to this innovative digital anthropology project. On November 8, the collected files will be entrusted to Smithsonian Folkways Recordings in Washington D.C., and the data will be preserved as historical artifacts.

The time capsule is organized around ten themes: Love, Sorrow, Anger, Faith, Beauty, Fun, Past, Hope, Now, and You, each of which was chosen to encourage a broad range of submissions. In addition to creating a historical record, the time capsule's design is intended to foster online community building. Users can submit original content, view other submissions, and engage in conversation about submissions with other users.

Harris's recent work has focused on the exploration of humans through the artifacts they leave behind on the Web. His background as an artist/techie/anthropologist makes him an ideal candidate to mold the project's creative vision.

As he wrote in his artist's statement, " . . . the Yahoo! Time Capsule sets out to collect a portrait of the world – a single global image composed of millions of individual contributions. This time capsule is defined not by the few items a curator decides to include, but by the items submitted by every human on earth who wishes to participate. We hope to reach a truly global expression of life on earth – nuanced, diverse, beautiful and ugly, thrilling and terrifying, touching and rude, serious and absurd, frank, honest, human. The Time Capsule itself is realized digitally so that the maximum number of people can have access . . .

The aesthetic of the Time Capsule is that of a ball of thread, spinning like a globe, its shifting surface entirely composed of words and pictures submitted by people around the world. The thread ball concept relates to threads of memory and threads of time, where threads are taken to be any continuous and self-consistent narrative strand. When the Time Capsule opens, it displays the 100 most recent contributions, which form the spinning globe. The ten themes orbit the globe in a pinwheel pattern. At any moment, any individual tile can be clicked, causing the globe to fall away and the selected tile to expand, revealing detailed information about the tile and the person who created it. Using a search interface, viewers can specify the population they wish to see, exploring such demographics as “men in their 20s from New York City”, and “Iraqi women who submitted drawings in response to the question: What do you love?”. There are an infinite number of ways to slice the data, and each resulting slice then becomes its own thread, which can be browsed independently, tile by tile, like a filmstrip."

With only 6 days, 8 hours and counting, there's not much time for procrastinating. Go and contribute now.

Genius among us

The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation announced this year's MacArthur fellowships, otherwise known as "Genius Grants". Among the artists receiving the fellowship are painter Shahzia Sikander, jazz violinist Regina Carter, multimedia artist Anna Schuleit, and sculptor Josiah McElheny. The fellowship award includes a $500,000 grant over five years, and is intended to allow these highly creative individuals to pursue their work free of obligations. According to the foundation's website, "The Fellows Program places its emphasis on individual creativity because the discoveries, actions, and ideas that shape our society often result from the path-breaking efforts of individuals. The MacArthur Fellowship is designed to support people, often unrecognized, who are expanding the boundaries of knowledge and human interaction."

Pittsburgher and Carnegie Mellon Professor Luis von Ahn was also recognized for his work concerning cryptography and artificial intelligence.

Registration and Scholarships are Live

Online registration for Technology in the Arts is now live! Register by August 20 to take advantage of the early bird rate.

Also, if you or your arts organization is based in the state of Pennsylvania, you are eligible to apply for both registration and travel scholarships for the conference, thanks to the generosity of the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.

Welcome!

Welcome to the Technology in the Arts blog!

We’ve set up this space as a way to open dialogue around the technology issues facing arts managers, from the high-level stuff (how will the senate’s vote on net neutrality impact non-profit arts organizations in the long term?) to the very practical (the difficulties of merging several mailing lists).

Several of us who are working on planning the conference will be posting here regularly between now and the event. But our voices are not enough – we want to hear from you!

I invite and encourage you to participate by commenting on what we’ve written here, or by emailing us a post you’d like us to put up. (Please include your name, where you are, what you do.)

We are living and working in an exciting time. I can’t wait to hear about what your organization has been doing, and sharing a little with you about what we’re up to here.