Second Chance Trees a finalist in Amex $5 million challenge

Paul Young of Converseon sends news that the Second Chance Trees initiative has been selected as one of 50 finalists in a competition sponsored by American Express called "The Members Project." Second Chance Trees is an effort to raise awareness about and funds for rainforest re-forestation around the world.  Second Life residents can purchase virtual trees in a lush rainforest setting for L$300 (about one US dollar), which funds the planting of a real tree in a rainforest somewhere in the real world. 

Paul says that if Second Chance Trees wins the competition, they could get up to $5 million, which would fund millions of trees.  Amex card holders can vote for Second Chance (or any other member project) by going to http://www.membersproject.com.

There’s a YouTube video that explains the Second Chance initiative, but of course it’s best to teleport in and check it out yourself in-world (teleport SLURL.) Buy a few trees while you’re there. I’m partial to the "Golden Shower" and the "Mangium" myself. Second Chance Trees was conceived, developed and built by social media agency Converseon in partnership with the non-profit Plant It 2020.

Written by: rikomatic

Drupal Basics-Feed Categories

I was asked by a good friend if I could merge the NPSL Offside Links and the Deli.cio.us NPSL links feeds into a single feed on nonprofitcommons.com in a block on the left side of the site.  I took care of it this evening, and it is actually a piece of cake to do.  These steps work in Drupal 5.x.

  1. Log into your Drupal site in an administrative capacity
  2. Click on "Administer"
  3. Click on "News Aggregator"
  4. Click on "Add Category"
  5. Create your Category
  6. Click on "Add Feed" and add the RSS feeds you wish to draw from

After you have a Category set up, the next step is to add exterior feeds. 

  1. Click on "Add Feed"
  2. Fill out this form, and make sure you check the box that has your category
  3. Repeat for as many feeds that you want to aggregate into a single list.

Next step…you need to go to your administrative menu and click on "Site Building"

  1. Click on "Blocks"
  2. You will find in your list of inactive blocks an item named "xxxx category latest items".  Click on "Configure".
  3. You can override the default name of the block (which is currently the category name) by entering something in the title.  Next you choose the number of items you want to have show up in the block.
  4. Choose the additional parameters you’d like to turn on or off such as the roles to see the block, what pages the block should show up on and so forth.
  5. Save the block.
  6. Assign the block a location and a weight.

Keep in mind that your feeds won’t update unless you have cron running.  If you want to manually run cron to see the fruits of your labour, type in your URL bar http://yoursite.com/cron.php.

Written by: rikomatic

Dutch NGO opens “Good Causes Island”

via the Mind Blizzard blog There’s again news from the Dutch NGO front:
Yesterday saw the opening of a Dutch NGO island, called “Goede Doelen eiland” (good causes island). The island is a presentation of the Dutch Red Cross and the Dutch Fund for Disability Sports. The island is sponsored by Dutch bankers ABN Amro and the Free University of Amsterdam (VUA) and was build by students of the VUA.

The ‘fun’ part of the island is the Stadium for the Dutch Fund for Disability Sports. In the stadium it is possible to go for a wheelchair race. Both organisations are looking for new ways of fundraising and are looking into the possibilities in Virtual Worlds.

SLURL:
http://slurl.com/secondlife/Goede%20Doelen%20Plein/128/128/0

Written by: kanter

Videos, Podcasts, and Post-Event Analysis at MacArthur Foundation Blog Available!

On June 22, MacArthur Foundation President Jonathan Fanton and Linden Lab CEO Philip Rosedale (a.k.a. Philip Linden) had an historic conversation about how virtual worlds could revolutionize philanthropy. At the event, Fanton also announced that the foundation would begin a year-long investigation into virtual worlds, including making some in-world grants through the USC Annenberg Center on Public Diplomacy.

The MacArthur Foundation blog has recently posted the complete event documentation, including pointers to articles and blog posts, podcasts, and videos.

Check it out.

Written by: kanter

Community Member Profiles: Jackson Soderstrom/Dan Michel


Jackson Soderstrom
Dan Michel
http://www.secondharvest.org
http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendi…

Goal for Second Life:
Increase awareness of hunger in America and our org, raise money and build a community both in RL and SL for the issue

Benefits to Organization
SL provides another avenue to build that hunger community and being in the beginning stages of nonprofit involvement in SL not only will we see immediate benefits but we will discover benefits as we and SL evolve (similar to when the internet first boomed)

Advice for Getting Started:
Dive in, try it out – again like the internet, you can stumble and pick yourself up learning from your stumble. one more thing on advice – take one step at a time. SL is huge and no need to conquer every goal at once

Written by: kanter

World Peace Display Needs a New Home

From Ken Hudson – Kenny Hubble :

I am writing on behalf of The Institute of Compassion and Peace located in Lunata. For the past couple of months I have been working with the creator of the inter-faith religious display to prepare it for official launch. Unfortunately, the party who had been funding the space is pulling out of the project just as we near completion.

Creator Herman Vos (Herman Bergson, sl) has asked me to appeal to the communities in SL to help preserve this wonderfully detailed display that is dedicated to cooperation and world peace. His sincere hope is that his creation is given a suitable place within SL to continue to promote these ideals.

Herman is willing to give the structures (wonderful church, mosque, synagogue, and so forth) to anyone who wants to use them to continue this vision. Ideally there is a piece of land on someone’s island where all of the buildings could be seen together. If there are teachers of religion, philosophy, or international diplomacy, perhaps those would make ready-fits for this display.

Please visit the location in Lunata http://slurl.com/secondlife/Lunata/85/148/52 and have a look at the near ready display. If you are interested in using the buildings, please contact Herman Bergson in-world or myself.

Thank you for your consideration of this most worthy project.

Ken Hudson – Kenny Hubble
http://kenhudson.net
Ken Hudson
E-Learning Facilitator
Loyalist College
613-969-1913 ext 2435

Written by: rikomatic

An Invitation to Participate. Survey: Engagement of Second Life by Educational Institutions

An Invitation to Participate. Survey: Engagement of Second Life by Educational Institutions

All educational professionals currently using Second Life are invited to participate in a survey: Engagement of Second Life by Educational Institutions. The purpose of the survey is to identify and describe the extent to which educational organizations are engaging Second Life at an institutional level.


An increasing number of educators, at all levels of the industry, are using Second Life for instructional purposes, and a tremendous number of institutions reportedly are engaging Second Life. However, no information exists describing the nature and extent of institutional engagement. To what extent are institutions, in which educators are using Second Life, engaging the technology at an organizational level as indicated by: development or revision of policies and guidelines; engagement strategic, organizational planning; commitment of financial and personnel resources; establishment of quality standards; implementation of student and faculty support and training programs, and deployment of an institutional Second Life Campus.
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If you have any questions regarding the survey, please contact Chris Duke at chris (at) muveforward (dot) com or via Second Life as Topher Zwiers.

Written by: kanter

Virtual Worlds: The future or a fad?

Back in December after Clay Shirky’s piece on Second Life, Stan who writes the PacificRim Exchange Blog took out his "I’m Sticking With DOS" buttons from the attic to make some points — maybe something about keeping an eye on the future horizon.

Allan Benamer has written a post called Why Project Agape’s Cause Is Better Than Second Life.  I think the title should have been more aptly "Why Project Agape’s Cause Is Better ROI for Fundraising Than Second Life in 2007!"   Nicole Wallace’s frames the post with these e questions:

What do you think? Is Second Life a passing fad, or is it something
savvy nonprofit groups should be watching and participating in?

Now this should set the stage for an interesting debate!

Ruby Sinreich notes in the comments, it isn’t an either/or:

"It’s not like we have to choose either/or! Second Life is great for enabling rich learning experiences, creative expression, and complex interpersonal interactions."

Susan Tenby writes in the comments about the special qualities of Second Life:

There are few places where the security issues and the individual time of a member are rendered less significant. The boundaries of SL allow you to have access to many whom you wouldn’t be able to meet with in the real world (for example,business executives, celebrities and those in remote locations). It also allows you to create experiences that the
two-dimensional web would never be able to produce (for example, walking through a human heart or experiencing schizophrenia as if you were the schizophrenic.) As soon as we have web directly enabled on Second Life (or whatever other virtual world takes it place), you will be able to have a seamless experience between your satellite office and your web documents.

It comes down to understanding what is the best tool/strategy to
reach an organization’s outcomes and having an eye on what is on the horizon and what is being learned today

My feeling is that although we’re still in the early
phases of virtual worlds, we shouldn’t ignore it or label is a passing fad.  As such not all nonprofits organizations should be investing heavily in resources to implement a fund raising campaign in Second Life.  As Allan points out,
there is a steeper learning curve and will require more resources to go to scale than say a Facebook profile. 

But, what about education programs?  What about the networking opportunities?

If I were a development person, I’d certainly want to get on avatar and get the chance to
chat with Mr. Fanton directly about the foundation’s funding interests, find out what they learning about virtual worlds and philanthropy.  If my nonprofit’s programs were geared for young people, I’d want to learn from first hand experience what opportunities virtual worlds present for my organization and its programs.  Exploring a tool with a low risk experiment to
see if it is the right fit is not a waste of resources. Having knee
jerk reactions – whether to immediately reject or immediately jump in
with full scale implementation – is.

In a strange coincidence, I received an email from Jackie Marsh, a UK-based researcher looking at social media and early childhood, telling me about her blog, Digital Beginnings.  (We discovered each other via a post I wrote called "Mommy, what’s a blog?" which was my attempt to explain blogging to my pre-K aged son, Harry.)   GenWe, today’s kids, are a glimpse into the future.   And, it isn’t just social networking sites they’re using, today’s young people are exploring and using virtual worlds.   So, are virtual worlds a fad or is it showing us what is to come.

Written by: kanter