Transcript of the November 30th NPC Meeting Featuring: Sally S. Cherry

[08:35] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Welcome everyone to this week’s Nonprofit Commons Weekly Meeting!

[08:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: The Nonprofit Commons in Second Life is sponsored by TechSoup Global and is a program of the TechSoup Global Community & Social Media team.

 

AGENDA

  • 8:30 am Introductions
  • 8:40 am TechSoup Announcements
  • 8:45 am Mentors Central
  • 8:55 am Sally S. Cherry (SarVana Haalan in Second Life) 
  • 9:30 am Open Mic / Announcements

[08:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: First a few links to start off the meeting.

 

Here are the many ways to can get involved with the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life:

  • Nonprofit Commons Blog: http://nonprofitcommons.org
  • Wiki: http://npsl.wikispaces.com
  • Twitter: http://twitter.com/npsl
  • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nonprofitcommons
  • Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/TechSoup-Second-Life
  • Google Calendar: http://bit.ly/2tMEYh
  • http://flavors.me/nonprofitcommons

 

About TechSoup the sponsors of the Nonprofit Commons:

  • http://www.techsoup.org/stock/howtousetechsoup.asp
  • http://flavors.me/techsoup

 

 

— INTRODUCTIONS —

 

[08:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir: So Welcome everyone, let’s start off with Introductions!

[08:37] HB Eternal: Harold W Becker, The Love Foundation, Florida, http://www.thelovefoundation.com @lovefoundation

[08:37] Brena Benoir: Brenda Bryan, Preferred Family Healthcare, Kirksville, Missouri, www.pfh.org, @brenabenoir

[08:37] Jen (jenelle.levenque): Bruce Hestley, Transgender American Veterans Association, Akron, OH, http://www.tavausa.org, http://www.facebook.com/#!/TAVAUS

[08:37] Zinnia Zauber: Renne Emiko Brock-Richmond, Sequim Humanities and Arts Alliance, Sequim, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. http://www.sequimartsalliance.org http://www.facebook.com/sequimartsalliance @renneemiko

[08:37] Gentle Heron: Virtual Ability, Inc. www.virtualability.org

[08:37] CarynTopia Silvercloud: Caryn Heilman, Topia Arts Center in the Berkshires of NW, MA, www.TopiaArts.org, @topiaartscenter

[08:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Please state your real name, location, org, and the ways we can find you online.

[08:37] Buffy Beale: Buffy Bye, Bridges for Women, Victoria BC Canada, http://www.bridgesforwomen.ca @bridges4women

[08:38] Rhiannon Chatnoir is Joyce Bettencourt, Boston MA area, Online Community Manager of NonProfit Commons in Second Life, http://joycebettencourt.com, http://twitter.com/RhiannonSL

[08:38] Glitteractica Cookie: Susan Tenby, Online Community and Social Media Director, TechSoup, San Francisco, CA USA @suzboop @techsoup @npsl @caravanstudios

[08:38] alebez: Ale Bezdikian, Online Community Coordinator, TechSoup Global, SF, CA @TechSoup, @alebez

[08:38] Adalace Jewell: Corine Van Hellemont, RoSa Library Brussels, Belgium http://www.rosadoc.be @adalace

[08:39] Sarvana Haalan: Sally S. Cherry, Baltimore, MD, Twitter.com/CHAREproject

[08:39] Rhiannon Chatnoir: If you joined us late, please still introduce yourself!

[08:40] Orange Planer: Hi, I’m Orange, and I haven’t had a drink in 5 years.

[08:40] alebez: there seems to be a disturbance in the force today – SL is acting strange for me.

[08:40] alebez: I know for bulaklak also

[08:40] Glitteractica Cookie: Bulaklak crashed

[08:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: I crashed once myself

[08:41] Glitteractica Cookie: maybe we could do mentor corner before he relogs?

[08:41] Tank Thibedeau (liltank.thibedeau): let me know when SL acts normal we can have a party that day

[08:41] Buffy Beale: lol Tank

[08:41] Adalace Jewell: 🙂

[08:41] Gentle Heron: Good one, Tank.

[08:41] Dancers Yao: Kara Bennett, ElderVoices, Los Angeles, CA Heatlh Care and Human Rights

[08:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: feel free to introduce yourself if you just joined us 🙂

[08:41] Dancers Yao: crashed too

[08:41] Orange Planer: But seriously, I’m Orange, and I haven’t been able to resist helping someone since I joined SL.

[08:41] Jen (jenelle.levenque): I locked up today

[08:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: welcome back bulaklak

 

 

TECHSOUP ANNOUNCEMENTS —

 

[08:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: It is time for TechSoup Announcements!

[08:42] bulaklak: Hi!

[08:42] bulaklak: Bear with me I am having some SL ish today

[08:43] bulaklak: Oops didn’t mean to sit on your lap

[08:43] bulaklak: Anyway

[08:43] bulaklak: Hi! Happy Friday!

[08:43] Buffy Beale: hi bulaklak!

[08:44] Zinnia Zauber: Hi there bulaklak!

[08:44] bulaklak: So we have a couple of great webinars coming up I wanted to highlight for you.

[08:45] bulaklak: Next week on December 6, we will be chatting with our partners NPcloud about how you know if the cloud is right for your nonprofit.

[08:45] bulaklak: As always, our webinars are free. And you can register for that here: http://bit.ly/V9g7Ww

[08:45] bulaklak: Also, if you would like any of our webinars to be live captioned, you can request that 72 hours in advance.

[08:46] bulaklak: The following week, we will be talking with tech trainers at nonprofits and libraries about their experiences and tips.

[08:46] bulaklak: That is on December 11 and you can register for that here: http://bit.ly/U6AQck

[08:47] bulaklak: And lastly, as Alebez has talked about the last few weeks, we have a pretty cool contest going on right now.

[08:47] Glitteractica Cookie: well, we and Microsoft,, just to be clear. We are helping them with the contest. 😉

[08:47] bulaklak: Sponsored by Microsoft, the Windows 8 Apps for Social Good contest is open now through the end of February 2013

[08:48] bulaklak: They are looking for folks to develop Windows 8 apps that are beneficial to civil society

[08:48] bulaklak: And there are awesome prizes at stake

[08:48] Glitteractica Cookie: Huge Monetary prizes

[08:49] bulaklak: yes

[08:49] Glitteractica Cookie: I assume Bulaklak is grabbing link?

[08:49] bulaklak: you assumed right as usual glitter

[08:49] Glitteractica Cookie: lol

[08:49] bulaklak: the best overall app takes home $15k

[08:49] Glitteractica Cookie: That is $15,000 USD NOT lindens, folks

[08:49] bulaklak: LOL

[08:50] bulaklak: plus a people’s choice award of $10k

[08:50] bulaklak: Here is the link with more information: http://bit.ly/QKexib

[08:50] Rhiannon Chatnoir: a pretty good prize 🙂

[08:50] Glitteractica Cookie: and the finished app you build in Win8 could be a phone app or web-based app

[08:50] bulaklak: If you know folks who are developers, please spread the word far and wide

[08:50] Tank Thibedeau (liltank.thibedeau): <<<<< wishes i knew how to program

[08:50] bulaklak: Or . . . if you even have a really bright idea . . . team up with a developer!

[08:50] Glitteractica Cookie: and the best thing is if you are planning to do one, you can use it for another contest like this one: http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2012pres/08/20120824a.html

[08:51] bulaklak: If you have a bright idea but don’t program, you can also post on the challenge platform and make it a “personal ad” of sorts to find developers to team up with!

[08:51] Glitteractica Cookie: This is an app building contest for helping women with cancer prevention and fighting cancer. From the site: Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services launched the Reducing Cancer Among Women of Color App Challenge. The Challenge calls on entrepreneurs to create an application for mobile devices that can help underserved and minority women fight and prevent cancer. Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services launched the Reducing Cancer Among Women of Color App Challenge. The Challenge calls on entrepreneurs to create an application for mobile devices that can help underserved and minority women fight and prevent cancer.

[08:52] bulaklak: That’s very cool, Glitter.

[08:52] Glitteractica Cookie: So, if any of you are interested in building these apps, please ping us at community@techsoup.org so we can help

[08:53] Glitteractica Cookie: (help, in terms of support i n the YAY! style, not in the help in the $$ or techie style)

[08:53] bulaklak: My mother is a colon cancer survivor so that is a very cool contest, I think.

[08:53] bulaklak: Anyway, I have run way over time due to my tech issues, so let’s move on!

[08:53] bulaklak: Have a great day everyone!

[08:53] Glitteractica Cookie: I am also a cancer survivor. I’m on board to help get these apps built

[08:53] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thanks bulaklak – glitter & ale 🙂

[08:54] Glitteractica Cookie: 🙂

 

 

— MENTOR’S CENTRAL: GENTLE HERON —

 

[08:54] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Time for Mentor’s Central!

[08:54] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Today for Mentor Central we have Gentle Heron! 

Let’s welcome her up and please start whenever your ready.!

[08:54] Gentle Heron: I’ll do it from here thanks.

[08:54] bulaklak: Welcome, Gentle!

[08:54] Sarvana Haalan: wooot, Gentle!!!

[08:54] Zinnia Zauber: Rah Gentle!

[08:54] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thats good too 🙂

[08:54] Gentle Heron: Good morning. We all admit we’re a wired culture. After all, here we are sitting in a virtual meeting in a virtual venue inside our computers.

[08:54] Gentle Heron: But what can we do if the Internet goes down?

[08:55] Gentle Heron: This could be the result of a storm, or construction workers cutting a cable accidentally. It could be a system overhaul by the IT department, or being in an airport or other travel situation without wifi.

[08:55] Gentle Heron: Or you might live in a rural area and simply have a low quality connection.

[08:55] Gentle Heron: Here are ten suggestions from an article I read this past week of things to do in order to stay productive during scheduled or unscheduled Internet outages.

[08:55] Gentle Heron: Sometimes you simply can’t find an alternative. However, most of us know that we can find another connection, perhaps through our smart phones or a local coffee shop with free wifi.

[08:55] Gentle Heron: If there is a planned outage in your future, print! It’s retro!

[08:55] Gentle Heron: And yes it’s not very green. But it’s functional, if you have time to prepare for loss of Internet connection.

[08:56] Gentle Heron: Did you know that Windows allows you to mark folders on network drives for offline use?

[08:56] Orange Planer: Uh

[08:56] Gentle Heron: (sorry, SL just deleted my notecard!)

[08:57] Orange Planer: Offline folders are great, but please ask your network administrator for reasonable limits to what’s possible.

[08:57] Gentle Heron: (gotta find me Word doc)

[08:57] Rhiannon Chatnoir: oh no – thanks

[08:57] Orange Planer: For example, if you’re trying to mark the entire Z drive for offline use, and the Z drive is bigger than your hard drive…

[08:57] Orange Planer: That’s not going to work.

[08:57] Zinnia Zauber: No worries, Gentle. You still have power!

[08:58] Gentle Heron: Did you know that Windows allows you to mark folders on network drives for offline use? This puts the folder contents onto your laptop’s hard drive. This strategy is especially useful if you will be traveling away from your home office, and might need to access files while you are disconnected from the Internet.

[08:58] Gentle Heron: Here’s how:

http://www.howtogeek.com/98793/how-to-use-offline-files-in-windows-to-cache-your-networked-files-offline/

[08:58] Gentle Heron: (and do take Orange’s advice please)

[08:58] Gentle Heron: You can cache web pages using Internet Explorer so that they are accessible without actually going to the Internet.

[08:58] Gentle Heron: Here’s how:

http://en.kioskea.net/faq/2037-internet-explorer-s-cache

[08:58] Rhiannon Chatnoir: good advice to get to files/sites you might need offline!

[08:58] Gentle Heron: If you use Outlook for email, you can answer emails offline. Outlook caches Exchange Server mailboxes, so you can display messages, contacts, tasks, and your calendar even if you can’t connect to Exchange.

[08:59] Gentle Heron: But do understand that although you are writing your email replies, they can’t be sent until you’re once again connected to the email server after the Internet comes back on.

 

*

[08:59] Orange Planer: A related note…

[08:59] Gentle Heron: Meetings during times of Internet outage can be fruitful.

[08:59] Gentle Heron: Without “important” interruptions and Internet-based distractions, staff can provide project status reports, brainstorm new work, or do various other collaborative tasks with their minds wholly on the topic.

 

*

[08:59] Orange Planer: If you use webmail to read your email, that won’t work. The alternative is to use an email program such as Outlook, Outlook Express, or other POP/MAPI-based applications.

[09:00] Gentle Heron: If your phone isn’t VoIP, return calls. Maybe you will catch someone who can actually answer their phone instead of letting it go to voicemail while they work on the Internet.

[09:00] Gentle Heron: *

 

What tasks have you been neglecting? When was the last time you cleaned your keyboard?

[09:00] Gentle Heron: Did you know that some computer keyboards are FIVE TIMES as germy as a toilet seat?

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Germs/story?id=4774746&page=1#.UKZSvIUc2n4

[09:00] Zinnia Zauber: eek!

[09:00] Gentle Heron: That is truly YUCK news….. it’s fecal bacteria they are talking about too!

[09:00] Jen (jenelle.levenque): Not to mention the cookie crumbs

[09:00] Orange Planer: You mean that dude who eats his sandwich over the keyboard isn’t being clean?

[09:00] Gentle Heron: Here’s how to get at that grunge safely and in the process create a healthier working environment by avoiding the “QWERTY flu”:

http://www.livescience.com/6679-clean-dirty-keyboard.html

 

*

[09:01] Orange Planer: Who woulda thought.

[09:01] Gentle Heron: Reading, whether a book, a newspaper, or a technical journal, is another retro idea for times the Internet is down. You could even use your Nook or Kindle, if you hesitate to touch actual wood pulp products.

[09:01] Gentle Heron: *

 

And finally, it’s OK to simply take a break. Does that really help productivity?

[09:01] Orange Planer: Yes it does.

[09:01] Gentle Heron: In a word, “yes.”

[09:01] Gentle Heron: Check out this article: “Eight Ways Goofing Off Can Make You More Productive.”

http://www.forbes.com/sites/susanadams/2012/06/18/eight-ways-goofing-off-can-make-you-more-productive/

 

*

[09:01] Gentle Heron: Today I shared with you what I learned by reading a short article from TechRepublic. Perhaps you’d like to share with us one of the articles you’ve been reading?

[09:02] Gentle Heron: You might even want to add your favorite ideas to these I’ve mentioned today. Just let Zinnia know when you’re ready to present what you’ve learned.

[09:02] Glitteractica Cookie: great idea

[09:02] Zinnia Zauber: Yes please!

[09:02] Gentle Heron: (that’s all for today…. thanks for your patience with SL flukes)

[09:02] Glitteractica Cookie: the etchnological advance on the book report

[09:02] Glitteractica Cookie: technological

[09:02] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you very much, Gentle!

[09:02] Gentle Heron nods to Glitter.

[09:02] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Gentle – Thanks for leading Mentors Central today

[09:02] Sarvana Haalan: Thank you

[09:02] Orange Planer: Etchnological? The engineering behind etching your computer with your name?

[09:03] Buffy Beale: yay Gentle!

[09:03] Zinnia Zauber: You are all welcome to share during Mentor Central! Just let me know!

 

 

— ABOUT TECHSOUP’S NONPROFIT COMMONS: SUSAN TENBY (GLITTERACTICA COOKIE) —

 

[09:03] Rhiannon Chatnoir: before we move to our featured presenter, we just wanted Glitteractica to say a few words

[09:03] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you, Gentle!

[09:03] Gentle Heron: I”m willing to share articles too! Just ask.

[09:03] Rhiannon Chatnoir: and everyone wave to the people on the other side of Sarvana’s projection screen

[09:03] Dancers Yao: thank you

[09:04] Buffy Beale: waving 🙂

[09:04] Sarvana Haalan: please do… The real life hosting of my World 

AIDS Day presentation is being 

provided by two local Tech Soup 

users and real life community 

partners, Equity Matters, Inc 

(Michael Scott – Chief Equity 

Officer/Chair) and MD Logix (Allen 

Tien – Founder). It is hoped that 

they will join the community

[09:04] Glitteractica Cookie: Cool, welcome… from the house that techsoup built

[09:04] Glitteractica Cookie: (I am that house)… j/k

[09:04] Sarvana Haalan: they are smiling

[09:05] Rhiannon Chatnoir: yes Glitteractca can you say a few words

[09:05] Glitteractica Cookie: But we welcome you! San Francisco is rainy, just like Baltimore today

[09:05] Jen (jenelle.levenque) waves at the good RL folks

[09:05] Glitteractica Cookie: Indeed!

[09:05] Rhiannon Chatnoir: .back

[09:05] Glitteractica Cookie: Hi all

[09:05] Glitteractica Cookie: So, I’m standing here before you today…

[09:05] Glitteractica Cookie: Sorry, I’m silly today

[09:06] Orange Planer: Four score and 7 years ago….

[09:06] Glitteractica Cookie: OK, so I started the NPC about 5 years ago, as an experiment

[09:06] Sarvana Haalan: smiles

[09:06] Glitteractica Cookie: I’ve been wroking at TechSoup Global for 12 years

[09:06] Glitteractica Cookie: Doing online community and social media stuff all along

[09:06] Glitteractica Cookie: and this community is a long-standing and dedicated one

[09:07] Glitteractica Cookie: TechSoup is an organization that was started in San francisco, CA in 1987, as “CompuMentor

[09:07] Glitteractica Cookie: we are now in 50 countries and have a reach of millions of nonprofits.

[09:07] Glitteractica Cookie: Here’s some canned language about TechSoup.org, the site, and TechSoup Global.org, the umbrella organization:

[09:07] Glitteractica Cookie: About TechSoup

TechSoup is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit with a clear focus: connecting your nonprofit or public library with technology products and the learning resources you need to make informed decisions about technology. Our free learning resources are available to all users. Once registered and qualified with TechSoup, nonprofits and libraries can access donated and discounted products and services, including high-quality refurbished hardware, and software from partners such as Microsoft, Adobe, Cisco, Intuit, and Symantec. 

 

About TechSoup Global

TechSoup Global was founded in 1987 on the belief that technology is a powerful enabler for social change. Since then, they’ve assembled a worldwide network of individuals and organizations that share this conviction. TechSoup Global operates programs in Africa, the Americas, Asia-Pacific, Europe, and the Middle East through a network of independent capacity-building NGOs. Through its websites, events, and community-building initiatives,

[09:08] Glitteractica Cookie: TechSoup Global also helps companies and foundations optimize their philanthropic impact.

[09:08] Sarvana Haalan: they are very impressed here in the Big B

[09:09] Glitteractica Cookie: And we are impressed at the wonderful volunteer spirit and dedication to using technology to fill access gaps and make social change

[09:09] Glitteractica Cookie: that all of you exhibit

[09:09] Rhiannon Chatnoir: 🙂

[09:09] Glitteractica Cookie: OK, with that… I will bounce and let you present Sarvana

[09:09] Glitteractica Cookie: Unless anyone has any questions for me first

[09:09] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thank you Glitter!

[09:09] Glitteractica Cookie: about techsoup, etc?

[09:10] Rhiannon Chatnoir: anyone in the room there Sarvana?

[09:10] Rhiannon Chatnoir: if not – we can move on

[09:10] Glitteractica Cookie: OK, I’ll fly away

[09:10] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thanks

[09:10] Glitteractica Cookie: my pleasure

 

— FEATURED PRESENTER: SALLY S.  CHERRY (SARVANA HAALAN) —

 

[09:10] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Time for today’s featured presenter!

[09:10] Zinnia Zauber: Rah Sar!

[09:11] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Let’s welcome Sally S. Cherry (SarVana Haalan in Second Life), who will be talking to us today about community health work focusing on HIV/AIDS, the CHARE/CHeTARE projects and using social media and technology for capacity building and awareness.

[09:11] Buffy Beale: cheering for Sar!

[09:11] Gentle Heron: Yay Sarvana.

[09:11] Rhiannon Chatnoir: She is presenting to us here today in recognition of World AIDS Day!

[09:11] Sarvana Haalan: as I stated… The real life hosting of my World 

AIDS Day presentation is being 

provided by two local Tech Soup 

users and real life community 

partners, Equity Matters, Inc 

(Michael Scott – Chief Equity 

Officer/Chair) and mdlogix (Allen 

Tien – Founder). It is hoped that 

they will join the community

 

that’s mdlogix (Medical Decision Logix)

[09:12] Rhiannon Chatnoir: ready when you are there and thanks Sarvana

[09:12] Sarvana Haalan: Medical Decision Logic, Inc

[09:12] Sarvana Haalan: I am thrilled to share a special 

version ofmy presentation… 

Community HIV/AIDS Resource Exchange 

Project (CHARE Project) Delivers 

Capacity Building Through Social 

Media and Virtual Worlds Integration

[09:13] Sarvana Haalan: As many of you know, I am Sally 

Cherry, MT(ASCP) in real life and I 

consider myself an social 

enterpreneur leaning toward a lot of 

the social side… smiles

[09:14] Sarvana Haalan: Here is a Bit of History, my 

focus…Technology – Sexual Health – 

Community Outreach – Capacity 

Building

[09:14] Sarvana Haalan: My interest was fueled at a 2009

NAPWA “Skill Building Institute for 

HIV Testing and Awareness Day Events 

and Campaigns” Using New Media in 

Response to HIV: Tools and 

Strategies sponsored by AIDS.gov, 

POZmagazine (Smart and Strong), and 

NAPWA

[09:14] Sarvana Haalan: My interest was fueled at a 2009

NAPWA “Skill Building Institute for 

HIV Testing and Awareness Day Events 

and Campaigns” Using New Media in 

Response to HIV: Tools and 

Strategies sponsored by AIDS.gov, 

POZmagazine (Smart and Strong), and 

NAPWA

[09:14] Sarvana Haalan: I adopted the Edelman approach…The 

Crawl, Walk, Run Methodology for 

Social Media to establish online 

credibility and trust through a 

stepped approach

[09:15] Gentle Heron: HINT: If whoever owns the slide projector would lock it (on the side) others can’t advance the slides by accidentally clicking on it.

[09:15] Sarvana Haalan: my 

focus…Technology – Sexual Health – 

Community Outreach – Capacity 

Building

[09:15] Sarvana Haalan: MY Linkdin network… my virtual 

based connections are in purple … 

that is many of you.

[09:15] Sarvana Haalan: is what you are seeing here

[09:16] Sarvana Haalan: I strongly believe that nonprofits benefit greatly from social media integration

[09:17] Sarvana Haalan: such as blogging, photosharing, and definitely virtual worlds

[09:18] Sarvana Haalan: the numbers tell the story as nonprofits tell their stories

[09:19] Sarvana Haalan: here is a little used meaduring tool on Facebook…

[09:19] Sarvana Haalan: *measuring

[09:19] Sarvana Haalan: It helps me see who and where CHARE Project is reaching

[09:20] Sarvana Haalan: these are tools that we are actively using

[09:21] Sarvana Haalan: only concern is the usability of nonprofits… that is why TechSoup and NPSL is so important to members

[09:21] Sarvana Haalan: my other face… lol, lol

[09:22] Sarvana Haalan: so many folks are not doing all that they can do in here… NPSL helps a lot

[09:22] Rhiannon Chatnoir: 🙂

[09:23] Sarvana Haalan: I hope that I am not going too fast

[09:23] Glitteractica Cookie: no, you are fine

[09:23] Sarvana Haalan: I have a parallel program in OpenSim

[09:24] Sarvana Haalan: Nonprofit Commons should be a place that nonprofits should be adding to their Internet marketing plans…

[09:25] Sarvana Haalan: and I am passionate about that little point… lol, lol

[09:25] Sarvana Haalan: I hope that we can have more mixed reality events

[09:26] Sarvana Haalan: and all-community events

[09:26] Sarvana Haalan: like the Wishes Granted… thanks to everyone here

[09:27] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you for being part of it!

[09:27] Sarvana Haalan: real life networking in virtual worlds… woot

[09:28] Sarvana Haalan: hope that we can even have some real life meetups smiles

[09:28] Rhiannon Chatnoir: 🙂

[09:28] Sarvana Haalan: Community HIV/AIDS 

Resource Project (CHARE Project) 

embraces the virtual platform for 

HIV/AIDS awareness such as World 

AIDS Day…

[09:28] Sarvana Haalan: the global reach is awesome!!!

[09:29] Sarvana Haalan: so many events are going and so many organizations are involved

[09:30] Sarvana Haalan: NPSL has been very involved in past World AIDS Day events…

[09:30] Sarvana Haalan: I must apologize for not having the completed list but I was truly impressed

[09:32] Sarvana Haalan: so that is my presentation… and all I would like to say is … Please encourage someone to get tested for HIV because 20% of infected individuals do Not even know that they are infected

[09:33] Sarvana Haalan: PLease click on the red ribbon and red boxes for some giveaways… red tibbons to wear for World AIDS Day. Thank you for this opportunity to share!!

[09:33] Sarvana Haalan: *red ribbons… smiles

[09:33] Sarvana Haalan: any questions or comments?

[09:34] Gentle Heron: Thanks Sarvana. How is the war against HIV/AIDS coming along? Are we making progress?

[09:34] Zinnia Zauber: This was wonderful, Sar!

[09:34] Coughran Mayo: Thanks, Sarvana!!

[09:34] Buffy Beale: QUESTION: Sar how did you hear about the Nonprofit Commons, and great presentation thanks!

[09:35] Sarvana Haalan: the key action is getting people tested and eliminating the stigma

[09:35] Sarvana Haalan: thanks…

[09:36] Gentle Heron: Is there any evidence that these awareness actions are helping? I guess that is what I was asking.

[09:36] Sarvana Haalan: I read an article on TechSoup’s page about various members discussing how they had used the virtual community here… and want to learn more…

[09:37] Sarvana Haalan: more are becoming awareness that AIDS is still with us. Since it is 100% preventable, an AIDS-free generation is possible and is a public health goal.

[09:38] Sarvana Haalan: President Obama’s National 

HIV/AIDS Strategy was released in 

2010… striving to reduce the 

number of new HIV infections; 

increase access to healthcare; and 

reduce HIV-related health 

disparities.

[09:38] Sarvana Haalan: so we must be creative…

[09:38] Sarvana Haalan: It is felt that social media is an 

essential tool to engage the 

targeted populations; connect with 

collaborative partners; and 

disperse information pertaining to 

HIV/AIDS prevention, HIV testing, 

and research data.

[09:40] Sarvana Haalan: any other questions…

[09:41] Gentle Heron: What can “the rest of us” do to help your cause?

[09:42] Sarvana Haalan: Tomorrow is the actual day… so check.. ONE in 5 infected w/HIV DON’T KNOW they’re infected, do you know your HIV status?The fight begins with you, know your status and start the conversation around HIV/AIDS with your personal networks. To find testing locations near you, text your zip code to 566948

 

 

CDC – World AIDS Day 2012

http://www.cdc.gov/globalaids/WAD/default.html

 

World AIDS Day events:

http://www.aids.gov/news-and-events/awareness-days/world-aids-day/

 

Join the 2012 Facing AIDS Initiative

http://facing.aids.gov/

 

Learn about the PEPFAR Blueprint

http://www.pepfar.gov/

 

Learn about the Epidemic

http://www.aids.gov/hiv-aids-basics/

 

World AIDS Day: Posters and Other Resources

http://www.aids.gov/news-and-events/awareness-days/world-aids-day/posters-tools.html

 

http://www.worldaidscampaign.org/world-aids-day/

 

http://www.worldaidscampaign.org/world-aids-day/history-of-world-aids-day/

 

CDC Fact Sheets

http://www.cdc.gov/nchhstp/newsroom/FactSheets.html

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: great resources – thank you

[09:43] Gentle Heron: Thanks Sarvana.

[09:43] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Sarvana also put out gifts for NPC members for World AIDS Day

[09:43] Sarvana Haalan: We are always looking for partnerships and funding opportunites…We do have a crowdfunding project going … http://gofundme.com/SupportCHAREproject

[09:43] Sarvana Haalan: Thanks

[09:43] Rhiannon Chatnoir: so click on those and grab them

[09:44] Sarvana Haalan: please visit my website.. http://CHAREproject.com

[09:44] Buffy Beale: thanks again Sar great job!

[09:44] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Thanks Sarvana for presenting to us today

[09:44] Sarvana Haalan: srill have a walking issue… lol, lol

[09:44] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you Sar for this and all you do for our community!

[09:44] Glitteractica Cookie: Thanx Sarvana

[09:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: and thanks to everyone in your room there

[09:45] Brena Benoir: Thanks for sharing Saravana

[09:45] Sarvana Haalan: Thank you… I continue to introduce local nonprofits to our community

[09:45] Tori Landau: Many thanks Sarvana. Lot to take in and think about.

[09:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir waves

 

 

— OPEN MIC & ANNOUNCEMENTS —

 

[09:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: So lets move on to Open Mic & Announcements

[09:46] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Does anyone have any announcements today?

[09:47] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any announcments – if not we can wrap things up a bit early

[09:47] Tori Landau: Open University’s rooftop bop is on Wed 5th Dec from 2pm to 4pm slt. We have a DJ, Anjoux Herbit, who will be spinning tunes and taing requests

[09:47] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thank you Tori

[09:47] Sarvana Haalan: great…. I have not be dancing in a while

[09:47] Tori Landau: will be at rooftop of communal building on deep think west

[09:48] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any others

[09:48] Brena Benoir: Wharf Ratz, Tuesdays from 7-9pm SLT, come on out and dance, network, and have a good time with great people

[09:49] Zinnia Zauber: Rah Wharf Ratz!

[09:49] Rhiannon Chatnoir: yes – always a great place to network & dance

[09:49] Gentle Heron: “HOLIDAY STRESS BUSTERS: Make the Season Joyful Again!” 

 

PRESENTER: Colleen M. Crary, M.A. (Anya Ibor in SL)

Monday, 3-Dec-2012 at 11 AM & 7 PM SLT

On Virtual Ability’s Healthinfo Island

Attend this 1-hour presentation and discussion on how to remove stress and anxiety from the holidays. Learn relaxation and coping techniques, tips and tricks to dealing with holiday memories and celebrations. Participants will get takeaway materials and a special gift!

In voice & text.

[09:49] Jen (jenelle.levenque): Raises Hand

[09:50] Rhiannon Chatnoir: also – if you arent already – I have been taking a ot of photos of the meetings and posting them online – join our Facebook page and tag your avatar!

[09:50] Rhiannon Chatnoir: sure Jen

[09:50] Adalace Jewell: 🙂

[09:50] Rhiannon Chatnoir: have an announcement Jen?

[09:50] Jen (jenelle.levenque): I’ll be lighting the first candle of Chanukah in TAVA’s office at 1400 SLT Sat 8 Dec

[09:51] Jen (jenelle.levenque): That’s approximately sundown EST

[09:51] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thanks

[09:51] Jen (jenelle.levenque): Anyone who would like to join me is most welcome

[09:52] Rhiannon Chatnoir: last call for announcements so we can wind down another NPC Friday 🙂

[09:52] Jen (jenelle.levenque): That is office number 1 in SW corner of Plush sim

[09:52] Glitteractica Cookie: Thanks all

[09:52] Glitteractica Cookie: great meeting

[09:52] bulaklak: thanks all!

 

And again, here are the many ways to can get involved with the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life:

 

 

About TechSoup the sponsors of the Nonprofit Commons:

  • http://www.techsoup.org/stock/howtousetechsoup.asp
  • http://flavors.me/techsoup

 

Thanks everyone and see you next week!

 

[09:52] Glitteractica Cookie: thanks Baltimore

[09:52] Sarvana Haalan: Rhiannon, I would like to thank Equity Matters and mdlogic for their real life support.

[09:53] Rhiannon Chatnoir: one last wave from us to all the people where Sarvana is!

[09:53] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you folks!

[09:53] Tori Landau: Flaps a wing °͜°

[09:53] Rhiannon Chatnoir: hi

[09:53] Sarvana Haalan: weee…. wee

[09:53] Jen (jenelle.levenque) waves at the RL folks

[09:53] Sarvana Haalan: wooot!!!! wooot!!!!

[09:53] Zinnia Zauber: Mentors Meeting at 10 AM! Go get your tea, coffee, and see you then!

[09:53] Sarvana Haalan: brb

[09:54] Rhiannon Chatnoir: great -thanks all!

Written by: Rhiannon Chatnoir

Sally Cherry: “CHARE – Community HIV/AIDS Resource Exchange Project” for the November 30th NonProfit Commons Meeting

This Friday, November 30th, Nonprofit Commons is happy to feature Sally S. Cherry (SarVana Haalan in Second Life). In recognition of World AIDS Day, She will be talking to us about her community health work focusing on HIV/AIDS, the CHARECHeTARE projects and using social media and technology for capacity building and awareness.

 

About CHARE / CHeTARE Project: In 2010, Community HIV/A

IDS Resource Exchange (CHARE) Project was launched to embrace connecting, communicating, and collaborating opportunities that will enhance awareness and delivery of HIV/AIDS prevention education, HIV testing, and related services. CHARE Project provides capacity building through effective use of social media such as Twitter postings, Twitter chats, Facebook Business Pages, Pinterest postings, Virtual Worlds Integration, and other relevant social media platforms. A companion program, Community Technology Awareness Resource Exchange (CHeTARE) Project was launched in 2012. It provides capacity building through social media and 3-D virtual worlds to enhance the delivery of technology awareness, training, career development, and related services within the public health community. As with CHARE Project, the CHeTARE Project identifies, promotes, and fosters collaborative networking partnerships for capacity building, training, and technical assistance for health service providers especially those serving women and girls.

 

Bio: In 1974, Sally S. Cherry received her Bachelor of Science degree in Medical Technology from Morgan State University and received a Certificate of Completion in Medical Technology from Union Memorial Hospital – School of Medical Technology. In 1975, Sally was certified as a registered medical technologist by the American Society for Clinical Pathology (ASCP).  After working as a medical technologist at Union Memorial Hospital until 1978, Sally joined the Bureau of Disease Control within Baltimore City Health Department as Laboratory Coordinator. While at the Health Department, Sally’s most exciting task was assisting with the planning, designing, and launching of the Bureau of Disease Control (BDC) Laboratory. 

 

In 1990, Sally established her own professional network, Cherry Consulting Network as a professional venture offering laboratory consulting and training services. Through the Network, Sally has conducted laboratory consulting and training assignments as a national STD lab instructor and an international GTI consultant in USA, Turkey, Kenya, Egypt, and Uganda. 

 

From November 2007 to June 2010, Sally was employed as the Project Manager for a Baltimore-based AIDS service organization. Her duties were centered on community mobilization, outreach, and HIV prevention education within high risk populations. She worked collaboratively with various substance abuse prevention/treatment agencies, community-based organizations, faith-based organizations, government agencies, and other AIDS service organizations to reduce the transmission of HIV/AIDS in Baltimore City. 

 

Sally strives to channel her acquired thirty-four (34) years of public health (clinical, administrative, international, and outreach), social media knowledge, and professional networks. Through her ongoing work, she welcomes opportunities to provide social media marketing, training, coaching, and consulting services associated with STI laboratory methods, HIV/AIDS prevention, health disparities, and laboratory career recruitment. 

 

Join us in Second Life!

 

Nonprofit Commons Weekly Meeting

Friday, November 30th, 8:30 AM SLT / PST

Plush Nonprofit Commons Amphitheater

http://bit.ly/NPCinSL

 

AGENDA

  • 8:30 am Introductions
  • 8:40 am TechSoup Announcements
  • 8:45 am Mentors Central
  • 8:55 am Main Speaker: Sally S. Cherry (SarVana Haalan in Second Life)
  • 9:30 am Open Mic / Announcements

 

http://nonprofitcommons.org

 

The mission of the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life is to create a community for nonprofits to explore and learn about virtual worlds, foster connections, and discover the many ways in which nonprofits might utilize the unique environment of Second Life to achieve their missions.

Written by: Rhiannon Chatnoir

Transcript of the November 16th NPC Meeting Featuring: Pooky Amsterdam

[08:34] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Welcome everyone to this week’s Nonprofit Commons Weekly Meeting!

[08:35] Rhiannon Chatnoir: The Nonprofit Commons in Second Life is sponsored by TechSoup Global and is a program of the TechSoup Global Community & Social Media team.

[08:35] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Today’s Agenda:

  • 8:30 am Introductions
  • 8:40 am TechSoup Announcements
  • 8:45 am Mentor’s Central 
  • 8:55 am Featured Presenter: Pooky Amsterdam, ‘The Future of Machinima‘ 
  • 9:30 am Open Mic / Announcements 

[08:35] Rhiannon Chatnoir: First a few links to start off the meeting. 

 

Here are the many ways to can get involved with the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life:

  • Nonprofit Commons Blog: http://nonprofitcommons.org
  • Wiki: http://npsl.wikispaces.com
  • Twitter: http://twitter.com/npsl
  • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nonprofitcommons
  • Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/TechSoup-Second-Life
  • Google Calendar: http://bit.ly/2tMEYh
  • http://flavors.me/nonprofitcommons

 

About TechSoup the sponsors of the Nonprofit Commons:

  • http://www.techsoup.org/stock/howtousetechsoup.asp
  • http://flavors.me/techsoup

 

— INTRODUCTIONS —

 

[08:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Happy Friday! and let’s start off with Introductions!

[08:36] Zinnia Zauber: Renne Emiko Brock-Richmond, Sequim Humanities and Arts Alliance, Sequim, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. http://www.sequimartsalliance.org http://www.facebook.com/sequimartsalliance @renneemiko

[08:36] CarynTopia Silvercloud: Caryn Heilman, Topia Arts Center in the Berkshires of NW, MA in the US, www.TopiaArts.org, @topiaartscenter, create@TopiaArts.org

[08:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Please state your real name, location, org, and the ways we can find you online.

[08:36] Buffy Beale: Buffy Bye, Bridges for Women, Victoria BC Canada, http://www.bridgesforwomen.ca @bridges4women

[08:36] Andy Evans: Andy Mallon, First Opinions Panel in SL; Chief Bottle-Washer, Social Research Foundation, New York, NY http://www.socialresearchfoundation.org/

[08:36] Gentle Heron: Virtual Ability, Inc. www.virtualability.org

[08:36] Chayenn: Monique Richer, Protect Yourself1, Inc., Baltimore, MD , protectyourself1.org, facebook.com/PY1US, @PY1US

[08:36] Adalace Jewell: Corine Van Hellemont, RoSa Liberary Brussels (Belgium) http://www.rosadoc.be @adalace

[08:37] alebez: Ale Bezdikian, Online Community Coordinator, TechSoup, SF, Ca. @TechSoup, @alebez

[08:37] Orange Planer: Orange Planer, IT Manager for H.O.M.E., http://elderhomeowners.org

[08:37] Grizzla (grizzla.pixelmaid): Chris Robinson, ed tech virtual assistant, Georgia Gwinnett College

[08:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir is Joyce Bettencourt, Boston MA area, Online Community Manager of NonProfit Commons in Second Life, http://joycebettencourt.com, http://twitter.com/RhiannonSL

[08:37] Lynne (yt.upsilon) – Lynne Hand. From the Learn English Network.

[08:37] Thynka Little: LuAnn Phillips, Cooperative Extension, Albany NY, extension.org/3D

[08:37] Glitteractica Cookie: Susan Tenby, Online Community and Social Media Director, TechSOup Global San Francisco, CA SUA @suzboop @techsoup @npsl

[08:38] Arklo Novelli: arklo, UK – creator

[08:38] Andy Evans: Susan, back from Hawaii? Nice tan!

[08:38] monvey Algoma: Monvey Algoma, teacher of Linguistics and Rhetoric, from Spain, and desiring to learn about alllll

[08:38] Gentle Heron senses enthusiasm from Monvey!

[08:38] Rhiannon Chatnoir: great!

[08:38] monvey Algoma: yes!!

[08:38] Andy Evans: si

[08:38] monvey Algoma: LoL

[08:39] monvey Algoma: waves to my friends

 

TECHSOUP ANNOUNCEMENTS —

 

[08:39] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Let’s move on to TechSoup Announcements!

[08:39] Brena Benoir: Brenda Bryan, Preferred Family Healthcare, Kirksville, MO www.pfh.org, @brenabenoir

[08:39] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Ale whenever you’re ready 🙂

[08:39] alebez: Hello everyone, alebez here again with this week’s TechSoup updates.

[08:39] alebez: First of all, appy Friday, ya’ll.

[08:39] Lynne (yt.upsilon): TGIF!

[08:40] Buffy Beale: yay for Friday!

[08:40] Zinnia Zauber: Rah Ale!

[08:40] alebez: We received our second entry into the Windows 8 Apps for Social Good Contest called Project Health Center! Check it out….

[08:40] Grizzla (grizzla.pixelmaid): TGI-any-day 🙂

[08:40] alebez: Health Center currently lets you lookup any medication you might be taking and finds it cheaper and will even offer you a unique Discount Insurance Card to obtain your medication for the price found.

[08:40] alebez: You can find it in the Windows Marketplace here: http://bit.ly/RHpqhw

[08:40] Glitteractica Cookie: cool

[08:41] alebez: Yep, very, very cool

[08:41] Gentle Heron: Alebez, where does it draw its data from?

[08:41] Buffy Beale: wow that’s great

[08:41] alebez: You know, Gentle…I’m not sure

[08:41] alebez: But, I’m interested to find out

[08:42] alebez: So, visit netsquared.org to check out the submissions as they come in.

[08:42] alebez: Recently our partner TechSoup Brazil teamed up with the UN Foundation, IBM, BrazilFoundation, and others for the Social Good Brazil International Seminar held on November 6 – 8 in Florianopolis, Brazil.

[08:42] alebez: It was a really great event for them

[08:43] alebez: Social Good Brazil followed on the heels of Mashable and the UN Foundation’s Social Good Summit, which was held in New York City in September. Social Good Brazil was an opportunity to continue the global conversation of how to use technology for social good as well as showcase the work of inspiring Brazilians.

[08:43] alebez: It was an amazing Global event

[08:43] alebez: It was an amazing event, and you can catch up on all of the discussions and resources via this recap by TechSoup Content Curator, Ginny Mies: http://bit.ly/U46880

[08:43] alebez: That’s all for me, folks. Enjoy the discussion.

[08:44] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Thanks Alebez

[08:44] Andy Evans: Great stuff, thanks

[08:44] alebez: You’re welcome!

[08:44] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you Ale!

 

 

— MENTOR’S CENTRAL —

 

[08:44] Rhiannon Chatnoir: On to Mentor’s Central!

[08:44] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Today for Mentor Central we have Zinnia Zauber

[08:44] Buffy Beale: yay Ale ty

[08:44] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you!

[08:44] Buffy Beale: and woo hoo Z!

[08:44] Gentle Heron smiles at Zinnia.

[08:45] Zinnia Zauber: Over the years, many of us have brainstormed ideas how to create community, respect for volunteers, and support of our work in virtual worlds.

[08:45] Zinnia Zauber: How can you create more engagement with the Nonprofit Commons?

[08:45] Zinnia Zauber: These are some ideas to share with you to gain new insight and I want to hear your ideas too.

[08:45] Brena Benoir: I think realizing that volunteering does not have to be a 9 to 5 thing

[08:45] Zinnia Zauber: Welcome Wagon and Training – The Mentors have a great time welcoming new avatars to NPC.

[08:45] Zinnia Zauber: You should too.

[08:46] Zinnia Zauber: Right, Brena!

[08:46] Zinnia Zauber: How many of you offer to bring someone new into SL?

[08:46] Brena Benoir: often times we find that the way to connect and get people involved is being available at evening times and weekends most of the time with my experience

[08:46] Rhiannon Chatnoir raises hand

[08:46] Gentle Heron: well, that’s a major purpose of my nonprofit!

[08:46] Zinnia Zauber: Totally!

[08:46] Zinnia Zauber: Great!

[08:47] Glitteractica Cookie: I just want to chime in that I’m so impressed by how many volunteers have stepped up over the years to make this place thrive. It’s the most self-sufficient volunteer community I have ever managed.

[08:47] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you, Glitter!

[08:47] Zinnia Zauber: Set and Hold Office Hours – This really invites people to learn more from you one on one.

[08:47] Glitteractica Cookie: seriously, impressive

[08:47] Brena Benoir: I think another big thing is networking.

[08:47] Zinnia Zauber: Yes! Networking!

[08:47] Brena Benoir: Getting connected with others and supporting events, kind of build your support group for events and supporting others

[08:47] Zinnia Zauber: Having set hours for such things makes it easy to invite people in.

[08:48] monvey Algoma: i can say that now im writting an article for a medical revew and i have in mind to talk about this community of Nonproffit en the area of medical topic

[08:48] Zinnia Zauber: Do you like my Dead Poets image?

[08:48] Andy Evans: Is there a list of office hours for each NPC member?

[08:48] Mia (praxislady.witt) whispers: loved that movie

[08:48] Zinnia Zauber: Good question Andy!

[08:48] Zinnia Zauber: We need to have that.

[08:49] Brena Benoir: For examples we have two possible regular networking opportunities outside of this meeting, those are Wharf Ratz and CommonGround.

[08:49] Zinnia Zauber: Share Your Machinima – Show off what you have done! Snapshots on Facebook is a good starting point!

[08:49] Rhiannon Chatnoir: monvey – you can announce more details during open mic

[08:49] Zinnia Zauber: Host Field Trips to Explore – I do this with my students and it really makes them feel like they can participate in SL.

[08:49] Zinnia Zauber: I am taking my video students to the Machinima Expo today! Field Trips also let you partner with others too.

[08:50] Lynne (yt.upsilon): My students take me on field trips now. 🙂

[08:50] Zinnia Zauber: Wonderful Lynne!

[08:50] Zinnia Zauber: That is great!

[08:50] Zinnia Zauber: It is also good to be open to working with others on these field trips.

[08:50] Zinnia Zauber: Team up!

[08:51] Zinnia Zauber: It is fun to see how people connect on many levels then.

[08:51] Zinnia Zauber: Be on or Create Talkshows – You have a mission to share, get out there and connect!

[08:51] Zinnia Zauber: Also, speak at physical conferences about your work here. I know I love to share with others!

[08:51] Zinnia Zauber: How many of you have spoken in RL about SL?

[08:52] Brena Benoir raises hand

[08:52] Thynka Little: i do often

[08:52] Chayenn: I do often

[08:52] Rhiannon Chatnoir has

[08:52] Namaara MacMoragh: yes

[08:52] Glitteractica Cookie: And better yet… SHOW your screen. It’s a lot easier to show SL than it is to describe it

[08:52] Andy Evans: yes

[08:52] Zinnia Zauber: Yes, good point Glitter.

[08:52] Namaara MacMoragh: definitely

[08:52] Andy Evans: We do on our website

[08:52] Rhiannon Chatnoir: very true Glitteractica!

[08:52] Zinnia Zauber: I show lots of photos and videos.

[08:52] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Join Me is good for sharing.

[08:53] Zinnia Zauber: Sponsor a Special Event – Camaraderie and Cohesiveness happens on the dance floor while you share your orgs goals.

[08:53] Buffy Beale: raises hand

[08:53] Andy Evans: Is there an official NPC video we can embed on our website?

[08:53] Zinnia Zauber: Yes, there are Andy.

[08:53] Zinnia Zauber: You can find them on YouTube.

[08:53] Andy Evans: k, ty

[08:53] Brena Benoir: and better yet get them in world on their own if possible to experience the immersiveness of this world

[08:54] Zinnia Zauber: right!

[08:54] Zinnia Zauber: Get them started!

[08:54] Zinnia Zauber: Get them in!

[08:54] Zinnia Zauber: Get them some new friends at events.

[08:54] Glitteractica Cookie: Yes, we have a great video.. It is posted in the beginning links that Rhiannon posted

[08:54] Glitteractica Cookie: I’ll grab the link

[08:55] Andy Evans: ty, Glitter

[08:55] Zinnia Zauber: You know that Wharf Ratz, which is a networking event every week at NPC, has been going for almost 5 years.

[08:55] Zinnia Zauber: How many of you made new friends there?

[08:55] monvey Algoma: MEEEEE!!!!

[08:55] Brena Benoir: I know I met a lot of people the first time I attended and continue to see new faces dropping in

[08:55] Zinnia Zauber: Excellent!

[08:56] Namaara MacMoragh: I did… and that was 4 years ago when I first was exploring NPC

[08:56] Zinnia Zauber: Wonderful!

[08:56] Zinnia Zauber: It worked!

[08:56] Zinnia Zauber: You are still here!

[08:56] Namaara MacMoragh: Developed some great collaborations from those times at Wharf Ratz… and here, too

[08:56] Rhiannon Chatnoir: yes 🙂

[08:56] Zinnia Zauber: yes yes

[08:56] Zinnia Zauber: We do make big plans there and CommonGround.

[08:56] Zinnia Zauber: Recognize that 9-5 may not be an Organization’s Volunteer Hours

[08:56] Buffy Beale: hearty applause for Brenna and Coughran to keep it running all this time

[08:56] Glitteractica Cookie: http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=nonprofit commons video&source=web&cd=3&cad=rja&ved=0CD4QtwIwAg&url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwAZ1-BstjE&ei=KnCmUKigL6GyigKe74HgDw&usg=AFQjCNGLn0m73j6oGAjD3ZBuf0x3FUWhPw

[08:57] Brena Benoir: thank you Buffy!

[08:57] Zinnia Zauber: Yes, Brena and Coughran!

[08:57] Glitteractica Cookie: ack… sorry link is so long

[08:57] Glitteractica Cookie: one sec

[08:57] Zinnia Zauber: Like Brena said, not all people work 9-5 M-F

[08:57] Glitteractica Cookie: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwAZ1-BstjE

[08:57] Andy Evans: got it, thanks

[08:57] Zinnia Zauber: Take that into account.

[08:57] Brena Benoir: I have met some great friends here in NPC way after hours 🙂

[08:58] Zinnia Zauber: Totally!

[08:58] Zinnia Zauber: We all have unique reasons we work with nonprofits.

[08:58] Zinnia Zauber: Some of us are employees and some of us are volunteers.

[08:58] Zinnia Zauber: We have one job, two jobs, three jobs, a family, go to school, hold office, and work with a nonprofit….

[08:58] monvey Algoma: this interest me a lot

[08:58] Zinnia Zauber: When are you available to be in Second Life?

[08:59] Zinnia Zauber: How can you create more engagement to support your fellow Nonprofit Peeps?

[08:59] Brena Benoir: I think that varies depending upon our RL schedules and what our goal is in being here in SL

[08:59] Zinnia Zauber: Right

[08:59] Lynne (yt.upsilon): My time in SL is always so packed.

[08:59] Brena Benoir: Some are able to be more flexible and sometimes we can schedule to be on during the day time and sometimes we can’t.

[09:00] Gentle Heron: That’s important, Brena, the SL goal of RL nonprofits. It’s important when they join SL, and important as they continue to function here.

[09:00] Lynne (yt.upsilon): I hardly ever really socialize.

[09:00] Brena Benoir: Thankfully many try to schedule activities at a variety of times to help accommodate the diverse schedules we have and time changes

[09:00] monvey Algoma: but… indeed i work myself from 9 – 24 hrs… i am happy to help some friends that dont know SL, and help them to make theirs avis and teach them how does it function… Its non a charity action, but enyway i think I’m helping someone…

[09:00] Zinnia Zauber: Lynne, then you need to join us for Wharf Ratz, that is work and social time.

[09:00] Lynne (yt.upsilon): It sounds good.

[09:00] Zinnia Zauber: Great, monvey!

[09:00] Lynne (yt.upsilon): I have a rat avi too. 🙂

[09:01] Zinnia Zauber: lol

[09:01] Zinnia Zauber: super!

[09:01] monvey Algoma: hahaha Lynne!!!

[09:01] Gentle Heron: That’s great for when Z does her “gray” color scheme, Lynne.

[09:02] Lynne (yt.upsilon): I’ll fit right in. And camouflaged. 🙂

[09:02] Zinnia Zauber: Silver CommonGround in Jan!

[09:02] Zinnia Zauber: hehe

[09:02] Zinnia Zauber: So, these are some ideas how to improve engagement, create community, respect for volunteers, and support of our work in virtual worlds.

[09:02] Zinnia Zauber: Remember we are all in this together and to Pay It Forward!

[09:02] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you everyone!

[09:02] Lynne (yt.upsilon) claps wildly with enthusiasm.

[09:02] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you for sharing your ideas too!

[09:02] Buffy Beale: yay Z great job!

[09:03] Andy Evans: thanks, good stuff

[09:03] Mia (praxislady.witt) claps

[09:03] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you!

[09:03] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thank you Zinnia!

[09:03] Arklo Novelli: applauds

[09:03] monvey Algoma: thanks to all of you

[09:03] monvey Algoma: app

[09:03] Gentle Heron: Great job Zinnia of reminding us.

[09:03] monvey Algoma: applauds

[09:03] Gentle Heron: Sometimes it’s the simple things we don’t think of, and we should.

[09:03] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you, Gentle so true.

[09:03] Mia (praxislady.witt): agree Gentle *nods head*

 

— FEATURED PRESENTATION: POOKY AMSTERDAM —

 

[09:03] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Time for today’s main speaker

[09:04] Rhiannon Chatnoir: she is teleporting in as we speak!

[09:04] Gentle Heron wipes dino slime off Pooky’s outfit.

[09:04] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Let’s welcome Pooky Amsterdam, who will speak to us today about the 5th Annual Machinima-Expo 2012 and what it will hold, and also what it possibly means for the future of machinima as a medium.

[09:04] Zinnia Zauber: Rah Pooky!

[09:04] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Bio: Pooky Amsterdam, CEO of PookyMedia.com has been working in the field of Virtual World Entertainment and TV for the past decade. The producer and writer of thousands of shows over this period, she is a leader in this field. Since 2008 she has been a driving force for using Second Life as a media platform. With a portfolio of work credited to the PookyMedia team, the films she produces portray a full range of genre from Music and fashion to educational films. Recently PookyMedia has been working on more Public Service Announcements for the State of California, that are helping children and adults eradicate the threat of airborne pests. Yes, they are starring a mosquito, named Pesky.

[09:05] Buffy Beale: yay Pook!

[09:05] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Hi Pooky…start whenever you are ready

[09:05] Rhiannon Chatnoir: and slides are behind you 🙂

[09:05] Lynne (yt.upsilon) claps wildly with enthusiasm.

[09:05] Lynne (yt.upsilon): again.

[09:05] monvey Algoma: clap, clap clap for Pooky!!!

[09:05] Mia (praxislady.witt) claps for Pooky

[09:06] Pooky Amsterdam: Thank you everyone and Ahoy all!

[09:06] Zinnia Zauber: Welcome Pooky!

[09:06] Pooky Amsterdam: you are really what makes this the heart of my Second Life – for you all we all have come together here to follow a wild passion and pursuit of our dreams

[09:07] Pooky Amsterdam: and to also find friendship and hope inspiration and excitement

[09:07] Pooky Amsterdam: I speak to the people of the Non Profit commons land as true friends more even than a audience

[09:07] Pooky Amsterdam: so Im going to go on a wee bit about the Expo

[09:08] Pooky Amsterdam: it was started 5 years ago by a rag tag bunch of film makers who realized that the craft of game engine film had far to go but that horizon was really an important one to meet

[09:08] Pooky Amsterdam: and every year it has grown and grown a bit more

[09:08] Pooky Amsterdam: its actually happening now on Livestream

[09:09] Pooky Amsterdam: www.machinima-expo.com

[09:09] Pooky Amsterdam: its about craft and excellence in film we do as screen capture or in programs such as iClone or Moviestorm

[09:09] Pooky Amsterdam: its a great way and I know so many of us have done films and of course all of us have seen a couple at least

[09:10] Pooky Amsterdam: the Expo this year asked me to do the Programming – so I went after it like my first academy awards show

[09:10] Pooky Amsterdam: who would be good for it?

[09:10] Pooky Amsterdam: what would be good panels – people and I tried to reach high as I thought the time is right for us to take that next step up

[09:10] Pooky Amsterdam: maybe folks would want to be apart of it on panels like Realistic Market for Machinima

[09:11] Pooky Amsterdam: or maybe not but worth a try

[09:11] Pooky Amsterdam: I had to say really worth it – and to see also – how are We perceived

[09:11] Pooky Amsterdam: how is the medium perceived

[09:11] Pooky Amsterdam: there is a very famous show a web series – gosh its huge

[09:11] Pooky Amsterdam: called Red versus Blue

[09:11] Pooky Amsterdam: I tried to get ahold of Burnie Burns but no luck

[09:12] Pooky Amsterdam: he was one of the only folks though who said no Im happy to say

[09:12] Pooky Amsterdam: most folks – even at places like About.com

[09:12] Pooky Amsterdam: massively.com

[09:12] Pooky Amsterdam: venturebeat

[09:12] Pooky Amsterdam: they all said yes

[09:13] Pooky Amsterdam: and so I was encouraged to put the program together with folks who need to know what we are doing and also folks who really know what we are doing

[09:13] Pooky Amsterdam: the film makers and production teams – people who have written books on topic and academics a as well

[09:14] Pooky Amsterdam: the event is taking place on the great NY Sim virtual reverie

[09:14] Pooky Amsterdam: its live now in fact I will have to return

[09:15] Pooky Amsterdam: tomorrow is packed program and I urge you to look at the link to see

[09:15] Pooky Amsterdam: we have the Director of the New media film festival interviewing Jason Silva – who is a noted futurist and videographer

[09:15] Pooky Amsterdam: and the wonderful molotov Alva

[09:15] Pooky Amsterdam: I actually cried when I met him as his film meant so much to me – it showed the possibility of really telling a story within this world I so cherish

[09:16] Pooky Amsterdam: then there is the Politically direct panel

[09:16] Pooky Amsterdam: Fanny Starr will be on to talk bout using the virtual world to get a message of such great authenticity and importance across

[09:17] Pooky Amsterdam: Helen of course too – and also some one you know Joliz GKids

[09:17] Pooky Amsterdam: it was important to also show how the next generation can use the virtual platform to tell and get the message across – to in effect really reach people who grew up with avatars, who can identify

[09:17] Pooky Amsterdam: and also is Joseph Delappe whose films about the war in Iraq raise important questions. moderating is tracey harwood

[09:18] Pooky Amsterdam: Torley Linden is opening the show !

[09:18] Zinnia Zauber: Rah!

[09:18] Gentle Heron: Wonderful speakers!

[09:18] Pooky Amsterdam: there is a discussion on new platforms

[09:19] Pooky Amsterdam: people from unity – flight sims

[09:19] Orange Planer: Torley must be busy – we haven’t heard from him in SL for quite awhile.

[09:19] Pooky Amsterdam: moviestorm iclone and 3ds will get together and discus why they use theres too

[09:20] Pooky Amsterdam: I guess I really still feel the benefits of a liberal education – I was forced to study things I didn’t always want to but it opened up my mind in ways if I only did what I liked well it never would have

[09:20] Pooky Amsterdam: so people known with on their platforms get to expound a bit with others who are using unknown tools

[09:20] Pooky Amsterdam: I hope to expand some creative thinking in there for sure

 

 

[09:21] Rhiannon Chatnoir: do you have within the program any presenters focusing on the use of machinima for social good.. I think back to some of the amazing PSA’s I have seen made and even some of the digital storytelling challenges using machinima here in the NPC community

[09:22] Zinnia Zauber: Yes!

[09:22] Pooky Amsterdam: the marketing panel has Dean Takahashi from Venturebeat – lead game writer

[09:22] Pooky Amsterdam: Flufee is on the web series panel

[09:22] Pooky Amsterdam: he will be there with Obilth Gnome of world of warcraft fame

[09:22] Pooky Amsterdam: and also Chris Burke who does This Spartan Life

[09:22] Glitteractica Cookie: Yes, just keeping in mind our point of being here in the NPC is to talk about tech for social benefit and nonprofit community building. Thanks for the reminder Rhiannon

[09:22] Gentle Heron cheers for the Gnome!

[09:23] Pooky Amsterdam: the benefit for the non profit community is to see how to improve the films that are made by them

[09:23] Pooky Amsterdam: there is a lot of information and people who are really doing great things for the inspiration and knowledge

[09:23] Lynne (yt.upsilon): We need all the help we can get.

[09:23] Glitteractica Cookie: so, that is in line with the techsoup digital storytelling challenge

[09:23] Pooky Amsterdam: and we bring the Expo to you and I guess I am here to let you know that its happening

[09:24] Glitteractica Cookie: i hope that with this year’s TSDIGS we get more involvement from the NPC community

[09:24] Pooky Amsterdam: the future of an inexpensive tool that enables the many to create animated film is a great boon to all of us

[09:24] Glitteractica Cookie: more machinima would be great

[09:24] Pooky Amsterdam: from entertainment to education

[09:24] Rhiannon Chatnoir: yes – we have been using machinima as another amazing tool to tell stories here at NPC

[09:24] Pooky Amsterdam: its a good way to see what is out there from a standpoint of craft and excellence

[09:24] Pooky Amsterdam: to see what you can do

[09:25] Pooky Amsterdam: and to see how it effects others

 

[09:25] Pooky Amsterdam: any questions?

[09:25] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Is it being showcased in SL, or just on Livestream?

[09:25] Pooky Amsterdam: let me give the landmark

[09:25] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Thanks.

[09:25] Pooky Amsterdam: there is a great theater and experience created for you all

[09:27] Pooky Amsterdam: Virtual Reverie (218,37,23)

[09:27] Pooky Amsterdam: it is going on right now

[09:27] Pooky Amsterdam: and will start tomorrow also at 9

[09:27] Zinnia Zauber: Wonderful!

[09:27] Andy Evans: Great, thanks

[09:27] Pooky Amsterdam: there is the slurl in the link I gave you in the beginning as well as the livestream

 

[09:28] Rhiannon Chatnoir: with all of the personal experience you have had with creating machinima and of course all of the amazing people you have interacted with in the field.. do you think as a medium it could be a tool for social change and good?

[09:28] Pooky Amsterdam: absolutely

[09:28] Lynne (yt.upsilon): If it encourages people to be creators, and not just consumers – yes.

[09:28] Arklo Novelli: 09.00 PST

[09:28] Pooky Amsterdam: there was a film done in 2005 I think about he riots in paris and prejudice

[09:28] Pooky Amsterdam: I definitely think so

[09:28] Arklo Novelli: ?

[09:28] Rhiannon Chatnoir: I think about some of the most amazing cinematic movies, like even something like Avatar, that though are commercial, also have deep underlying messages of social good.. of course there is also more direct applications of video/machinima

[09:28] Pooky Amsterdam: people are very attracted well they certainly identify with avatars – people who play games are now well everyone

[09:29] Lynne (yt.upsilon): True.

[09:29] Pooky Amsterdam: and so you are showing folks something they understand and identify with its powerful a tool yes

 

[09:29] Pooky Amsterdam: well thank you all very much

[09:30] Pooky Amsterdam: if there are no further questions then

[09:30] Orange Planer: No, thank you for taking time to talk with us, Pooky.

[09:30] Arklo Novelli: bravo Pooky well done

[09:30] Pooky Amsterdam: I do hope you all check it out at the theatre or at the livestream

[09:30] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any other quick comments/questions before Pooky has to fly back to her event?

[09:30] Chayenn: great

[09:30] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Definitely.

[09:30] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you so much Pooky!

[09:30] Andy Evans: Wonderful, thank u… will check it out for sure

[09:30] Zinnia Zauber: This is wonderful and what a showcase!

[09:30] Buffy Beale: Yay Pooky great info!

[09:30] Pooky Amsterdam: so hugs and hope to see you later

[09:30] Pooky Amsterdam: ty

[09:30] Zinnia Zauber: Hugs!

[09:31] Gentle Heron: Thanks Pooky. Sounds fantastic.

[09:31] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Group hug.

[09:31] Buffy Beale: lol Lynne we have one of those too 🙂

[09:31] Thynka Little: I am hoping to catch a lot of it over the next couple of days

 

— OPEN MIC & ANNOUNCEMENTS —

 

[09:31] Rhiannon Chatnoir: It’s time for Open Mic!

[09:32] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Does anyone have any announcements?

[09:32] Gentle Heron: Virtual Ability has two events this weekend, if I may share them.

[09:32] monvey Algoma: sorry… i am at phone in rl!

[09:33] Rhiannon Chatnoir: go ahead Gentle!

[09:33] Gentle Heron: This evening, 5-7pm SLT, we open a new exhibit at the Cape Able Art Gallery. It features the 3D assemblage art of Scottius Polke.

[09:33] Gentle Heron: These are illustrations he made for a children’s book on Aesop’s Fables. VERY cool artwork, and of course a chance to meet the artist and quiz him about his style and his life.

[09:33] Gentle Heron: Please join us also for a dance with DJ Suzzie Halsey-Zsun. Our Art Gallery always features art by talented artists with disabilities.

[09:33] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Lovely.

[09:33] Lynne (yt.upsilon): I <3 the fables.

[09:33] Zinnia Zauber: Wonderful!

[09:33] Gentle Heron: Also (cue the trumpets) on Saturday NPC’s Dancers Yao will present “Problem-Solving Strategies for Health Care: The importance of complex, fluctuating symptom patterns in the diagnosis and treatment of diseases.”

[09:34] Gentle Heron: Dancers is going to talk about keeping journals (patient diaries) and seeking patterns in your life. This talk is based on her research as a psychologist for Elder Voices, as well as the research of others including Oliver Sacks.

[09:34] Zinnia Zauber: Rah Dancers!

[09:34] Gentle Heron: Dancers will be presenting in Sojourner Auditorium on Saturday, Nov. 17, at noon SLT. Please come and support your fellow NPC member.

[09:34] Buffy Beale: yay Dancers!

[09:34] Gentle Heron: I can give you a notecard about either of these events. Just IM me.

[09:34] Gentle Heron: (That’s all for this week.)

[09:34] Zinnia Zauber: Please!

 

[09:34] Thynka Little: Cooperative Extension has three new projects in development over the next few months. Details can be found in a Google Doc here https://docs.google.com/document/d/1d84ezdgnTY8KPdTQewD9hMnN0tplzVsncG_7JgtZwdQ/edit

[09:35] Zinnia Zauber: Great Thynka!

 

[09:35] Chayenn: Our organization Protect Yourself 1, Inc has been rated top health nonprofit 2012 by greatnonprofits http://greatnonprofits.org/reviews/protect-yourself-1-inc

[09:35] Thynka Little: The projects are Montana Ecosmart House, AgrAbility Farm, and Virtual Coworking Space

[09:35] Gentle Heron: Congrats Chayenn!

[09:35] Chayenn: we are very pleased

[09:35] Chayenn: thank you

[09:35] Chayenn: second year

[09:35] Mia (praxislady.witt): nice, looks like fun!

[09:35] Thynka Little: Please feel free to make comments on the Google Doc

[09:35] Zinnia Zauber: That is so awesome Chayenn!

[09:35] Buffy Beale: nice going Chay!

[09:36] Gentle Heron: Thynka, I think I want to work with you! Great topics.

[09:36] Glitteractica Cookie: That is really impressive Chayenn

[09:36] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Is that VWC for Open Sim?

[09:36] Zinnia Zauber: Wonderful news!

[09:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: great 🙂

[09:36] Chayenn: yes it give us a lot of credibility to raise funding via Guidestar

[09:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any other announcements?

[09:36] Chayenn: for our HIV prevention programs

[09:37] Zinnia Zauber: Your program is so important

[09:37] Chayenn: will do a presentation soon

[09:37] Zinnia Zauber: and it is wonderful to have you be so active here at NPC.

[09:38] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Anyone else with announcements?

 

[09:38] Zinnia Zauber: Will we have a meeting next week?

[09:38] σƙi (loki.koba): RL’s calling, please excuse me

[09:39] Glitteractica Cookie: yes, good question

[09:39] Glitteractica Cookie: i usually say no NPC mtg after thanksgiving

[09:39] Glitteractica Cookie: but you all could decide otherwise?

[09:39] Glitteractica Cookie: In general, I like to let the team take the time off, since it’s a work holiday

[09:39] Zinnia Zauber: I know that I can’t attend.

[09:40] Rhiannon Chatnoir: I am hoping we will… our own Sally Cherry said she can present and if she can we will have a lighter NPC meeting

[09:40] Rhiannon Chatnoir: if not, we will resume the week after 🙂

[09:40] Glitteractica Cookie: I think we should take the day off and let Sally present the following week, when we will have a bigger audience

[09:40] Andy Evans: we could make it just an informal meeting for those who choose to come… like an open mic to discuss ideas, issues or just get to know each other

[09:40] Zinnia Zauber: Good idea Andy

[09:40] Glitteractica Cookie: I know most ppl will be off work with their familes

[09:40] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Will there be turkey?

[09:40] Rhiannon Chatnoir: nod true

[09:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: lol I have made an SL turkey.. maybe can send out gifts 🙂

[09:41] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Great.

[09:41] Lynne (yt.upsilon): 🙂

[09:41] Andy Evans: hahahaha

[09:41] Glitteractica Cookie: i also wanted for us to have a more structured brainstorm at a later date, but if you all want to meet for fellowship and fun, have at it!

[09:41] Mia (praxislady.witt): turkey, woot!!

[09:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: and yes, good idea Andy.. will followup with Sarvana/Sally

[09:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thanks Glitter 🙂

[09:42] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Thanks everyone. It was v. interesting, and nice to virtually meet you all.

[09:42] Lynne (yt.upsilon): Good night / morning / evening / afternoon.

[09:42] Buffy Beale: great to meet you Lynne and welcome

[09:42] Glitteractica Cookie: Nice to meet you Lynne

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: ok – if there arent any other announcements – we can end this week’s meeting

[09:42] Arklo Novelli: yes thanks, love ya enthusiasm

 

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: And again, here are the many ways to can get involved with the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life:

  • Nonprofit Commons Blog: http://nonprofitcommons.org
  • Wiki: http://npsl.wikispaces.com
  • Twitter: http://twitter.com/npsl
  • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nonprofitcommons
  • Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/TechSoup-Second-Life
  • Google Calendar: http://bit.ly/2tMEYh
  • http://flavors.me/nonprofitcommons

 

About TechSoup the sponsors of the Nonprofit Commons:

  • http://www.techsoup.org/stock/howtousetechsoup.asp
  • http://flavors.me/techsoup

 

[09:43] Glitteractica Cookie: for the newbies, these links will help you learn more about us

[09:43] Andy Evans: Greeat meeting, Rhiannon

[09:43] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thanks!

[09:43] Glitteractica Cookie: thanks all

Written by: Rhiannon Chatnoir

Pooky Amsterdam: “The Future of Machinima” for the November 16th NonProfit Commons Meeting

This Friday, November 16th, Nonprofit Commons is happy to feature Pooky Amsterdam. Moving beyond live production of shows and professional videos Pooky is heading up a major International Film Festival’s busy 3 Day schedule, this weekend – She will be talking to us about the 5th Annual Machinima-Expo 2012 and what it will hold, and also what it possibly means for the future of machinima as a medium. 

Bio: Pooky Amsterdam, CEO of PookyMedia.com has been working in the field of  Virtual World Entertainment and TV for the past decade. The producer and writer of thousands of shows over this period, she is a leader in this field.  Since 2008 she has been a driving force for using Second Life as a media platform. With a portfolio of work credited to the PookyMedia team, the films she produces portray a full range of genre from Music and fashion to educational films. Recently PookyMedia has been working on more Public Service Announcements for the State of California, that are helping children and adults eradicate the threat of airborne pests. Yes, they are starring a mosquito, named Pesky.

 

Join us in Second Life!

 

Nonprofit Commons Weekly Meeting

Friday, November 16th, 8:30 AM SLT / PST

Plush Nonprofit Commons Amphitheater

http://bit.ly/NPCinSL

 

AGENDA

  • 8:30 am Introductions
  • 8:40 am TechSoup Announcements
  • 8:45 am Mentors Centra
  • l8:55 am Main Speaker: Pooky Amsterdam
  • 9:30 am Open Mic / Announcements

 

http://nonprofitcommons.org

The mission of the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life is to create a community for nonprofits to explore and learn about virtual worlds, foster connections, and discover the many ways in which nonprofits might utilize the unique environment of Second Life to achieve their missions.

Written by: Rhiannon Chatnoir

Nonprofit Commons Recap: To Invent the Future, We Must Build Dreams

article by Alexandra Bezdikian, Online Community Coordinator, TechSoup Global

On October 26th, 2012, the Nonprofit Commons welcomed back John (Pathfinder) Lester, a man whose unparalleled work in virtual worlds and 3D environments has allowed the development of new systems for immersive learning using next-generation virtual world platforms that integrate with the web and mobile devices. Work he’s currently pursuing as Chief Learning Officer at ReactionGrid Inc. (http://reactiongrid.com)

Although his presentation addressed key features of next generation virtual worlds and best practices on how to build truly engaging simulations within them, he began with a dream.

“I was looking at the sphinx, then suddenly the jet car from Buckaroo Banzai drove up to me,” Pathfinder dreamed out loud. “A classic mix of dream reality and surreality,” he said as he came back to the crowd. “I think as designers, as people thinking about how to deeply engage visitors in virtual worlds, dreams are a good template to explore because next generation virtual worlds must focus on deep engagement and capturing people’s imaginations, and there’s no better place for that then dreams.

Too often what we end up creating in virtual worlds,” Pathfinder Lester confessed, “or any new medium, to be honest, is most of the time a recreation of the familiar, recognizable because familiar makes us feel safe. But the deepest engagement does not happen when we feel completely safe. It happens when we see something bizarre and when we are ‘challenged’ by our environment. That’s just how we our brains are wired. Our brains kick into high gear when we’re challenged.

I think the BEST place to look for inspiration, for finding that balance between familiar and truly fascinating, is in human dreams. Our dreams are often a perfect mix of the mundane and fantastical. Virtual environments are as malleable as dreams. So i think it’s important to explore the full range of emotional states in them.”

As Pathfinder put it, “to invent the future, we must build dreams.”

He wrapped up his presentation by projecting the road ahead for next generation virtual worlds. 

“I think the real future of virtual worlds in general will lie at the intersection of virtual spaces and physical places. The intersection of Augmented Reality and Virtual worlds. There’s a lot happening right now with Augmented Reality, but I think there’s a single serious roadblock. I think the roadblock is the fact that our mobile device are tiny screens we have to pull out of our pockets to see. For things to really take off, I think we need something like Google’s Glass hardware. Something we wear. Something that gives us a seamless malleable view of the world. And all of the work everyone here has done with virtual worlds will be critical in building that broader future of malleable reality.”

Written by: Rhiannon Chatnoir

Transcript of the November 9th NPC Meeting Featuring: Opal Lei

 

[08:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Welcome everyone to this week’s Nonprofit Commons Weekly Meeting!

 

The Nonprofit Commons in Second Life is sponsored by TechSoup Global and is a program of the TechSoup Global Community & Social Media team.

 

[08:36] Buffy Beale: hi there 🙂

[08:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Today’s Agenda:

  • 8:30 am Introductions
  • 8:40 am TechSoup Announcements
  • 8:45 am Mentor’s Central 
  • 8:55 am Featured Presenter: Opal Lei, “Getting the Code You Need” 
  • 9:30 am Open Mic / Announcements

 

[08:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir: First a few links to start off the meeting. 

 

Here are the many ways to can get involved with the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life:

 

  • Nonprofit Commons Blog: http://nonprofitcommons.org
  • Wiki: http://npsl.wikispaces.com
  • Twitter: http://twitter.com/npsl
  • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nonprofitcommons
  • Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/TechSoup-Second-Life
  • Google Calendar: http://bit.ly/2tMEYh
  • http://flavors.me/nonprofitcommons

 

About TechSoup the sponsors of the Nonprofit Commons:

 

  • http://www.techsoup.org/stock/howtousetechsoup.asp
  • http://flavors.me/techsoup

 

— INTRODUCTIONS —

 

[08:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Happy Friday all! Llet’s start off with Introductions!

 

Please state your real name, location, org, and the ways we can find you online.

 

[08:37] Buffy Beale: Buffy Bye, Bridges for Women, Victoria BC Canada, http://www.bridgesforwomen.ca @bridges4women

[08:37] HB Eternal: Harold W Becker, The Love Foundation, Florida, http://www.thelovefoundation.com @lovefoundation

[08:37] Jen (jenelle.levenque): Bruce Hestley, Transgender American Veterans Association, Akron, OH, http://www.tavausa.org, http://www.facebook.com/#!/TAVAUS

[08:37] Buffy Beale: lol HB slipping today 🙂

[08:37] Zinnia Zauber: Renne Emiko Brock-Richmond, Sequim Humanities and Arts Alliance, Sequim, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. http://www.sequimartsalliance.org http://www.facebook.com/sequimartsalliance @renneemiko

[08:37] Gentle Heron: Virtual Ability, Inc. www.virtualability.org

[08:37] Dancers Yao: Kara Bennett, Elder Voices, Los Angeles, CA Health Care and Human Rights www.eldervoices.net

[08:37] Pathfinder Lester: John Lester, Chief Learning Officer, ReactionGrid, Montreal Canada http://about.me/pathfinder

[08:37] Zotarah Shepherd: BEACH College, Santa Rosa, CA

[08:38] Andy Evans: Andy Mallon, First Opinions Panel in SL; Chief Bottle-Washer, Social Research Foundation, New York, NY http://www.socialresearchfoundation.org/

[08:38] Chayenn: Monique Richert, Protect Yourself 1, Inc. Baltimore MD, protectyourself1.org. facebook.com/PY1US . @PY1US

[08:38] alebez: Ale Bezdikian, Online Community Coordinator, TechSoup, SF, Ca. @TechSoup, @alebez

[08:38] Glitteractica Cookie: Susan tenby, Online cxommunity and Social Media Director, TechSoup, @suzboop @techsoup @npsl, San Francisco, CA USA

[08:38] Rhiannon Chatnoir is Joyce Bettencourt in the Boston, MA area; Community Manager of TechSoup’s NonProfit Commons in Second Life; find me online at http://joycebettencourt.com & http://twitter.com/RhiannonSL

[08:38] Ethelred Weatherwax: Dave Dexter. Neenah Historical Society, Wisocnsin USA

[08:38] Ozma Malibu: Sandy Andrews, Floaters Org, tech outreach in Arizona, Mexico and On the Road, @ozma

[08:38] CarynTopia Silvercloud: Caryn Heilman in the Berkshires of NW MA in Adams, MA, Topia Arts Center, www.TopiaArts.org, create@TopiaArts.org, @topiaartscenter

[08:38] Orange Planer: Orange Planer, Homeowner Options for Massachusetts Elders http://www.elderhomeowners.org

[08:38] Atalanta Visage: Jennifer Siegel, National Service Inclusion Project, Boston, MA www.serviceandinclusion.org

[08:38] Orange Planer: I should probably create an orange.planer@elderhomeowners.org account.

[08:38] Adalace Jewell: @adalaceRoSa Documentation centre Brussel (Belgium) http://www.RoSadoc.be

[08:38] Coughran Mayo: Dick Dillon, Innovaision, LLC St. Louis MO @innovaision, @Coughran

[08:39] Zotarah Shepherd: Good to see you Orange

[08:39] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): Carl Icann http://carlicann.wordpress.com and Events @ http://interoccupy.net/ovw17 – I am hosting a Poetic DRUM CIRCLE on 9AM Sunday… Themes for Next 2 weeks are NO MO’ GMOs and Seed Freedom! (Do your causes align??? Thank You!)

[08:39] Patio Plasma: Patio Plasma, San Francisco Exploratorium, patioplasma@gmail.com

[08:39] Frans Charming: I’m Jeroen Frans, The Vesuvuius Group. Amsterdam.

[08:39] Brena Benoir: Brenda Bryan, Preferred Family Healthcare, Kirksville, MO www.pfh.org, @brenabenoir

[08:40] Grasshopper (ines.ogura): Ines Puspita German International School Indonesia

[08:40] Ronnie Rhode: Denise Harrison, The Garden for the Missing, http://www.gardenforthemissing.org/ and SLURL Remora (203,148,21), Project Jason, assistance for families of the missing, http://www.projectjason.org.

 

TECHSOUP ANNOUNCEMENTS —

 

[08:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: It is time for TechSoup Announcements!

[08:41] alebez: Hello everyone, alebez here again to give you a few TechSoup updates for the week!

[08:41] alebez: I’ll keep it short and sweet today.

[08:42] alebez: I wanted to first say “Appy Friday” ya’ll! Every Friday is an appy friday here at TechSoup.

[08:42] Buffy Beale: yay alebez!

[08:42] alebez: This is a new theme born out of our Windows 8 Apps for Social Good contest and will continue throughout the campaign and beyond as a content theme to follow on social media and on the TechSoup blog. Every Friday is our day to discuss innovation and trends in the mobile space, as well as apps to note in the nonprofit and library world.

[08:42] alebez: We have an upcoming webinar that speaks to mobile trends in our nonprofit community. Consider joining us on 11/29 for part II of our popular Transforming Communities through Apps webinar: http://bit.ly/VjEO7u

[08:43] alebez: For more ‘Appy Friday goodness, check out a blog post roundup of recent stories about Apps for Youth, Election Time Apps, Gamification Apps and more! http://bit.ly/AppItUp

[08:43] alebez: And finally, I wanted to remind everyone that the Windows 8 Apps for Social Good contest is in fact live. We even have our first submission! Very exciting.

[08:43] alebez: The prototype submitted is for a mobile game based on the East African boardgame, Mancala. The game is called Bao the concept is the more you play the game the more this app makes through ads, and the money is donated to an organization that works on improving the lives of the people in Malawi.

[08:44] alebez: you can learn more about bao here: http://bao.win-rt.com/

 

And you can check out more of the submissions as they come in at http://www.netsquared.org/

 

The contest is open from November 5 – February 28.

 

[08:44] Orange Planer: That’s a long time.

[08:44] alebez: So if you have a great social good app idea, know a developer or two, and can swing a submission to this contest, the prize is 15K

 

Ok, that’s all she wrote folks. Have a great meeting.

[08:44] alebez: It is a long time, Orange.

[08:45] Orange Planer: 15K lindens or $15K USD?

[08:45] alebez: 15K USD.

[08:45] Ellie Edo: hmm

[08:45] Ellie Edo: thats interesting

[08:45] Glitteractica Cookie: makes it a bit more appealing, no? 😉

[08:45] Ellie Edo: iphone app?

[08:45] Gentle Heron: What is the source of the prize money?

[08:46] alebez: It really does. It can be mobile or web app

[08:46] Glitteractica Cookie: We receive the prize money from Microsoft, and we are running the contest for them

[08:46] Glitteractica Cookie: why do you ask, Gentle?

[08:46] Orange Planer: Does it have to be a Windows 8 app?

[08:46] Ellie Edo: morals, perhaps?

[08:46] Gentle Heron: just interested, Glitter.

[08:46] Glitteractica Cookie: ok

[08:46] Glitteractica Cookie: this is part of our Win 8 campaign

[08:47] Orange Planer: OK, so it does need to be a Win8 app.

[08:47] alebez: Yes, it does have to be a windows 8 app

[08:47] Ellie Edo: ok, forget that then lol

[08:47] Glitteractica Cookie: the point of the contest is to launch Win 8

[08:47] Orange Planer: Oh come on, Ellie.

[08:47] alebez: it must be submitted to the Windows marketplace as part of the contest

[08:47] Orange Planer: Win8’s an excellent interface.

[08:47] Ellie Edo laughs

[08:48] Ellie Edo: “sorry” (looks contrite)

[08:48] Orange Planer: It’s only “hard” if you’re used to doing things the hard way.

[08:48] alebez: Ok, great. That’s all for me. Have a great meeting all!

[08:48] Orange Planer: Which is what we’ve done before tablets got here.

[08:48] Orange Planer: Thanks, alebez.

[08:48] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Thanks Ale

[08:48] Buffy Beale: thanks Ale

 

— MENTOR’S CENTRAL —

 

[08:48] Rhiannon Chatnoir: on to Mentor’s Central!

[08:48] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Today for Mentor Central we have Gentle is speaking today on Helping Volunteers Succeed.

Let’s welcome her up and please start whenever your ready.!

[08:49] Zinnia Zauber: Rah Gentle!

[08:49] Gentle Heron: I want to encourage my fellow NPCers, especially those who are in the Mentor Group, to consider making a little “book report” on something they have read recently, either on the net or on paper.

[08:49] Zotarah Shepherd: Yay Gentle

[08:49] Buffy Beale: yayy Gentle!

[08:49] Gentle Heron: And it contains several BIG HINTS!!!!!

[08:49] Gentle Heron: This information is from “Helping Volunteers Succeed” by Allen Liff. It is a short document addressed to a potential volunteer.

[08:49] Gentle Heron: I was looking for information on the internet about how to help my own SL community (which is entirely volunteer, we have no staff!) work more efficiently.

[08:49] Gentle Heron: It begins with The Volunteer Inventory:

[08:50] Gentle Heron: Three Elements of a Successful Volunteer Experience:

[08:50] Gentle Heron: •Addressing an issue of personal interest.

•Applying my skills & experiences to a challenge

•Contributing to the association, profession, etc.

[08:50] Gentle Heron: These are all seen as benefits to the volunteer. The volunteer should be able to answer these questions before applying for a specific volunteer position.

[08:50] Gentle Heron: Also, the staff member of the organization for which the volunteer will be working should be able to answer those same questions.

[08:51] Gentle Heron: Developing Groundrules for the Partnership between Staff and Volunteers.

[08:51] Gentle Heron: This is a set of four questions that could be answered jointly.

[08:51] Gentle Heron: How do you want to be treated?

How do you want to treat others?

[08:51] Gentle Heron: How do you think I want to be treated?

How will we resolve conflicts?

[08:52] Gentle Heron: Of course, any work requires a plan. That leads us to:

[08:52] Gentle Heron: Making a Plan for Volunteer Tasks. This covers three areas: clarity, readiness, success.

[08:52] Gentle Heron: CLARITY:

[08:52] Gentle Heron: •Do we agree on the facts? 

•What opinions or assumptions do people hold? 

•Are we clear about the roles of staff and volunteers?

[08:52] Gentle Heron: READINESS:

[08:53] Gentle Heron: •Do we agree on a path forward plan and accountability? 

•Do we have the right mix of resources and skills?

[08:53] Gentle Heron: SUCCESS:

[08:53] Gentle Heron: •Do we share and are we committed to the same goals? 

•How will we know if and when we have succeeded?

[08:53] Gentle Heron: And finally, a diagnostic tool for health of a volunteer operation. These questions will help identify issues and initiate corrective actions.

[08:53] Gentle Heron: NINE QUESTIONS VOLUNTEERS SHOULD ASK:

[08:53] Gentle Heron: 1. Do volunteers know what is expected of them as volunteers? Are staff and volunteers in agreement about: a) which activities and functions should be done only by the volunteer; and b) those activities and functions that should be done only by staff?

[08:54] Orange Planer: I am SO stealing this.

[08:54] Gentle Heron smiles at Orange.

[08:54] Gentle Heron: 2. Do staff provide volunteers with the materials and support they need to do their work well?

[08:54] Gentle Heron: 3. Does staff understand and appreciate the priorities of the volunteer?

[08:54] Gentle Heron: 4. In the past three or four months, have volunteers received recognition or praise, from staff for doing good work?

[08:54] Gentle Heron: 5. Does the staff at staff seem to care about volunteers as persons? (e.g., Do I have a friend at staff?)

[08:55] Gentle Heron: 6. Is there someone at staff who encourages volunteers individually, either to take on a new challenge or to learn from a failure?

[08:55] Gentle Heron: 7. Do volunteer opinions count with staff?

[08:55] Gentle Heron: 8. Does the staff feel the work of the volunteers is important? Do they make volunteers feel important?

[08:55] Gentle Heron: and finally

[08:55] Gentle Heron: 9. In the last few months, has someone on staff checked in to see how volunteers are doing and whether they are meeting their goals?

[08:56] Gentle Heron: SO several things to think about, whether we manage volunteers or whether we are asked to volunteer for an organization we belong to.

[08:56] Coughran Mayo: Brilliant!

[08:56] Gentle Heron: Thank you and happy reading.

[08:56] Zinnia Zauber: This is wonderful!

[08:56] CarynTopia Silvercloud: thanks very helpful

[08:56] Zotarah Shepherd: Thank you Gentle

[08:56] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you so much Gentle!

[08:56] Buffy Beale: all good reminders Gentle thanks!

[08:56] Jen (jenelle.levenque): Thanks a heap Gentle

[08:56] Mia (praxislady.witt): Haha, The mistress of organizational skills, our Gentle :))

[08:56] Zinnia Zauber: A great checklist to use!

[08:56] Gentle Heron: You’re all welcome.

[08:56] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Yes – great stuff .. thanks Gentle 🙂

[08:57] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Let’s thank Gentle for leading Mentors Central today!

[08:57] Dancers Yao: thank you

[08:57] Pathfinder Lester: thanks Gentle

[08:57] Glitteractica Cookie: thanks and great stuff

 

— FEATURED PRESENTATION, OPAL LEI: GETTING THE CODE YOU NEED —

 

[08:57] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Time for today’s main presenter…

 

[08:58] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Welcome Opal Lei, who will discuss with us today the why, what, who and how of obtaining LSL scripts for your organization’s virtual presence.

 

[08:58] Rhiannon Chatnoir: First a bit about our speaker…

 

Opal Lei (aka Lea Tesoro in real life) now calls herself an author after publishing her book “Love, Like Dim Sum” (www.LoveLikeDimSum.com). But, once upon a time, she called herself a techie. Prior to discovering SL, she worked in the software industry for 14 years, including a stint at Microsoft, where she documented APIs and coded basic snippets for the .NET SDK. Her first LSL scripting project was a docent game for the International Spaceflight Museum. As her alt Treasure Box, she had also choreographed and coded the burning of the Burning Life/Burn2 temple for four years. 

 

http://www.virtuasapient.com

 

[08:58] Gentle Heron: YAY Opal!

[08:58] Zinnia Zauber: Rah Opal!

[08:58] Opal Lei: Hi, everybody.

[08:58] Opal Lei: This prim behind us is a media-on-a-prim.

[08:58] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thank you Opal, start whenever your ready 🙂

[08:58] Opal Lei: Thank you, Rhiannon

[08:58] Opal Lei: If you prefer to view the stream directly, you can go to …

http://www.opallei.com/livestream.html

[08:59] Opal Lei: It only has the slides. If you can’t view it, all the information will be in chat anyway.

[08:59] Opal Lei: LiveStream will first show you an ad, so you might want to get that started to get past the ad before we get to the good stuff.

[08:59] Buffy Beale: Cheering for Opal!

[08:59] Opal Lei: I received 13 responses to the survey. Thank you very much to those who responded.

[08:59] Opal Lei: Based on the results of that survey,

[08:59] Opal Lei: • Most of you want to learn basic LSL. My apologies to the intermediate and advanced scripters in the audience. The first part might bore you but the latter part might be a little interesting.

[09:00] Opal Lei: • Most of you have not hired any scripters. Of the three who have, two are happy and one is not.

[09:00] Opal Lei: • I couldn’t prioritize which topics to focus on. Based on the weighted average, they all got approximately the same ratings.

[09:00] Opal Lei: And you asked many questions!

[09:00] Opal Lei: therefore,….

[09:00] Opal Lei: * I’m going to spend more time on “Deciding when to modify a freebie script and when to leave it alone.”

[09:00] Opal Lei: * I will briefly touch on “Deciding when to hire, when to purchase off the shelf, and when to do it yourself.”

[09:01] Gentle Heron: /cheers for the first topic

[09:01] Opal Lei: * I will also quickly skim over “Choosing the right scripter if you decide to hire.” And someone had great questions related to that.

[09:01] Opal Lei: * And because some of you might get volunteer scripters, I’ll spend more time on “Effectively sharing your vision with a scripter to get the results you want.”

[09:01] Opal Lei: Even if you prefer to write your own scripts, stick around for that last topic.

[09:01] Opal Lei: In the end, I’ll answer the questions you wrote in the survey. I’ll try to address as many of them as I can.

[09:01] Opal Lei: Let’s get started…. Please let me know if I’m going too fast.

[09:01] Sarvana Haalan: Sally S. Cherry, MT(ASCP), Baltimore, MD @CHAREproject, @SarVana

[09:01] Opal Lei: Why scripts for non-profits?

[09:02] Opal Lei: You give away notecards, landmarks, free shirts, whatever.

[09:02] Opal Lei: You direct people to your website or to YouTube or Facebook.

[09:02] Opal Lei: You play an automatic slideshow.

[09:02] Opal Lei: You track your visitors.

[09:02] Opal Lei: You give them an “experience” to emphasize the need that your organization addresses.

[09:02] Opal Lei: You engage them with a “game”.

[09:02] Opal Lei: You add interactivity to your displays.

[09:02] Opal Lei: You illustrate a concept.

[09:02] Opal Lei: And so much more.

[09:02] Opal Lei: I know that many of you use simple freebie scripts to do the basics of what you need to get done.

[09:02] Opal Lei: So, let’s talk about freebie scripts. …

[09:02] Opal Lei: TOPIC 1: Deciding when to modify a freebie script and when to leave it alone

[09:03] Opal Lei: If you can combine the functionality of two or more freebie scripts in one prim, reduce lag by combining them into one. I’ll explain why….

[09:03] Opal Lei: There are two ways a script can take up server resources . . . time and space . . . processing time and memory space.

[09:03] Opal Lei: If a script is compiled WITHOUT Mono, each instance of a script takes up 16kB of memory for both code and data.

[09:03] Opal Lei: If a script is compiled WITH Mono, the FIRST instance of a script takes up 64kB of memory. Other instances of the same script in the sim take up space for the data only.

[09:04] Opal Lei: So, if you use two separate scripts that could have been combined, you use twice the memory in the server.

[09:04] Opal Lei: Compiling with Mono makes sense if you will use the same script at least four times in the same sim, if you have a large script, and/or if you will hold a lot of data.

[09:05] Opal Lei: (( Now, I’m sorry I started with something that technical. I apologize. ))

[09:05] Gentle Heron: Just one question: what is Mono?

[09:05] Opal Lei: If you have any questions, just throw it out and I’ll try to explain.

[09:06] Opal Lei: In the olden days, the only way to compile scripts is with the old LSL engine.

[09:06] Opal Lei: Mono is a more efficient engine.

[09:06] Orange Planer: Mono is the compiler used to turn LSL into binary programming code.

[09:06] Opal Lei: THank you, Orange. 🙂

[09:06] Opal Lei: On to the next point….

[09:07] Opal Lei: If there is a conflict in user interaction, keep them separate or use alternate interactions. For example, ….

[09:07] Opal Lei: If both original scripts use touch as a trigger for an action, you can change the combined script to perform different actions depending on the face touched.

[09:07] Opal Lei: For example, you can have the code from ScriptA respond only if the user touches Face 0 of the prim.

[09:07] Opal Lei: And the code from ScriptB responds only if the user touches Face 3.

[09:08] Opal Lei: When it rezzes, here’s an example of an object where touching a different side sends you to a different website.

[09:09] Opal Lei: kk, i set it for sale for 0L.

[09:09] Opal Lei: Feel free to take a copy.

[09:09] Orange Planer: Nice.

[09:10] Opal Lei: You can also make it depend on the area touched on the same face.

[09:10] Orange Planer: Really nice.

[09:10] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you, Opal!

[09:10] Opal Lei: I’ll do some shameless self promotion and rez the poster for my book.

[09:10] Opal Lei: The poster itself has only one prim.

[09:10] Opal Lei: The buttons are part of the texture.

[09:11] Opal Lei: But if you touch the area assigned to each button, the script behaves differently.

[09:11] Opal Lei: And that’s only using one side of the prim.

[09:11] Opal Lei: If/When you are comfortable with coding menus, you can use a menu system to allow users to select the action.

[09:11] Opal Lei: That’s another option to save prims and scripts.

[09:12] Opal Lei: However, a menu system adds additional steps for the user,

[09:12] Opal Lei: … is not intuitive for non-native speakers of the language used,

[09:12] Opal Lei: … can be restrictive because each button displays only 12 characters,

[09:12] Opal Lei: … is a little more complex to code, and

[09:12] Opal Lei: … is a little more complex to code, and

[09:12] Opal Lei: … uses up more resources.

[09:12] Orange Planer: Is prone to repeating itself?

[09:12] Orange Planer: Sorry.

[09:12] Opal Lei: lmao

[09:12] Opal Lei: That was a copy-paste error. 😀

[09:13] Opal Lei: Third point on the topic….

[09:13] Ellie Brewster: So if it uses up more resources, is there really a gain in using fewer prims?

[09:13] Opal Lei: If the scripts are too complex, leave them alone or test the script extensively.

[09:13] Orange Planer: No, Mono uses less.

[09:13] Opal Lei: Ellie, did you mean the … Thank you, Orange.

[09:13] Opal Lei: The memory is already allocated to the script.

[09:13] Orange Planer: if the script does not use Mono, then it’s definitely worth using less prims to use fewer resources.

[09:14] Ellie Brewster: ty

[09:14] Opal Lei: The reasons why to avoid messing with more complex scripts is that two scripts might use the same variable name differently and cause problems when combined.

[09:15] Opal Lei: If you don’t know everything that a script does, be very cautious about modifying it.

[09:15] Opal Lei: Code is very picky. Even using the wrong capitalization or missing a single dot can cause the compiler to throw an error at you.

[09:15] Opal Lei: Or worse, the compiler would say that it’s fine, but it doesn’t work like you expected.

[09:15] Opal Lei: And you can sit there and cuss at it all you want, only to cuss at yourself after you realize you made a type.

[09:15] Opal Lei: typo*

[09:15] Opal Lei: like that.

[09:16] Opal Lei: Any questions on that topic?

[09:16] Opal Lei: kk, next topic …

[09:16] Orange Planer has some familiarity with coding, but not LSL

[09:16] Opal Lei: TOPIC 2: Deciding when to hire, when to purchase off-the-shelf, and when to do it yourself

[09:16] Opal Lei: Of course, if you cannot afford to hire, you can look for volunteers or do it yourself.

[09:16] Opal Lei: Generally, I recommend doing it yourself for simple scripts and hiring someone if the project is beyond your level of comfort.

[09:16] Opal Lei: But how would you know?

[09:17] Opal Lei: In Topic 4, we’ll talk about sharing your vision with a scripter.

[09:17] Opal Lei: I recommend going through that process, even if you don’t think you need someone else.

[09:17] Opal Lei: Because it will clarify the project and will help you decide.

[09:17] Opal Lei: There aren’t many off-the-shelf scripts available in the market.

[09:17] Opal Lei: And I’ve seen scripts that are too expensive for what they do.

[09:17] Opal Lei: There are some systems that are worth it, however. Systems that do not have to be customized much, like teleporters, vendors, security systems….

[09:17] Opal Lei: On the other hand, they tend to be laggier because they use additional code that you’d probably use only once when you set up, but they continue to use up resources.

[09:18] Opal Lei: And scripters are probably not going to give you their proprietary code, so you would not be able to customize it to fit your needs, except for the customization that is built-in.

[09:18] Opal Lei: I’m going to move ahead to the next topic.

[09:19] Opal Lei: If I’m losing you, let me know.

[09:19] Opal Lei: TOPIC 3: Choosing the right scripter if you decide to hire

[09:19] Opal Lei: Depending how big the project is, depending on your budget, and depending on your negotiations, these are some of the qualifications that you’re looking for:

[09:19] Opal Lei: * Skill level that is appropriate for your project

[09:19] Opal Lei: Check if they’ve done something similar to your project.

[09:19] Opal Lei: They should be able to demo or describe past projects, whether sold in retail or done in custom projects.

[09:20] Opal Lei: Even if your project is something new to them, if they’ve done a wide variety of projects at different

[09:20] Opal Lei: levels of complexity, they can probably handle yours too.

[09:20] Opal Lei: There is a certification program but I haven’t looked into it: http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/Scripting_Certification

[09:20] Opal Lei: * Problem-solving skills

[09:20] Opal Lei: Ask them if they have encountered an interesting coding problem and how they solved it.

[09:20] Orange Planer: i run the group for that, Opal.

[09:21] Orange Planer: bug me later.

[09:21] Opal Lei: Oooh, cool, Orange! Let’s chat.

[09:21] Opal Lei: 😀

[09:21] Opal Lei: If not, give them a problem to solve and ask how they would solve it without coding.

[09:21] Opal Lei: More importantly, ask them WHY they chose that solution.

[09:21] Opal Lei: * Coding practices

[09:21] Opal Lei: Generally, if a scripter/coder is paid by the hour, you own the code and you should receive the scripts with full perms, so you can modify it in the future.

[09:21] Opal Lei: For that reason, you need someone who writes code that is “clean”, well-organized, well-commented, and easily understandable.

[09:22] Opal Lei: Good professional coders will submit code that someone else can more easily modify later down the road.

[09:22] Opal Lei: Ask them to write a short script for you, and you define what the script does. When you view the code, you should be able to get a sense of what each section does, based on the variable names, the function names, and the comments within the code.

[09:22] Orange Planer: Hear har

[09:22] Orange Planer: hear

[09:22] Opal Lei: at least a vague sense at the minimum.

[09:22] Orange Planer can’t emphasize the “clear, well-commented” aspect.

[09:22] Orange Planer: enough

[09:22] Opal Lei: There are a few topic suggestions from the survey that I’d like to address quickly in this section.

[09:23] Opal Lei: Q: Why prices may vary significantly between scripters:

[09:23] Glitteractica Cookie: (sorry i have to jump out early for a mtg., see u all next week)

[09:23] Ellie Edo: If onlythe Lindens had stuck to that when they statred SL !

[09:23] Rhiannon Chatnoir: this is good advice for those looking for coders outside of Second Life too!

[09:23] Opal Lei waves at Glitter.

[09:23] Opal Lei: LSL scripters come from all over the world. Cost of living in their area is a significant factor.

[09:23] Orange Planer: Ellie, talk to me about that.

[09:23] Ellie Edo: cleann documented mosdifiable code

[09:23] Opal Lei: Some may be experienced coders and they already know what they’re worth.

[09:23] Opal Lei: Others might be just learning and building their portfolio or reputation.

[09:23] Opal Lei: Some do it for a living. Others do it for fun.

[09:23] Opal Lei: Some may be lowering their prices to compete.

[09:24] Opal Lei: Let me add….

[09:24] Opal Lei: When you create scripts that are meant to be sold off-the-shelf, you have the advantage of the software business model.

[09:24] Opal Lei: You invest a lot in the first copy of the product, and all subsequent copies that you sell have almost no cost.

[09:24] Opal Lei: This is true whether you’re selling a script or a virtual piece of clothing. And you can sell an infinite number of copies, theoretically.

[09:24] Opal Lei: On the other hand, if you do custom software, you’re selling your time, which is a very limited resource.

[09:25] Opal Lei: The second part of the suggested topics….

[09:25] Opal Lei: Q: Advantages/disadvantages of choosing an individual scripter vs a company, e.g. price may be lower for individual but availability and ongoing/future support more reliable from a company

[09:25] Opal Lei: I think it may depend on the scripter and the company. Some companies have been around for a while and their longevity is a good sign.

[09:25] Opal Lei: But it also depends on what the company guarantees they would do.

[09:25] Opal Lei: Do they review each other’s code? Do they test each other’s code? What sorts of tests do they do? How good is their best scripter? How good is the scripter they’re going to assign to your project?

[09:25] Opal Lei: You might not want to reject an individual scripter who’s at level 10 in favor of a company whose scripters are only at level 5.

[09:26] Opal Lei: And the last part of the suggested topic…

[09:26] Opal Lei: Q: How to estimate reasonable costs

[09:26] Opal Lei: Estimates are very difficult to do. Like anything else, the more experience you have, the better you can estimate.

[09:26] Opal Lei: A good scripter will help you fine-tune the requirements, then code it, then test the code, then document the project both for the end user and for the person who will be maintaining the code.

[09:26] Opal Lei: A good scripter will also give you status updates, and even submit partial code at milestones that you agree on.

[09:26] Opal Lei: All these take time. And for a custom job, you’re paying for their time.

[09:26] Opal Lei: Actually, this is a great segue to the next topic.

[09:27] Opal Lei: Before you can estimate, you have to first define the job. The more detailed the definition, the better the estimate.

[09:27] Opal Lei: If your budget is limited, you can work with the scripter to define the priorities of the features. Then make sure that they implement the features you *need* before they implement the features you *want*.

[09:27] Opal Lei: Depending on your negotiations, you might also be able to come to an agreement on an estimate and the scripter would absorb the time cost if they don’t get it done within your agreed maximum cost.

[09:27] Opal Lei: Any questions before I move to the last topic?

[09:28] Opal Lei: Sorry, I forgot to move the slides forward. Oops.

[09:28] Opal Lei: TOPIC 4: Effectively sharing your vision with a scripter to get the results you want

[09:28] Opal Lei: In my first job after my undergrad, I learned a lesson that I still remember to this day, …

[09:28] Opal Lei: *** What the customer asks for is not necessarily what they need. ***

[09:28] Opal Lei: We were told to dig out what they really need.

[09:28] Opal Lei: A system could have all the bells and whistles. …

[09:28] Opal Lei: It could even be 100% bug-free (although computer science purists will say there is no such thing). …

[09:28] Opal Lei: But, if it doesn’t meet the customer’s needs, it’s a failure.

[09:29] Opal Lei: In software development, several specifications (or specs) are created to communicate what the customer needs to the development team.

[09:29] Opal Lei: Specs that define the problem that the product will solve and the customers that it will serve.

[09:29] Opal Lei: Specs that define the behavior of the product from the customer’s point of view.

[09:29] Opal Lei: Specs that define the internal data structures and technical components that the product will have.

[09:29] Opal Lei: Specs that define the tests that will be done on the code.

[09:29] Opal Lei: Essentially, you will need to write an abbreviated version of all those specs rolled into one.

[09:29] Opal Lei: Even if you’ll be writing your own code, I recommend this process anyway.

[09:29] Opal Lei: Think of it as something like writing a business plan or a project plan. Or a storyboard for a film.

[09:30] Opal Lei: It will help you think through the project, so you can see where you might need help or what you need to learn.

[09:30] Opal Lei: I still do this for myself too, because it keeps me focused and helps me make the little decisions when I

[09:30] Opal Lei: choose how to implement a piece of the code, or what features to include.

[09:30] Opal Lei: It also reminds me why I chose to solve a problem one way, instead of another way.

[09:30] Opal Lei: It also reminds me why I chose to solve a problem one way, instead of another way.

[09:30] Opal Lei: Eventually, you can rewrite the document as instructions for how to use the script.

[09:30] Jen (jenelle.levenque): Also helps you to develop modules for plugins later

[09:30] Opal Lei: Yes!

[09:30] Opal Lei: Specs go through several edits and iterations.

[09:30] Opal Lei: Sometimes even while the coding is already being done.

[09:30] violeta222: sobre o que vcs falam?

[09:31] violeta222: e uma palestraW

[09:31] Opal Lei: Before coding starts, ask your scripter to review the specs and suggest changes.

[09:31] Opal Lei: Your scripter can tell you what can or cannot be done within the limitations of LSL.

[09:31] Opal Lei: And s/he can recommend alternate solutions or approaches that are more efficient or more effective.

[09:31] Opal Lei: Invest as much time as you can on the spec before coding starts.

[09:31] Opal Lei: Work with your scripter to fine-tune the spec.

[09:31] Opal Lei: The later you make a change in the design, the more expensive it gets, in terms of time and money.

[09:31] Opal Lei: And the more likely that bugs would get introduced into the code.

[09:32] Opal Lei: A good spec makes coding straightforward, so coding itself takes less time to do.

[09:32] Opal Lei: With a good spec, the scripter doesn’t have to second-guess your needs and preferences.

[09:32] Opal Lei: So, here are some of the things that you need in it and why.

[09:32] Opal Lei: This is not a complete list, and some may depend on the project itself.

 

[09:32] Opal Lei: 1. YOUR GOAL

  • What is your goal for the project?
  • Do you want to educate? Entertain? Add interactivity?
  • Increase traffic to your parcel? To your website?

Segment your target audience. By knowing who would be interacting with the object/script, you’ll be able to define the features and the behavior better.

 

[09:32] Opal Lei: 2. USER INTERFACE

  • Exactly how do you want the user to interact with the script?
  • What would the object look like? What would the textures look like?
  • How will the script be triggered to do something? Touch? Proximity? Collision? Chat? Sitting? Paying?
  • Do you need a blue menu system? A chat-based system?
  • Do you need them to type something in chat?
  • What needs to be done to process what they type?

 

[09:33] Opal Lei: 3. DESIRED RESULTS

  • Do you want the script to say something in chat? To collect information? To listen?
  • Do you want to change the configuration of the prim? How?
  • Do you want to give inventory?
  • If giving inventory, how many items are you giving away?
  • Are there conditions when you give some items and other conditions when you give other items?

 

[09:33] Opal Lei: 4. DATA HANDLING AND STORAGE

  • Do you need the script to hold data temporarily, like visitor UUIDs or other settings? For how long? How much data? Why do you need to store the data?
  • Do you need to validate any data? For example: If you ask for an email address, you’d look for the “@” in the string that the user enters.
  • Do you need to handle sensitive data that must be secured? How secure?

 

[09:33] Opal Lei: 5. INTEGRATION WITH OTHER SYSTEMS

  • Do you need to save data to an external database or to customize a website for the user?
  • If someone else is coding the web application and database, how is the data formatted? Are there restrictions in length and data types?
  • Will there be other scripts in the same object? What do they do? What are the triggers for those scripts? Could the triggers cause conflict; i.e.: same triggers used?
  • Does the script need to interface with another script? Are the scripts in the same prim? Same object but different prims? Different object? Outside normal chat range? Outside shouting rage? Outside the sim? Outside SL?

[09:34] Opal Lei: If possible, give your scripter a copy of the object where the scripts would reside. Better yet, have them collaborate with your builder. The script design and the object design must work well together.

[09:34] Opal Lei: The years when I scripted the Burning Life / Burn2 temple as my alt Treasure Box, I couldn’t start planning the burn, let alone start scripting until after Damanios Thetan gave me a copy of the temple that he built.

[09:35] Opal Lei: I didn’t change the design, but I had to reconfigure how the prims were linked together, in order to make the collapse of the structure more realistic and to group components that burned similarly.

[09:35] Opal Lei: For example, I separated the glass parts from the wood parts and from the metal parts.

[09:35] Opal Lei: So, don’t leave your scripter in the dark when it comes to the final object where the scripts would go.

 

[09:35] Opal Lei: 6. ACCEPTANCE TESTING

  • What tests will you perform before you accept the project as satisfactory?
  • Each criteria must be specific and the whole test plan must be comprehensive.
  • If you don’t know how to test code, you can hire a separate tester who is not associated with the scripter, so you’d get an independent opinion.
  • Your tester can write this section for you.

 

[09:35] Opal Lei: If you want to get a copy of the expanded version of this LSL spec-writing guideline as a pdf file, just fill out the post-talk survey with your feedback.

[09:36] Opal Lei: Here’s the link: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/R3VDKJV

 

[09:36] Opal Lei: But don’t go there yet.

[09:36] Opal Lei: Are we out of time?

[09:36] Opal Lei: Did everybody fall asleep?

[09:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: aww

[09:36] Zinnia Zauber: This is great, Opal!

[09:37] Ellie Edo: nope. somegood advice there

[09:37] Zotarah Shepherd: Taking notes

[09:37] Orange Planer: No, I’m glad I’m recording hte chat because there’s so much detail.

[09:37] Opal Lei: Oh good. 😀

[09:37] Orange Planer: You’re giving us a complete working plan to implement a solution.

[09:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir: still awake here.. lots of great advice for SL and programmer/coders you might need beyond SL

[09:37] Sarvana Haalan: an excellent presentation

[09:37] Patio Plasma: yay Opal

[09:37] Opal Lei: Thank you all.

[09:37] Andy Evans: Excellent

[09:37] Andy Evans: May I make a comment?

[09:37] Zotarah Shepherd: Very helpful.

[09:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any questions for Opal

[09:37] CarynTopia Silvercloud: thanks

[09:37] Opal Lei: I’ll post the answers to some of the questions I got from the survey.

[09:37] Opal Lei: Andy, please go ahead.

[09:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir: great

[09:38] Andy Evans: It might be instructive to have an archive of:

 

Name of purchaser

Name of Scripter

Custom scripts that were done – the purpose, type, description of project

Time frame from initial discussion to completion

Final costs

Recommendations from the purchaser & scripter – what they might have done differently or what could have saved costs; what decisions were made and why along the way

 

[09:38] Sarvana Haalan: Thank you … I understand some aspects of scripting a lot better

[09:38] Opal Lei: Good point, Andy.

[09:38] Opal Lei: Glad to hear Sarvana.

[09:38] Opal Lei: Oh, let me answer one question fromthe survey.

[09:39] Orange Planer: You mean an “after project wrap-up,” Andy?

[09:39] Rhiannon Chatnoir: and of course we will have the archive of this up on http://nonprofitcommons.org so you can reread

[09:39] Rhiannon Chatnoir: please do Opal

[09:39] Opal Lei: ty, Rhiannon

[09:39] Opal Lei: Q: What are the best current resources for learning more about scripting?

[09:39] Andy Evans: Yes, an after project wrap up

[09:39] Opal Lei: The LSL portal in the Second Life wiki should be your bible: http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/LSL_Portal

[09:39] Opal Lei: I still refer to it every time to look up the correct spelling of a function name and/or to check the parameters it requires.

[09:39] Opal Lei: I still refer to it every time to look up the correct spelling of a function name and/or to check the parameters it requires.

[09:40] Opal Lei: An older resource is lslwiki.net, but I’m not sure how up-to-date that is. However, some of the functions are better described there than in the SL wiki.

Don’t read it all at once. Just take the time to look up the one or two functions that you need.

[09:40] Opal Lei: DISCLAIMER: I cannot vouch for nor recommend any of the following individuals, groups, sites or organizations, because I have no connections nor interactions with them.

[09:40] Orange Planer: and play with them a lot until you’re comfortable with them.

[09:40] Opal Lei: College of Scripting: Horsa (57,243,84)

[09:40] Opal Lei: Builder’s Brewery (buildersbrewery.com)

[09:40] Opal Lei: Groups: 

“Scripting Mentors” looks like a good one to join.

Search for “scripting” in Groups.

[09:40] Jen (jenelle.levenque): If it’s a new function to me then I usually tinker with it outside my main coding til I’m comfortable with it

[09:40] Zotarah Shepherd: I start with scripts I have bought that are no mod or too complex for me to change and tell a scripter a scripter – like this one only changed to do that… so at least there is a starting point.

[09:40] Opal Lei: YouTube:

 Search for “lsl scripting tutorial”.

[09:41] Opal Lei: A website that generates LSL based on your answers to multiple choice questions: 

http://www.3greeneggs.com/autoscript/

[09:41] Sarvana Haalan: I used Builders’ Brewery a lot

[09:41] Opal Lei: Are you happy with them, Sarvana?

[09:41] Zinnia Zauber: I love that site!

[09:41] Sarvana Haalan: yes… there were a major help when I starting building a couple yrs ago and still is

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: yes .. that was made by Ann Enigma, Hilary Mason in real life who is now the head data scientist for http://bit.y

[09:42] Sarvana Haalan: *they

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: that LSL script generator

[09:42] Sarvana Haalan: awesome

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: oops http://bit.ly

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: well let’s thank Opal for presenting today

[09:42] Opal Lei: I’ll put up the answers to the rest of the questions that came in the survey in a website page and send it to Rhiannon to include with the chat log.

[09:43] Zotarah Shepherd: Thank you Opal

[09:43] Jen (jenelle.levenque): ********APPPLLLAAAUUUSSSEEE********

[09:43] Opal Lei: Thanks, everybody and Rhiannon!

[09:43] Sarvana Haalan: wooot… Opal Lei is a Superhero for sure.

[09:43] Patio Plasma: Yay

[09:43] Rhiannon Chatnoir: am hoping to have her back for a followup .. a scripting 201 😉

[09:43] Sarvana Haalan: Thanks

[09:43] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you Opal!

[09:43] Zinnia Zauber: This was super!

[09:43] Dancers Yao: thanks so much

[09:43] Patio Plasma: also for writing particle scripts try this free website http://particles-lsl-generator.bashora.com

[09:43] Opal Lei: Oooh, Thanks, Patio!

 

— OPEN MIC & ANNOUNCEMENTS —

 

[09:44] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Let’s end things off with Open Mic & Announcements

[09:44] Rhiannon Chatnoir: anyone have anything to announce?

[09:44] Zinnia Zauber: me, please!

[09:44] Rhiannon Chatnoir: go Zinnia!

[09:44] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you!

[09:44] Zinnia Zauber: We will not have a Mentors Meeting today because we are going to VAI!

[09:44] Zinnia Zauber: Here are the details!

[09:45] Zinnia Zauber: Accessible Instruction in Virtual Worlds

Presenters: DanielG Tigerfish (PATINS Project) and Gentle Heron (Virtual Ability)

FRI Nov 9, 9:45am SLT

[09:45] Zinnia Zauber: Sojourner Auditorium, Virtual Ability Island

Virtual Ability (53,172,23)

[09:45] Zinnia Zauber: Many educational institutions are exploring the use of virtual worlds for instruction. As with any new technology, accessibility is a concern. Virtual worlds are not websites, nor are they physical environments. What accessibility issues exist in virtual worlds? How can they be made accessible for instructional usage?

[09:45] Zinnia Zauber: One of the speakers will be presenting from an instructional environment inside Second Life. The other will present from the PATINS conference in Indianapolis. The two audiences will be able to interact after the presentation.

[09:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: oo field trips!

[09:45] Zinnia Zauber: So! That starts right away!!

[09:45] Zinnia Zauber: I hope you can join us!

[09:46] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you!

[09:46] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any other announcements?

[09:46] Sarvana Haalan: I posted it on my FB page… will tweet it out

[09:46] Andy Evans: Great meeting, thanks!

[09:46] Zinnia Zauber: Great! I am heading there now! Super Meeting!

[09:47] Zotarah Shepherd: Great meeting Thank you so much.

[09:47] Rhiannon Chatnoir: if no other announcements, we can end things earlier today

[09:47] Sarvana Haalan: I have an announcement

[09:47] Sarvana Haalan: An invite to read my Wego Blog post from last week… http://virtual-sarvana.blogspot.com/2012/11/national-health-blog-post-mo…… Virtual Ability is featured in it

[09:47] Mia (praxislady.witt): yes, very informative :))

[09:48] Patio Plasma: excellent info

[09:48] Rhiannon Chatnoir: next week we should be having Pooky Amsterdam present 🙂

[09:48] Rhiannon Chatnoir: And again, here are the many ways to can get involved with the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life:

 

Nonprofit Commons Blog: http://nonprofitcommons.org

 

 – Wiki: http://npsl.wikispaces.com

 – Twitter: http://twitter.com/npsl

 – Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nonprofitcommons

 – Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/TechSoup-Second-Life

 – Google Calendar: http://bit.ly/2tMEYh

 – http://flavors.me/nonprofitcommons

 

About TechSoup the sponsors of the Nonprofit Commons:

 

 – http://www.techsoup.org/stock/howtousetechsoup.asp

 – http://flavors.me/techsoup

 

Thanks everyone and see you next week!

 

[09:48] Mia (praxislady.witt): bye *waving*

[09:48] Dancers Yao: thanks for the meeting…bye everyone

[09:48] Rhiannon Chatnoir: yes bye all and thanks again to Opal!

 

Written by: Rhiannon Chatnoir

Opal Lei: “Getting the Code You Need” for the November 9th NonProfit Commons Meeting

This Friday, November 9th, Nonprofit Commons is happy to feature Opal Lei, who will discuss the why, what, who and how of obtaining LSL scripts for your organization’s virtual presence. 

 

Maybe you settled for freebie scripts that do not do enough or off-the-shelf scripts that include code that you do not need and just cause lag. Maybe you have a great project idea, but you are intimidated by scripters who speak techno-babble. Maybe you can’t decide whether to hire someone or to learn LSL yourself. Maybe you’ve tried hiring someone and they ended up creating something utterly different from your vision.

 

Opal will squeeze as many tips as she can to help:

  • Decide when to modify a script and when to leave it alone
  • Decide when to hire, when to purchase off the shelf, and when to do it yourself
  • Choose the right scripter if you decide to hire
  • Effectively share your vision with a hired scripter to get the results you want

 

Opal has created a survey to help tailor this presentation for those attending, please fill out before November 8: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/Z2HJDMY.

 

Bio: Opal Lei (aka Lea Tesoro in real life) now calls herself an author after publishing her book “Love, Like Dim Sum” (www.LoveLikeDimSum.com). But, once upon a time, she called herself a techie. Prior to discovering SL, she worked in the software industry for 14 years, including a stint at Microsoft, where she documented APIs and coded basic snippets for the .NET SDK. Her first LSL scripting project was a docent game for the International Spaceflight Museum. As her alt Treasure Box, she had also choreographed and coded the burning of the Burning Life/Burn2 temple for four years.   

http://www.virtuasapient.com

 

Join us in Second Life!

 

Nonprofit Commons Weekly Meeting

Friday, November 9th, 8:30 AM SLT / PST

Plush Nonprofit Commons Amphitheater

http://bit.ly/NPCinSL

 

AGENDA

  • 8:30 am Introductions
  • 8:40 am TechSoup Announcements
  • 8:45 am Mentors Central
  • 8:55 am Main Speaker: Lea Tesoro (Opal Lei in Second Life)
  • 9:30 am Open Mic / Announcements

 

http://nonprofitcommons.org

 

The mission of the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life is to create a community for nonprofits to explore and learn about virtual worlds, foster connections, and discover the many ways in which nonprofits might utilize the unique environment of Second Life to achieve their missions.

Written by: Rhiannon Chatnoir

Transcript of Novemeber 2nd Meeting Featuring: Anna Jaeger

[08:32] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Welcome everyone to this week’s Nonprofit Commons Weekly Meeting!

[08:32] Rhiannon Chatnoir: The Nonprofit Commons in Second Life is sponsored by TechSoup Global and is a program of the TechSoup Global Community & Social Media team.

 

[08:32] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Today’s Agenda:

 – 8:30 am Introductions

 – 8:40 am TechSoup Announcements

 – 8:45 am Mentor’s Central – featuring Ozma Malibu on the NPC wiki

 – 8:55 am Featured Presenter: Anna Jaeger, “Cloud Technology and the NGO Community” 

 – 9:30 am Open Mic / Announcements

 

[08:33] Rhiannon Chatnoir: First a few links to start off the meeting. 

 

Here are the many ways to can get involved with the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life:

 

 – Nonprofit Commons Blog: http://nonprofitcommons.org

 – Wiki: http://npsl.wikispaces.com

 – Twitter: http://twitter.com/npsl

 – Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nonprofitcommons

 – Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/TechSoup-Second-Life

 – Google Calendar: http://bit.ly/2tMEYh

 – http://flavors.me/nonprofitcommons

 

About TechSoup the sponsors of the Nonprofit Commons:

 

 – http://www.techsoup.org/stock/howtousetechsoup.asp

 – http://flavors.me/techsoup

 

— INTRODUCTIONS —

 

[08:33] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Morning everyone, let’s start off with Introductions!

 

Please state your real name, location, org, and the ways we can find you online.

 

[08:33] Buffy Beale: Buffy Bye, Bridges for Women, Victoria BC Canada, http://www.bridgesforwomen.ca @bridges4women

[08:33] HB Eternal: Harold W Becker, The Love Foundation, Florida, http://www.thelovefoundation.com @lovefoundation

[08:33] CarynTopia Silvercloud: Caryn Heilman, Topia Arts Center in the Berkshires of NW, MA, www.TopiaArts.org, @TopiaArtsCenter

[08:33] Buffy Beale: heh heh HB 🙂

[08:33] HB Eternal: Go Buffy!

[08:33] Zinnia Zauber: Renne Emiko Brock-Richmond, Sequim Humanities and Arts Alliance, Sequim, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. http://www.sequimartsalliance.org http://www.facebook.com/sequimartsalliance @renneemiko

[08:33] Ronnie Rhode: Denise Harrison, The Garden for the Missing, http://www.gardenforthemissing.org/ and SLURL Remora (203,148,21), Project Jason, assistance for families of the missing, http://www.projectjason.org.

[08:33] Jen (jenelle.levenque): Bruce Hestley, Transgender American Veterans Association, Akron, OH, http://www.tavausa.org, http://www.facebook.com/#!/TAVAUS

[08:33] alebez: ale bezdikian, Online Community Coordinator, TechSoup, SF, Ca. @TechSoup, @alebez

[08:34] Diantha Petrov: Lori Wahl http://www.webpages.uidaho.edu/sl/

[08:34] Dancers Yao: Kara Bennett , ElderVoices, Los Angeles, CA, Health Care and Human Rights www.eldervoices.net

[08:34] Chayenn: Monique Richert, Protect Yourself 1, Inc., Baltimore, MD , protectyourself1.inc., facebook.com/PY1US , @PY1US

[08:34] Gentle Heron: Virtual Ability, Inc. www.virtualability.org

[08:34] Par (parhelion.palou): Phred Phlintstone, generic volunteer (no org), north of Baltimore, MD, no twitter or website

[08:34] Hour Destiny: Morris Cox, Nevada, @morriscox

[08:34] Atalanta Visage: Jennifer Siegel, National Service Inclusion Project, Boston, MA www.serviceandinclusion.org

[08:34] Ozma Malibu: Sandy Andrews, Floaters Org tech outreach, active in Arizona, Mexico and On the Road, @ozma

[08:35] Rhiannon Chatnoir is Joyce Bettencourt, Community Manager of the NonProfit Commons in Second Life, http://joycebettencourt.com, @RhiannonSL …located in the Boston, MA area….which is a bit squishier post Sandy

[08:35] Rhiannon Chatnoir: If you joined us late, feel free to introduce yourself

[08:36] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): Professor Carl Icann, Rockcliffe University, http://carlicann.wordpress.com — I am hosting another Poetic Drum Circle at Burning Life on Sunday 9am SLT. This week’s theme is Election & Democracy Poetry. Location: Teleport to Burning Man- Black Rock (55,199,25) (DO NOT CLICK THIS!!!)

[08:36] Andy Evans: Andy Mallon, First Opinions Panel in SL

Social Research Foundation, NYC in RL

[08:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: 🙂

[08:37] Sister (sister.abeyante): Sister Patrice Colletti, SDS Milwaukee, WI *** @SisterAbeyante http://4equalrights.blogspot.com/ *** @TechTips4Usds http://techtipssds.blogspot.com/ *** as well as a volunteer with Virtual Ability, Inc. http://www.virtualability.org

 

— TECHSOUP ANNOUNCEMENTS —

 

[08:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Let’s move on to TechSoup Announcements – today Alebez will be speaking

[08:38] alebez: Hello everyone, alebez here to give you the TechSoup updates for the week! Bulaklak sends his love, and also me. 🙂

[08:38] alebez: It was an exciting week at TechSoup and in the community!

[08:38] alebez: Windows 8 launched, we have announced a winner to our Technology in Action social media campaign, our goal was to generate stories to include on the local impact map – we got 28 entries!

[08:39] alebez: And if you’ve watched the news recently, hurricane Sandy is making headlines left and right. Not in a good way.

[08:39] alebez: Our content team thought it was important to address our community affected by hurricane Sandy, so our team came together worked hard to create hurricane Sandy disaster relief resources.

[08:39] alebez: But disaster preparedness doesn’t start or stop with just natural disasters. We also included a whole lot of content on technology’s impact on disaster relief.

[08:40] alebez: You can check out the roundup of those resources here in this bundle: http://bit.ly/SADU4I

[08:40] alebez: The winner of our Technology in Action campaign was Get set, Go – a non profit based out of Wisconsin, but whose main arm is its Women’s Learning Center in Cambodia.

[08:40] Buffy Beale: that’s so innovative alebez for using the map, well done to TechSoup!

[08:40] alebez: 28 orgs submitted really amazing photographs showing how technology activates their organization and helps fulfill their mission.

[08:41] alebez: You can view some of the great photos, and the winning submission here: http://bit.ly/PjIIux

[08:41] CarynTopia Silvercloud: thanks for the disaster relief efforts- much appreciated

[08:41] alebez: And finally, I wanted to announce the coming launch of the Windows 8 Apps for Social Good Contest. The contest goes live on Monday.

[08:41] alebez: Whether you are a hacker at heart, a social do-gooder, a youth activist, or a developer with an innovative mind and skills to implement, this contest seeks to bring together innovation with the means to create. Now’s the time to pow wow with your developer friends to make that great app idea you had one time happen.

[08:42] alebez: The prizes are great.

 

There are 3 categories of prizes: Best Overall Windows 8 App: $15,000; Best Overall Windows 8 Phone App: $15,000; People’s Choice App: $10,000

 

[08:42] alebez: Important Dates

  • Project submissions: November 5 – February 28
  • Public voting: March 1 – March 15
  • Winners Announced: March 25

 

[08:43] alebez: Ready to get started? Here’s how to proceed.

[08:43] alebez: Create a Windows 8 app focused on social good (collaborations encouraged!)

Publish the app in the Windows Store – http://bit.ly/TXv4K9

Register the application project on the contest website (will be http://www.netsquared.org/challenge/windows-8-apps-social-good-contest when the contest goes live on Monday)

Check out the other apps, then vote on your favorites in March!

[08:43] Hour Destiny: I’m going to a code camp next Friday. Why doesn’t TechSoup have a Code Camp sometime?

[08:43] alebez: That’s a great idea, hour. and one we are currently exploring 🙂

[08:44] alebez: please let us know about your experience!

[08:44] alebez: that’s all folks!

[08:44] Frans Charming applauds

[08:44] Hour Destiny: It’s my 3rd year and counting.

[08:44] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Thanks Alebez!

[08:44] alebez: thank you all

 

— MENTOR’S CENTRAL —

 

[08:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: on to Mentor’s Central!

[08:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Today for Mentor Central we have Ozma Malibu speaking to us about the NPC wiki. Let’s welcome her up and please start whenever your ready.

[08:45] Ozma Malibu: OK!

[08:45] Buffy Beale: yay Oz!

[08:45] Gentle Heron: YAY Ozma!

[08:45] Zinnia Zauber: Rah Ozma!

[08:45] Ozma Malibu: haha. thanks.

[08:45] Par (parhelion.palou): Yay, Oz … even if you were responsible for the hurricane

[08:45] Ozma Malibu: Well. The Mentors Corner today will emphasize a useful TechSoup resource that is especially for us in the NPC.

[08:45] Ozma Malibu: I know, alas, the hurricane. (I am a Sandy too.)

[08:46] Ozma Malibu: Anyway.

[08:46] Ozma Malibu: Please don’t click the display btw. It may advance if you do.

[08:46] Ozma Malibu: The resource is the Nonprofits in Second Life Wiki, at http://npsl.wiki.techsoup.org

[08:47] Ozma Malibu: Seriously. Don’t click it.

[08:47] Ozma Malibu: …thank you… 🙂

[08:47] Ozma Malibu: Anyone can access the wiki for information

[08:47] Ozma Malibu: (here it is)

[08:48] Ozma Malibu: BUT if you want to be an editor, you must first create an account, and then ask Rhiannon for editing permission.

[08:48] Ozma Malibu: (up there at the top is where you create an account)

[08:49] Ozma Malibu: The NPSL wiki is full of useful information, all in one place. You can send new members here

[08:49] Ozma Malibu: (saves time and is fun for them)

[08:50] Ozma Malibu: But,, you’ll also find much that’s new and interesting no matter how long you’ve been a resident here.

[08:50] Ozma Malibu: (so check it out)

[08:51] Ozma Malibu: Here for instance are the Upcoming Events.

[08:51] Ozma Malibu: Transcripts of meetings. Blog posts.

[08:51] Ozma Malibu: There is an #npsl twitter feed that you may want to contribute to.

[08:51] Glitteractica Cookie: (sorry I’m late… Susan Tenby, Online Community and Social Media Director, TechSoup, SF CA USA logging in from Maui, Hawaii @suzboop @techsoup

[08:52] Ozma Malibu: At the top, you’ll find buttons to the NPSL presence on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc.

[08:52] Ozma Malibu: so useful.

[08:52] Ozma Malibu: Over on the left, in the Navigation section, you’ll see the Mentoring link. Click on it!

[08:53] Ozma Malibu: well, wait til you get to the actual wiki please.

[08:53] Rhiannon Chatnoir: 🙂

[08:53] Ozma Malibu: A bit of history: this was originally the Docent section, and that title lives on in the page tA bit of history: this was originally the Docent section, and that title lives on in the page title.

[08:54] Ozma Malibu: ah didn’t think that went through.

[08:54] Ozma Malibu: Now, some parts of the Wiki need to be periodically updated, and so the Mentors are currently updating the list of available Mentors, which is on the siki.

[08:54] Ozma Malibu: We’d like to invite all of you to volunteer. There are three levels of Mentors, so any amount of expertise and any amount of time you can give are just fine.

[08:55] Ozma Malibu: If you think it sounds like fun but have cold feet, you can also just attend Mentor meetings and sign up later.

[08:55] Ozma Malibu: To serve as a welcome wagon mentor, all you have to do is to take new members under your wing and be friendly. If you have building skills, etc., that is wonderful, but it is not necessary.

[08:55] Ozma Malibu: Instructors have skills of one kind and another, and when a newbie is stuck on a Second Life question, an Instructor can help the necessary skills. You don’t need to possess many skills to volunteer for this position – sign up for what you know!

[08:55] Ozma Malibu: Mentors’ Mentors are people with great skills, and little time. When the Mentors are working with someone who needs help, and don’t have sufficient skills yet for a particular problem, they can call on one of the Mentors’ Mentors for advice. Again, you can just sign up for the specific skills that you want to offer.

[08:56] Ozma Malibu: So, Mentoring is a great way to fulfill your volunteer obligation to the NPC, have fun, learn a lot, dream a lot, and it’s a further opportunity for networking. Remember, Mentor meetings happen every Friday. right after this one.

[08:56] Ozma Malibu: And please do check out the the wiki – often!

[08:56] Ozma Malibu: thank you!

[08:56] Frans Charming applauds

[08:56] Ozma Malibu: that’s all!

[08:56] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you very much, Ozma! This was great!

[08:56] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Ozma – Thanks for leading Mentors Central today!

[08:56] Hour Destiny: If only there were an app for that. 🙂

[08:56] Brena Benoir: Brenda Bryan, Preferred Family Healthcare, Kirksville, Missouri, www.pfh.org, @brenabenoir

[08:56] Sister (sister.abeyante): Thanks, helkpful info

[08:57] Buffy Beale: yay Oz that was great!

 

— FEATURED PRESENTATION: ANNA JAEGER —

 

[08:57] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Time for today’s main presenter

[08:57] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Welcome Anna Jaeger of TechSoup (Sage Ovetcher in SL), who will speak to us today on TechSoup’s recent Cloud Technology Survey and the primary advantages, barriers and motivations that nonprofits, libraries, and NGOs from around the world reported for moving their IT to the cloud.

[08:57] Glitteractica Cookie: Le W00t!

[08:57] Glitteractica Cookie: go anna!

[08:57] alebez: anna!

[08:57] Sage Qvetcher: Thanks, Susan

[08:57] Rhiannon Chatnoir: a brief bio:

[08:57] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Anna Jaeger, the Director of Microsoft Program and Special Projects, was also the co-founder of the GreenTech Initiative at TechSoup Global. GreenTech’s mission is to help nonprofits and libraries reduce their environmental impact through the effective use of technology, including cloud technologies. Prior to her work on the Global Cloud Survey, Ms. Jaeger lead TechSoup Global’s IT Engineering Department, which implemented and maintained all enterprise software and websites.

[08:58] Sage Qvetcher: Hello all and thank you for the chance to share the results of our survey with all of you.

[08:58] Glitteractica Cookie: Hey Sage!

[08:58] Glitteractica Cookie: I love yr last name

[08:58] Buffy Beale: cheering!

[08:58] Glitteractica Cookie: Qvetcher… Second Life/Jewish spelling

[08:58] Sage Qvetcher: Thanks! Me too.

[08:58] Glitteractica Cookie: 🙂

[08:58] Sage Qvetcher: It fits me so well.

[08:58] Glitteractica Cookie: ha ha

[08:58] Ozma Malibu: love it

[08:58] Gentle Heron: It’s a great name, however it’s spelled.

[08:59] Sage Qvetcher: My name is Anna Jaeger and I am a director at TechSoup Global in San Francisco.

[08:59] Jen (jenelle.levenque): Love Yiddish

[08:59] Sage Qvetcher: Well, make sure to kibbitz during the presentation then.

[09:00] Sage Qvetcher: This will be a brief presentation of a tiny sliver of our data. 

If you have questions, comments or want to delve deeper, please feel free to reach out to me afterwards at anna@techsoup.org.

[09:00] Rhiannon Chatnoir: presentation slides are up behind you – let me know if you need any help advancing

[09:00] Sage Qvetcher: thanks

[09:00] Sage Qvetcher: Trying to pan

[09:00] Sage Qvetcher: but it is slow

[09:00] Sage Qvetcher: Next Slide (2):

My goals for this presentation are:

Understanding what organizations from around the world have said about the advantages to, barriers of and motivators for using cloud computing.

[09:00] Rhiannon Chatnoir: lots of avatars present….makes things slower

[09:01] Sage Qvetcher: Familiarize you with the types of applications and the specific applications nonprofits are already adopting.

[09:01] Sage Qvetcher: Let you know how to find more information.

 

Given the mountain of data we collected, this final bullet is most critical.

[09:02] Sage Qvetcher: Why did we do a global cloud survey?

[09:02] Sage Qvetcher: We wanted to gauge how NGOs worldwide are currently using cloud products and services

[09:03] Sage Qvetcher: Measure how NGOs perceive barriers to and advantages of cloud computing adoption 

 

Understand these organizations’ future plans for cloud computing adoption

[09:03] Sage Qvetcher: Help capacity-building organizations, consultants, donors, and foundations better support the social benefit sector in making informed decisions about whether cloud-based solutions are right for them.

 

I also think the final bullet on this slide is the most important.

[09:03] Sage Qvetcher: I promise the slides will get more visually interesting in a moment. 🙂

[09:04] Sage Qvetcher: but not yet

[09:04] Sage Qvetcher: We needed to pick a definition that was short, easy to understand and easy to translate. We couldn’t be all inclusive without greatly expanding the length of the survey

[09:04] Sage Qvetcher: So, we focused mostly on software as a service (SaaS).

[09:05] Sage Qvetcher: The survey was conducted in the 1st half of 2012

We published the survey in 21 languages and received 10,593 usable responses from respondents in 88 countries.

[09:05] Sage Qvetcher: We released the report in September 2012

The full report is available online, free of charge

Our executive summary is published in 19 languages

And in addition, we have 25 individual country-level reports

[09:06] Glitteractica Cookie: That is so impressive, it bears repeating! nearly 10,600 answered surveys!

[09:06] Sage Qvetcher: Here is the breakout of responses by region:

  • Europe: 37%
  • US/Can: 33%
  • Asia: 13%
  • S. Africa/Egypt: 4%
  • Aus/NZ: 4%
  • Undefined: 6%

[09:06] Sage Qvetcher: 74% from the highest GDP category (>$20K per capita)

[09:07] Sage Qvetcher: How is my speed? Am I going too fast or too slow?

[09:07] Rhiannon Chatnoir: doing fine

[09:07] Sage Qvetcher: Everything I am presenting here today is available in the report

[09:07] Glitteractica Cookie: doing great, Sage!

[09:07] Sage Qvetcher: I will give you the URL to the full reportand the translations at the end of the presentation

[09:07] Sage Qvetcher: Thanks.

[09:08] Sage Qvetcher: As you can see, our data is heavily focused on Western countries and rich countries

[09:09] Sage Qvetcher: However, in the report, we did break out some of the data by country and by region and by country GDP

[09:09] Sage Qvetcher: We did that so that you could see how individual countries differed from the average data set

[09:10] Sage Qvetcher: Given the nature of the outreach, the questions asked, and the fact that the survey was taken online, the survey sample skews toward those working in organizations that have access to the Internet and are engaged with cloud computing.

[09:11] Sage Qvetcher: uh-ohConsequently, cloud usage levels reported here may be higher than actual levels among all NGOs.

[09:11] Sister (sister.abeyante): Sage- I’m wondering- how did NGOs select themselves to participate? How did you connect with them?

[09:11] Sage Qvetcher: Ah! Good question

[09:12] Sage Qvetcher: They did self-select and self-identify

[09:12] Sage Qvetcher: However, we did outreach in our normal means, which means that we were targeting NGOs, libraries and other social benefit orgs. 

  • 90% of respondents worldwide are using cloud computing.
  • 79% say the greatest advantage is easier software/ hardware administration.
  • 60% say lack of knowledge is the greatest barrier.
  • 53% report plans to move a “significant portion” of their IT to the cloud within three years.
  • 47% say cost-related changes and ease of setup would be the greatest motivators for moving their IT to the cloud.

[09:13] Sage Qvetcher: Keep in mind that these numbers represent only the respondents

[09:13] Sage Qvetcher: We are not saying that 90% of all NGOs aworld wide are using the cloud.

[09:13] Sage Qvetcher: Familiarity with many of these applications is not surprising. 

Facebook, Gmail, Skype and Twitter are common words in everyday vernacular.

[09:14] Sage Qvetcher: However, it is interesting to note how different actual usage of these applications is.

[09:14] Glitteractica Cookie: ppl don’t even realize they are using the cloud, often

[09:14] Sage Qvetcher: You can see here that Twitter usage dropped to 38% from a familiarity percentage of 90%. So, most people have heard of twitter, but only 1/3rd use it at their nonprofits.

[09:15] Rhiannon Chatnoir: very true Glitteractica

[09:15] Sage Qvetcher: Yes, our study found that people didn’t know what the cloud was and when they were using it.

[09:16] Sage Qvetcher: People indicated that they didn’t use the cloud for collaboration and then in another question indicated that they use Skype and web conferencing tools like ReadyTalk and WebEx.

[09:16] Sarvana Haalan: Like how fols refer to it… Up there… in the cloud…. of th ecloud

[09:16] Sage Qvetcher: NTEN calls this the “Hidden cloud”

[09:16] Sarvana Haalan: *folks

[09:16] Sage Qvetcher: While it is not surprising that ease of use and access featured highly as advantages (79% reported it as a major advantage). It was interesting that cost also was noted as a major advantage (62%).

[09:17] Sage Qvetcher: Survey respondents identified costs and data security (54%) as both advantages and barriers to cloud computing.

[09:17] Sarvana Haalan: I am consern about content rights in the cloud 🙂

[09:17] Par (parhelion.palou): Data security is NOT an advantage to cloud computing

[09:17] Sage Qvetcher: You should be.

[09:17] Sarvana Haalan: *concern… sorry can’t spell today… smiles

[09:18] Sage Qvetcher: Well, data security may be an advantage for nonprofits who have their data on a server sitting on the floor in their bathroom (true story) or on their back porch

[09:18] Sage Qvetcher: It is really dependent on the situation

[09:18] Orange Planer: Sorry I’m late.

[09:18] Orange Planer: Data security?

[09:18] Hour Destiny: Encrypt before sending to the cloud.

[09:18] Sage Qvetcher: If you are Free Tibet, it may not be an advantage, but a concern.

[09:19] Sage Qvetcher: BTW, please remember

[09:19] Sarvana Haalan: excellent idea Hour… thanks

[09:19] Sage Qvetcher: We are reporting what people cited in the survey. I am not saying that any of these are or are not an advantage or concern for any of you.

[09:20] Sage Qvetcher: Lack of knowledge was the group of barriers that were reported at the highest rates (60%). 

30% of respondents said they didn’t know enough about cloud computing to know what the barriers are.

[09:20] Sage Qvetcher: Lack of knowledge was consistently reported as a barrier across geographies and organization sizes.

[09:20] Hour Destiny: Cloud == hosted services.

[09:20] Sage Qvetcher: The only barrier cited more frequently by smaller organizations was lack of knowledge.

[09:20] Sage Qvetcher: Medium organizations were on average 10% more likely to cite any barriers to cloud computing adoption.

[09:21] Sage Qvetcher: Large organizations were 18% more likely to cite barriers. 

Respondents at large organizations cited all the barriers to cloud computing adoption (except lack of knowledge) at higher levels than other organizations.

[09:21] Sage Qvetcher: Noncontrollable Externalities like “unstable electric grid” and “lack of dependable internet connection” were cited by 34% of respondents. Even in some of the wealthiest nations.

[09:21] Sister (sister.abeyante) nods on that one!

[09:21] Sage Qvetcher: We also did some individual interviews and were able to include those in the report.

[09:21] Sage Qvetcher: NGO voice: “When you’re talking about broadband in South Africa, you’re not talking about broadband in somewhere like San Francisco. You’re talking about something that’s probably about a quarter of the speed.” Technology Development Manager, South African NGO

[09:22] Sage Qvetcher: Cost factors and Ease of Setup factors were reported most frequently (47%) as changes that would most motivate organizations to move more of their IT to the cloud.

[09:22] Sage Qvetcher: Interestingly, even though 60% of respondents indicated that lack of knowledge was their greatest barrier, only 37% cited training as something that would help overcome the barriers.

[09:22] Sage Qvetcher: Large organizations cited more motivators overall for moving to the cloud than smaller organizations. In particular, they reported cost-related changes, making integration easier, the reduction of security risks, and providing remote management at higher-than-average rates.

[09:23] Sage Qvetcher: Medium-sized organizations reported making integration easier, adjusting their budget, and providing remote consulting at higher-than-average rates.

[09:23] Sage Qvetcher: With regards to timeframe…

[09:23] Sage Qvetcher: 53% plan to move a “significant portion” of their IT to the cloud within 3 years

[09:24] Sage Qvetcher: However, 36% have no plans to move to the cloud

[09:24] Sage Qvetcher: India, Africa/Middle East, and Mexico report the most accelerated reported timeframes with 74% of respondents in India reporting that they will move to the cloud within 3 years.

[09:24] Sage Qvetcher: Specifically, our data indicates that the more cloud-based apps respondents say are being used at their organization, the more advantages they report to using cloud computing and the faster their reported timeframe is for adopting cloud-based apps in the future.

[09:25] Sage Qvetcher: Medium-sized organizations reported the most aggressive timeframe for moving IT to the cloud, with 22% reporting they plan to move a significant portion of their IT to the cloud within one year.

Medium-sized organizations were defined as organizations with 10 to 44 full-time staff and volunteers.

[09:25] Orange Planer: I’m sure those virtual people will be of great help.

[09:25] Sage Qvetcher: You can also see in the lower left of the slide, that several of the nations from the lowest GDP tier reported the fastest timeframe for adopting cloud technologies. What does that mean for organizations in those countries? How might we need to tailor educational content differently in those countries?

[09:26] Sage Qvetcher: The top three or four application types on this list are not surprising: File storage/Sharing, email, data backup/recovery and office productivity like Google docs and Office365.

[09:26] Sage Qvetcher: These were closely aligned with the types of applications that were reported to be already in use in the cloud.

[09:27] Sage Qvetcher: What have we learned?

We need to offer more precise solutions. Solutions that work in verticals and minimize configuration.

[09:27] Glitteractica Cookie: i’m surprised online collab and communication is not on that list

[09:27] Orange Planer: Things that save money directly will be first on the list.

[09:27] Orange Planer: That is – those things that eat up the most storage.

[09:27] Sage Qvetcher: I am sure they are there, perhaps just lower down.

[09:27] Sage Qvetcher: But yes, it is surprising that they are not higher up.

[09:28] Sage Qvetcher: I am guessing it is because when thinking of adoption

[09:28] Glitteractica Cookie: yeah, maybe we need to add on our findings that we need to promote those apps better, via techsoup

[09:28] Sage Qvetcher: people first think “how can I make what I already do easier?”

[09:28] Orange Planer: No.

[09:28] Orange Planer: They will think “how can I save money.”

[09:28] Sage Qvetcher: They don’t think of collaboration as something they do on computers.

[09:28] Sage Qvetcher: Collaboration is 5th on the list

[09:29] Sister (sister.abeyante): Collaboration using technology as an interface is strongly influenced by the cultural context, too.

[09:29] Rhiannon Chatnoir: we are ahead of the curve in that regards.. I imagine all of us here think of collaborating online and in the cloud

[09:29] Sage Qvetcher: Very true

[09:29] Sage Qvetcher: We still have significant externalities that impact organizations’ ability to take advantage of technology. Externalitites like no reliable power or no reliable internet. We need to be supporting the good work that organizations like Inveneo are doing to help make those externalities a thing of the past.

[09:29] Sage Qvetcher: We also need to support those organizations that can connect but, for whatever reasons, have not yet done so.

[09:30] Ozma Malibu: so interesting!

[09:30] Sage Qvetcher: As you all know from your experiences here…

[09:30] Sage Qvetcher: Training is something everyone needs. And it’s hard. We know we need it. But it’s hard to make “go to a technology training class” the most important thing on the to-do list. We have to figure out how we, as capacity builders, leverage technology and our relationships across a number of sectors to offer answers to questions on demand, create mentorships, office hours for experts who are willing to donate their expertise. We need to think about how we get knowledge to people where and when they need it. And how we do that when getting the answer is urgent.

[09:30] Sister (sister.abeyante): Agree, Sage, or take a lead in creating solutions that can use the available techologies- in Africa, for example, the major growth is use of cell phone based techologies, not in using internet/computers.

[09:30] Sage Qvetcher: Exactly

[09:30] Sage Qvetcher: Answers must be locally relevent

[09:31] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): Can you take questions?

[09:31] Sage Qvetcher: And culturally sensitive

[09:31] Sage Qvetcher: Sure

[09:31] Sage Qvetcher: We need to know more about the technology usage of the organizations we all serve. We all know bits and pieces of the usage. And surveys, like this one and like NTEN’s State of the Cloud, help us. But we can also do a better job of thinking through the strengths and capacities we each bring, fitting those together so that we can get to solutions that work on the ground for the organizations we serve.

[09:31] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): What are the implications of the Cloud and this survey on Corporate Social Responsibility? And corporate use of NGOs in their advertising?

[09:33] Sage Qvetcher: Well, we hope that CSR groups will leverage the data to make better choices for their philanthropy

[09:33] Sage Qvetcher: We are working with the TSG donor partners to use this data to provide resources for NGOs and libraries

[09:33] Sage Qvetcher: Mostly, we are focusing on getting training out there.

[09:34] Sage Qvetcher: Making knowledge available so that NGOs can make informed choices.

[09:34] Sister (sister.abeyante): I imagine the training question is a “cart before the horse” question sometimes too- an org that needs training, but can’t access it because… they do not yet have the training to access it!

[09:34] Sage Qvetcher: We hope that corporations and foundations will use this data to offer the right resources at the right time.

[09:35] Sage Qvetcher: Yes, or they don’t have the internet access to be able to access the training

[09:35] Sister (sister.abeyante) nods

[09:35] Sage Qvetcher: It will take a village to get many of the world’s NGOs up and running in a safe way on cloud technologies

[09:35] Sage Qvetcher: I hope that these survey results might help some of you do just that with regards to the cloud and how NGOs are using it or want to use it.

[09:35] Orange Planer: I think Sister is saying that some organization’s employees aren’t internet savvy enough to understand how to use online training effectively.

[09:36] Sage Qvetcher: Absolutely

[09:36] Sage Qvetcher: In those cases, we need other orgs who are on the ground who first help get NGOs equipped to use computers

[09:36] Gentle Heron agrees with Sister. Sometimes the TOPIC of an online event is the motivator for people to learn the technology. We need to consider that as well.

[09:36] Sister (sister.abeyante): Yes, Orange- or they don’t yet have a clue what is possible becuase they don’t yet have the tech to find out what’s “out there” too.

[09:36] Sage Qvetcher: We need orgs like Inveneo who get orgs connected.

[09:37] Sage Qvetcher: As Allen “Gunner” Gunn from Aspiration has said, “The cloud is not a fad.” We need to help social benefit organizations “Adopt the cloud on their terms, not someone else’s terms.”

[09:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir: yes

[09:37] Glitteractica Cookie: agree

[09:37] Hour Destiny: I’ve suggested for some time a “wizard” to help NGOs find what they need/want. Maybe I’ll actually build it some day.

[09:37] Sage Qvetcher: TechSoup can put resources out there, but we are not the org who can get to the ones who don’t have computers or internet access.

[09:38] Sage Qvetcher: A wizard would be lovely.

[09:38] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any other questions for Sage

[09:38] Sister (sister.abeyante): Great idea, Hour- I guess I am even one or two steps prior to that… an org that doesn’t have a computer connected to the internet or a person who knows how to use it…. but would multiply their impact localy if they did.

[09:38] Sage Qvetcher: Thank you for your time today. Does anyone have any more questions or comments?

[09:38] Sage Qvetcher: Also, think of libraries and other places with public access computers

[09:39] Ozma Malibu: that is wonderful work you have done, Sage.

[09:39] Sage Qvetcher: Those are GREAT resources for the newbies.

[09:39] Sage Qvetcher: Thank you Ozma

[09:39] Sister (sister.abeyante): True- and those do not exist in many countries/ cultures/ comunities.

[09:39] Hour Destiny: You also need to overcome the fear that TechSoup is “too good to be true”.

[09:39] Sage Qvetcher: Well, surprizingly, a lot do

[09:39] Sister (sister.abeyante): Thanks, Ozma- excellent info and wow, what a great research!

[09:39] Sage Qvetcher: Telecenters are in many many places

[09:39] Sage Qvetcher: Check out telecentre.org

[09:40] Sage Qvetcher: They have resources for public access computers

[09:40] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Thanks Anna/Sage for presenting to us today

[09:40] Sage Qvetcher: I encourage you to read the report. It is free

[09:40] Diantha Petrov: Thank you

[09:40] Sage Qvetcher: Thanksto all of you.

[09:40] Diantha Petrov: This is great information

[09:40] Sister (sister.abeyante): Wonderful!

[09:40] emilia Avindar: thanks for the info 🙂

[09:40] Buffy Beale: cheering! great info ty

[09:40] Ozma Malibu: I will read it.

[09:41] Ozma Malibu: great joy that someone is doing work on this level.

[09:41] Glitteractica Cookie: i think we (techsoup) can help folks believe in the truth of techsoup and trustworthiness if we position ourselves more aligned with nonprofits. We are a nonprofit, and not many ppl see this b/c we have a corporate voice more often than not,unfortunately (my opinion)

[09:41] Sister (sister.abeyante): Will you post your entire powerpoint to the NPC blog?

[09:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Transcript of this will also go up on the NPC blog so if you missed any of it, you can catch u pon it there

[09:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: and if Anna is ok with it, we can post her powerpoint?

[09:41] Glitteractica Cookie: nonprofitcommons.org is the URL of that blog, for those of you who don’t know

[09:42] Gentle Heron: Glitter, that’s an interesting observation, and important I believe. How can TechSoup create its image as a “fellow nonprofit”?

[09:42] Glitteractica Cookie: we should have this up on the techsoup slideshare page as well, if we don’t already

[09:42] Sage Qvetcher: Absolutely

[09:42] Sage Qvetcher: Post away

[09:42] Sister (sister.abeyante): Thanks, Sage!

 

— OPEN MIC & ANNOUNCEMENTS —

 

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Lets move on to Open Mic and Announcements

[09:42] Sage Qvetcher: Also, we will be hosting webinars on elements of cloud computing, like security and cost.

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: and thanks again Sage … will put the slides up then as well

[09:42] Sage Qvetcher: Thank you

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Anyone have any announcements for today

[09:43] Gentle Heron: I have one.

[09:43] Rhiannon Chatnoir: go ahead Gentle

[09:43] Gentle Heron: This Sunday, November 4, at 1pm SLT, Virtual Ability sponsors a presentation titled “Interprofessional health care education: Application to health literacy.”

[09:43] Gentle Heron: The presenters will be talking about the recent All Together Better Health (ATBH) conference in Kobe, Japan.

[09:43] Gentle Heron: You might think… health literacy–doesn’t apply to me or my interests.

[09:43] Gentle Heron: But these presenters will be talking about COLLABORATION, and that’s what we’re all about, right?

[09:43] Gentle Heron: Please attend if you can: Sunday Nov 4, 1pm SLT, Sojourner Auditorium, Virtual Ability Island.

[09:43] Gentle Heron: Please let me know if you want the promo notecard which includes all the info plus speaker bios plus LM and SLURL.

[09:43] Gentle Heron: (done)

[09:43] Zinnia Zauber: Cool!

[09:44] Orange Planer: I have one also.

[09:44] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thanks.. anyone else

[09:44] Rhiannon Chatnoir: OK, go Orange

[09:44] Orange Planer: I now have an official excuse to be here.

[09:44] Orange Planer: I am now the network administrator for Homeowner Options for Massachusetts Elders, whose information can be found here: http://www.elderhomeowners.org/

[09:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: congrats 🙂

[09:45] Buffy Beale: yay Orange!

[09:45] Hour Destiny: Gratz!

[09:45] Tori Landau: Congrats Orange °͜°

[09:45] Ozma Malibu: congratulations!

[09:45] Orange Planer: Essentially, we assist elderly homeowners to stay in their homes when they face financial difficulties such as badly-done reverse mortgages, predatory lending, among others.

[09:45] Orange Planer: H.O.M.E. is registered as a non-profit organization in the TechSoup website.

[09:45] Glitteractica Cookie: maybe we could create a story on your org on our local impact map

[09:45] Orange Planer: I’d love to do that.

[09:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: 🙂

[09:46] Glitteractica Cookie: ok, we will connect you with the techsoup staffer who is running that

[09:46] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thanks Orange for letting us know

[09:46] Sage Qvetcher: Yay!

[09:46] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Tori.. you had an announcement?

[09:46] Tori Landau: Ty Rhiannon….

[09:46] Tori Landau: Open University’s rooftop bop is Wed 7th Nov at 1pm slt

[09:47] Tori Landau: with DJ Anjoux Herbit spinning live and taking requests °͜°

[09:47] Tori Landau: chance for everyone to just chill and mix

[09:47] Rhiannon Chatnoir: 🙂

[09:47] Tori Landau: at Deep Think

[09:47] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Thanks Tori

[09:47] Tori Landau: rooftop of communal building at Deep Think West… nearly forgot to say where lol

[09:48] Gentle Heron: Tori, you might way what Open University is….

[09:48] Tori Landau: eek – forgot – not 1pm, 2pm slt

[09:48] Orange Planer: Well, I assume it’s Open, not Closed University….

[09:48] Gentle Heron: might *say

[09:48] Tori Landau: Open University is a university based in the UK that specialises in distance learning

[09:49] Tori Landau: www.open.ac.uk

[09:49] Gentle Heron loves the idea of open education!

[09:49] Rhiannon Chatnoir: nod

[09:49] Tori Landau: has a rl campus at Milton Keynes, some parts of which are reflected in the design of Deep Think

[09:49] Rhiannon Chatnoir: also want to mention that Next week we have Opal Lei as the featured presenter on scripting and getting the code you need for your organization’s virtual presence.

 

To help tailor this presentation for NPC, Opal requests that you fill out a survey before November 8: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/Z2HJDMY.

 

[09:50] Rhiannon Chatnoir: so if you have coding/scripting questions …. please fill out this coming week 🙂

[09:50] Zinnia Zauber: Opal rocks!

[09:50] Buffy Beale: sounds great

[09:51] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any other announcements

[09:51] Rhiannon Chatnoir: if not, lets close this week’s meeting …

[09:51] Rhiannon Chatnoir: And again, here are the many ways to can get involved with the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life:

 

Nonprofit Commons Blog: http://nonprofitcommons.org

 

 – Wiki: http://npsl.wikispaces.com

 – Twitter: http://twitter.com/npsl

 – Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nonprofitcommons

 – Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/TechSoup-Second-Life

 – Google Calendar: http://bit.ly/2tMEYh

 – http://flavors.me/nonprofitcommons

 

About TechSoup the sponsors of the Nonprofit Commons:

 

 – http://www.techsoup.org/stock/howtousetechsoup.asp

 – http://flavors.me/techsoup

 

Thanks everyone and see you next week!

[09:51] Sage Qvetcher: Thank you

[09:51] Buffy Beale: thanks Rhi great job!

[09:51] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Thanks again Sage

[09:52] Zinnia Zauber: Great meeting!

[09:52] Glitteractica Cookie: Thanks Sage!

[09:52] Sarvana Haalan: sorry I was late… checking in… Sally S. Cherry, Baltimore, MD @SarVana/@CHAREproject

[09:52] Tori Landau: Many thanks and hope to be here next week again as missed some weeks

[09:52] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Mentor meeting next I believe

[09:52] Zinnia Zauber: Thank you Sage and Ozma this week!

[09:52] Glitteractica Cookie: yes, thanks all

[09:52] Tori Landau: bye everyone °͜°

[09:52] alebez: thank you!

[09:52] Zinnia Zauber: Mentors Meeting at 10! Please join us!

[09:52] Rhiannon Chatnoir: great and thanks all

Written by: Rhiannon Chatnoir

Anna Jaeger: “Cloud Technology and the NGO Community” for the November 2nd NonProfit Commons Meeting

TechSoup Global recently released the findings from our 2012 Global NGO Cloud Survey. This Friday, November 2nd, Nonprofit Commons is happy to feature Anna Jaeger of TechSoup, who will discuss the primary advantages, barriers and motivations that nonprofits, libraries, and NGOs from around the world reported for moving their IT to the cloud.

 

Bio:

Anna Jaeger, the Director of Microsoft Program and Special Projects, was also the co-founder of the GreenTech Initiative  at TechSoup Global. GreenTech’s mission is to help nonprofits and libraries reduce their environmental impact through the effective use of technology, including cloud technologies. Prior to her work on the Global Cloud Survey, Ms. Jaeger lead TechSoup Global’s IT Engineering Department, which implemented and maintained all enterprise software and websites. 

 

More info on the TechSoup Cloud Survey: http://forums.techsoup.org/cs/community/b/tsblog/archive/2012/09/12/cloud-technology-and-the-ngo-community.aspx

 

Join us in Second Life!

 

Nonprofit Commons Weekly Meeting

Friday, November 2nd, 8:30 AM SLT / PST

Plush Nonprofit Commons Amphitheater

http://bit.ly/NPCinSL

 

AGENDA

  • 8:30 am Introductions
  • 8:40 am TechSoup Announcements
  • 8:45 am Mentors Central
  • 8:55 am Main Speaker: Anna Jaeger
  • 9:30 am Open Mic / Announcements

 

http://nonprofitcommons.org

 

The mission of the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life is to create a community for nonprofits to explore and learn about virtual worlds, foster connections, and discover the many ways in which nonprofits might utilize the unique environment of Second Life to achieve their missions.

Written by: Rhiannon Chatnoir

Transcript of October 26th meeting – featuring John (Pathfinder) Lester

 

[08:33] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Hello and Welcome everyone to this week’s Nonprofit Commons Weekly Meeting!

 

The Nonprofit Commons in Second Life is sponsored by TechSoup Global and is a program of the TechSoup Global Community & Social Media team.

 

[08:33] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Today’s Agenda:

 – 8:30 am Introductions

 – 8:40 am TechSoup Announcements

 – 8:45 am John Lester: “To Invent the Future, we must Build Dreams” 

 – 9:30 am Open Mic / Announcements

 

[08:34] Glitteractica Cookie: Good Morning

[08:34] Rhiannon Chatnoir: 🙂

[08:34] Tank Thibedeau (liltank.thibedeau): Morning

 

[08:34] Rhiannon Chatnoir: First a few links to start off the meeting. 

 

Here are the many ways to can get involved with the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life:

 

 – Nonprofit Commons Blog: http://nonprofitcommons.org

 – Wiki: http://npsl.wikispaces.com

 – Twitter: http://twitter.com/npsl

 – Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nonprofitcommons

 – Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/TechSoup-Second-Life

 – Google Calendar: http://bit.ly/2tMEYh

 – http://flavors.me/nonprofitcommons

 

About TechSoup the sponsors of the Nonprofit Commons:

 

 – http://www.techsoup.org/stock/howtousetechsoup.asp

 – http://flavors.me/techsoup

 

— INTRODUCTIONS —

[08:34] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Hello everyone, let’s start off with Introductions!

[08:34] Zinnia Zauber: Renne Emiko Brock-Richmond, Sequim Humanities and Arts Alliance, Sequim, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. http://www.sequimartsalliance.org http://www.facebook.com/sequimartsalliance @renneemiko

[08:34] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Please state your real name, location, org, and the ways we can find you online.

[08:34] HB Eternal: Harold W Becker, The Love Foundation, Florida, http://www.thelovefoundation.com @lovefoundation

[08:34] Andy Evans: Andy Mallon, First Opinions Panel in SL; Social Research Foundation, New York, NY http://www.socialresearchfoundation.org/

[08:34] Gentle Heron: Virtual Ability, Inc. www.virtualability.org

[08:35] Delenn Daines: Judy Kelly, Biology Dept. Henry Ford community college, dearborn MI

[08:35] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): Jerry Buchko, MA AFC | Counselor, Coach, & Tutor of Personal Finance in Private Practice | http://www.linkedin.com/jerrybuchko | @jerrybuchko

[08:35] Jen (jenelle.levenque): Bruce Hestley, Transgender American Veterans Association, Akron, OH, http://www.tavausa.org, http://www.facebook.com/#!/TAVAUS

[08:35] alebez: Ale Bezdikian, TechSoup, SF, Ca. 94110 @TechSoup, @alebez

[08:35] bulaklak: Michael DeLong, TechSoup Global, www.techsoup.org, @TechSoup @mmdlong, San Francisco, CA US

[08:35] Glitteractica Cookie: Susan Tenby, Online COmmunity and Social Media Director, TechSoup. Logging in from Maui, Hawaii this morning, and it’s 5:30am (ouch!) Aloha! @suzboop @techsoup @npsl

[08:35] Dancers Yao: Kara Bennett, Elder Voices, Inc Los Angeles , CA Health Care and Human Rights

[08:35] CarynTopia Silvercloud: Caryn Heilman, Topia Arts Center in the Berkshires in NW, MA, www.TopiaArts,org, @topiaartscenter

[08:35] Ozma Malibu: Sandy Andrews, Floaters Org (Arizona, California & On the Road), @ozma

[08:35] Tank Thibedeau (liltank.thibedeau): Ricky Davis, San Antonio, TX DJ STEELE, HIV/AIDS Peer support, DJ and now SL clothing designer conguering mesh next

[08:35] Pathfinder Lester: John Lester, Chief Learning Officer, ReactionGrid. @Pathfinder http://about.me/pathfinder Montreal, Canada

[08:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir is Joyce Bettencourt, Community Manager for NonProfit Commons, Boston MA, @RhiannonSL, http://joycebettencourt.com

[08:36] Kate Miranda: Kate Miranda, Music Island at Sea Turtle Island in SL, Arts Administrator in Toronto in RL

[08:36] Desmond Kestrel: Peter Bellin, Aethervirtual.com (for profit, forgive me!), Anaheim California, info@aethervirtual.com

[08:36] Kim Anubis: Kim Rufer-Bachwww.themagicians.us

[08:37] Sarvana Haalan: Sally S. Cherry, MT(ASCP), Baltimore, MD, @CHAREproject, http://sallyscherry.com

[08:37] Violet Meadow (nancy.hilltop): greetings nancy hilltop been rp playing instruments for tips at my linden home and pool and giving it to virtual ability

[08:37] Atalanta Visage: Jen Siegel, National Service Inclusion Project, Boston, MA www.serviceandinclusion.org

[08:37] Rhiannon Chatnoir: If you joined us late, please still introduce yourself!

[08:37] Shailey Garfield: Shailey Minocha, The Open University, UK http://www.linkedin.com/in/shaileyminocha

[08:38] Chimera Cosmos: I’m a fluffy cloud to me. Am I dressed???

[08:38] Rhiannon Chatnoir: you are

[08:38] Chimera Cosmos: good 😉

[08:38] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): Carl Icann – EDU resources @ http://carlicann.wordpress.com and Events @ http://interoccupy.net/ovw17 – I am hosting a Poetic DRUM CIRCLE at BURNING LIFE 9am SLT Sunday @ Burning Man- Black Rock (72,184,2)

[08:38] JoJa Dhara: joja dhara www.jojadhara.com www.metameets.com

[08:38] ChrisG Techsan: Chris Gibson TSTC vushi….www.vushi.org

[08:38] Brena Benoir: Brenda Bryan, Preferred Family Healthcare, Kirksville, Missouri, www.pfh.org @brenabenoir

[08:38] jacmacaire Humby: Jacques Macaire Humanbe http://www.humanbe.com Action Tank and Council on Sustainable Development France and International @Humanbe

[08:38] ChrisG Techsan: www.vushi.org

[08:39] Bevan Whitfield: Bevan Whitfield, Rockcliffe University www.urockcliffe.comSLACTIONS, slactions.org

[08:39] JoJa Dhara: BEVAN!!!

[08:39] JoJa Dhara

[08:40] Chimera Cosmos: Liz Dorland – Washington U in St Louis but on sabbatical in the UK – U Sheffield ATM

[08:40] Bevan Whitfield: hey there 🙂

[08:40] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Thanks everyone..

 

TECHSOUP ANNOUNCEMENTS —

[08:40] Rhiannon Chatnoir: It is time for TechSoup Announcements!

[08:40] Chimera Cosmos: Great to see so many SL friends here 🙂

[08:40] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Bulaklak

[08:40] bulaklak: Hiya, all!

[08:40] bulaklak: Great to be here on this October day.

[08:41] Zinnia Zauber: Wonderful Peeps here!

[08:41] bulaklak: So just a few announcements from TechSoup land.

[08:41] bulaklak: We have a new product in our donation program, for eligible 501c3 nonprofits and public libraries

[08:42] bulaklak: npOffice – that will provide non-profits with a professional assessment to determine whether eligible organizations and libraries could benefit from migrating to Microsoft’s Office 365 cloud-based office and email platform.

[08:42] bulaklak: it includes o A telephone interview resulting in a detailed implementation proposal for migrating to the Office 365 platform

[08:42] bulaklak: more information about that here

[08:43] bulaklak: http://bit.ly/S0z78N

[08:44] bulaklak: I also want to point to a new blog entry on our TSG “enterprise” blog by Alicja Peszkowska

[08:44] bulaklak: TechCamp is a program under Secretary Clinton’s Civil Society 2.0 Initiative to galvanize the technology community to assist civil society organizations. With the support of the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, Fundacja TechSoup organized TechCamp Sarajevo in close collaboration with the Office of eDiplomacy of the U.S. State Department

[08:44] bulaklak: Alicja, who works in our Warsaw office, attended the camp and wrote some cool stuff about her experiences

[08:44] bulaklak: Please read more of those here

[08:45] bulaklak: http://bit.ly/Uzhy5i

[08:45] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): Very cool 🙂

[08:45] Pathfinder Lester: nice

[08:45] bulaklak: Alicja is very cool =)

[08:45] Glitteractica Cookie: yes!

[08:45] bulaklak: So that’s all I’ve got for today!

[08:45] bulaklak: Have a great meeting and a great weekend!

[08:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Thanks bulaklak

 

— FEATURED PRESENTATION, JOHN LESTER: “TO INVENT THE FUTURE, WE MUST BUILD DREAMS”  — 

[08:46] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Time for today’s featured presenter….

[08:46] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Welcome John (Pathfinder) Lester, who will speak to us today on the key features of next generation virtual worlds and best practices on how to build truly engaging simulations within them. He will also give an overview of ReactionGrid’s “Jibe” platform

[08:46] Rhiannon Chatnoir: John’s focus is on 3D Simulations and Virtual Worlds for Learning. His background is in neuroscience research and medical education, and he previously worked at Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital and Linden Lab. John is currently the Chief Learning Officer at ReactionGrid Inc. (http://reactiongrid.com), helping clients develop new systems for immersive learning using next-generation virtual world platforms that integrate with the web and mobile devices. For more information about John please see http://about.me/pathfinder

[08:46] Zinnia Zauber: Rah Pathfinder!

[08:46] Rhiannon Chatnoir: take it away when your ready Pathfinder 🙂

[08:47] Pathfinder Lester: Thank you! I’m very excited to be able to chat with everyone today.

[08:47] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko) claps. 🙂

[08:47] Pathfinder Lester: I’ll be going through some slides that you can see on the pictureboard behind me.

[08:47] Sarvana Haalan: Wooot… Pathfinder!!!

[08:47] Pathfinder Lester: For about 20 min.

[08:47] Pathfinder Lester: Then we can have Q and A.

[08:47] Gentle Heron: Welcome Pathfinder.

[08:47] Pathfinder Lester: So, here we go

[08:47] Pathfinder Lester: next

[08:48] Pathfinder Lester: whoops

[08:48] Pathfinder Lester: there was a disturbance in the force

[08:48] Gentle Heron chuckles

[08:48] Pathfinder Lester: but i am back

[08:48] Delenn Daines: LOL

[08:48] Chimera Cosmos: May the Force be with you!

[08:48] Pathfinder Lester: Anyway, I find it interesting how many people have 3d-type images as their desktop

[08:48] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): Yes, I’d rather be “out there” in that picture…. 😉

[08:48] Pathfinder Lester: next

[08:48] Pathfinder Lester: I think it’s because we want this.

[08:49] Pathfinder Lester: We always crave 3d environments.

[08:49] Pathfinder Lester: And no, that’s not my RL desk.

[08:49] Pathfinder Lester: I live in Montreal. We do not have palm trees. 😉

[08:49] Pathfinder Lester: next

[08:49] Kate Miranda: Or “Metaphors be with you” as we writers say.

[08:49] Pathfinder Lester: But when we simulate things in software, we’re always recreating things like this…

[08:50] Pathfinder Lester: folders….files….2d desktops

[08:50] Pathfinder Lester: we are constantly recreating what already exists

[08:50] Pathfinder Lester: next

[08:50] Pathfinder Lester: in 3d

[08:50] Sarvana Haalan: smiles

[08:50] Pathfinder Lester: we dream of navigating places like this

[08:50] Pathfinder Lester: So I’m going to talk a little bit about dreams today…

[08:50] Pathfinder Lester: as well as what I think are key best practices and feature for “next generation” virtual worlds.

[08:51] Pathfinder Lester: next

[08:51] Pathfinder Lester: I see 3 key features for virtual worlds to really break out as a global phenomenon with many broad applications.

[08:51] Pathfinder Lester: I’ll go thru each of them

[08:51] Pathfinder Lester: next

[08:52] Pathfinder Lester: I think we can all agree that the Web has become as ubiquitous as electricty.

[08:52] Pathfinder Lester: It is something we simply expect to be available, anywhere we go, just like electricity.

[08:53] Pathfinder Lester: So I believe it follows that any next generation virtual world platform *must* be able to exist as part of the Web.

[08:53] Pathfinder Lester: embedded in pages

[08:53] Pathfinder Lester: and also accessible on mobile devices.

[08:53] Pathfinder Lester: this image is an example of Rutgers embedding a virtual office in their website

[08:53] Pathfinder Lester: they hold office hours there. 🙂

[08:53] Pathfinder Lester: next

[08:53] Pathfinder Lester: Second, I think next generation virtual world platforms must not only live *on* the web…

[08:54] Glitteractica Cookie: i agree

[08:54] Pathfinder Lester: but that they must also *integrate* with the web

[08:54] Pathfinder Lester: By that I mean they need to integrate with web-based applications and databases.

[08:54] Sarvana Haalan: indeed

[08:54] Hour Destiny: http://awesomium.com/

[08:54] Pathfinder Lester: This pic is an example of how, when you walk up to a model of HIV in a virtual world…

[08:55] Pathfinder Lester: there’s a script that goes to wikipedia and loads their page on HIV right on the same screen.

[08:55] Pathfinder Lester: I think the key is to leverage all the existing web-based content and web-based apps….

[08:55] Pathfinder Lester: That way your virtual world application can be part of a larger ecosystem.

[08:55] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko) nods.

[08:55] Pathfinder Lester: next

[08:55] Gentle Heron: since it is anyway

[08:55] Shailey Garfield: sure, I agree

[08:55] Pathfinder Lester: And lastly

[08:55] Pathfinder Lester: but definitely not least-ly

[08:56] Sarvana Haalan: welcome to my world… smile

[08:56] Pathfinder Lester: Next generation virtual worlds *must* focus on deep engagement and really capturing people’s imaginations.

[08:56] Pathfinder Lester: At the end of the day

[08:56] Pathfinder Lester: it’s all about content.

[08:56] Pathfinder Lester: Same with any medium of expression.

[08:56] Pathfinder Lester: This montage is all from SL.

[08:57] Pathfinder Lester: Over the years I’ve seen a number of places in SL that I think really capture this “deep engagement” idea.

[08:57] Grizzla (grizzla.pixelmaid): Preach it, brother!

[08:57] Shailey Garfield: Content and how different media (audio, video, text) are combined to deliver it.

[08:57] Pathfinder Lester: Like a virtual recreation of ancient egyptian temples, where you can explore living history.

[08:57] Sarvana Haalan: amen

[08:57] Pathfinder Lester: Or a giant human larynx that you can fly through to understand the complex anatomical structure.

[08:57] Pathfinder Lester: I know you’ve all found places like this in SL and probably other virtual world platforms.

[08:58] Shailey Garfield: yes, or the cell in Genome Island.

[08:58] Pathfinder Lester: It kind if punches you in the gut when you see it. You feel a visceral engagement and amazement.

[08:58] Pathfinder Lester: Shailey, yes!

[08:58] Pathfinder Lester: great example there too.

[08:58] Pathfinder Lester: next

[08:58] Pathfinder Lester: So.

[08:58] Pathfinder Lester: What we end up creating in virtual worlds (or any new medium, to be honest)….

[08:58] Pathfinder Lester: is most of the time a recreation of the familiar.

[08:58] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): lol

[08:58] Pathfinder Lester: Safe.

[08:58] Kate Miranda: It’s not all visual though. It is the communities that keep us here.

[08:58] Pathfinder Lester: Recognizable.

[08:59] Pathfinder Lester: This is ok.

[08:59] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): You can just feel the joy there…. 😉

[08:59] Pathfinder Lester: Because familiar makes us feel safe. And feeling safe is not a bad thing, fundamentally.

[08:59] Pathfinder Lester: But…

[08:59] Pathfinder Lester: The deepest engagement does not happen when we feel completely safe.

[08:59] Pathfinder Lester: It happens when we see something bizarre and when we are *challenged* by our environmetn.

[09:00] Pathfinder Lester: That’s just how we our brains are wired.

[09:00] Shailey Garfield: and if we can see value in it

[09:00] Pathfinder Lester: Our brains kick into high gear when we’re challenged.

[09:00] Pathfinder Lester: Shaily, yes

[09:00] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:00] Chimera Cosmos: challenged within our capabilities, at least 🙂

[09:00] Pathfinder Lester: So, with virtual worlds, I think there *is* value in recreating *some* of the familiar.

[09:00] Glitteractica Cookie: agree, I’ve been looking for those sims (like human heart you could walk through or schizophrenia simulator) for years now. Those told the SL story best.

[09:01] Gentle Heron: actually Chimera, I think the challenge has to be a tiny bit stretching what we think our capabilities are.

[09:01] Pathfinder Lester: Things like chairs and desks are cultural touchstones.

[09:01] Pathfinder Lester: They ground us.

[09:01] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:01] Chimera Cosmos: yes, a bit stretching, but not overwhelming

[09:01] Chimera Cosmos: and with support 🙂

[09:01] Pathfinder Lester: But I believe the trick is in walking the razor’s edge…

[09:01] Pathfinder Lester: balancing enough *familiar* with enough *truly fascinating*.

[09:01] Pathfinder Lester: This pic is from an employee training world we built for Microsoft.

[09:02] Pathfinder Lester: They loved this part of it where employees could run around a fantasy-type space and explore.

[09:02] Pathfinder Lester: yet, at the same time, they were answering very standardized questionnaires.

[09:02] Sarvana Haalan: I think to have been a bit conservative with my designing 🙁

[09:02] Pathfinder Lester: a balance between familar and fantastical

[09:02] Pathfinder Lester: It’s very tough to find that balance. But I think it’s well worth it.

[09:02] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:03] Pathfinder Lester: And I think the BEST place to look for inspiration for finding that balance is in human dreams.

[09:03] Pathfinder Lester: Our dreams are often a perfect mix of familiar/mundane and fantastical.

[09:03] Pathfinder Lester: We’ve all had dreams where we’re doing something normal, then something crazy happens.

[09:03] Pathfinder Lester: And those are always the most engaging types of dreams, in my opinioin.

[09:04] Pathfinder Lester: Like this pic on the slide

[09:04] Pathfinder Lester: “I was looking at the sphinx, then suddely the jet car from buckaroo banzai drove up to me…”

[09:04] Pathfinder Lester: classic mix of dream reality/surreality

[09:04] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): (hmmm… connecting design of sim spaces with Jung… 🙂

[09:04] Pathfinder Lester: So I think as designers…

[09:05] Pathfinder Lester: as people thinking about how to deeply engage visitors to virtual worlds….

[09:05] Pathfinder Lester: I believe dreams are a good template to explore. 🙂

[09:05] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:05] Pathfinder Lester: so build dreams

[09:05] Pathfinder Lester: places that are a mix of familiar and fantastical…

[09:05] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:05] Pathfinder Lester: And be sure to explore the full emotional spectrum of dreams…

[09:06] Pathfinder Lester: They include moments of peace and contemplation

[09:06] Pathfinder Lester: like this pic of me in my forest retreat in my Jibe demo world. 😉

[09:06] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:06] Pathfinder Lester: and then moments of action/chaos

[09:06] Pathfinder Lester: this is a pic of a meteor shower also in my Jibe demo world

[09:06] Pathfinder Lester: Virtual environments are as malleable as dreams.

[09:07] Pathfinder Lester: So I think it’s important to explore the full range of emotional states in them.

[09:07] Pathfinder Lester: again

[09:07] Pathfinder Lester: it’s about finding balance

[09:07] Pathfinder Lester: between everything.

[09:07] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:07] Pathfinder Lester: So a bit about what I’ve been doing at ReactionGrid.

[09:07] Shailey Garfield: I think that meaning is important for engagement

[09:07] Pathfinder Lester: We have been working to do 2 things

[09:08] Pathfinder Lester: 1) we build and provide a general purpose virtual world platform called “Jibe”

[09:08] Pathfinder Lester: it has many of the features I think are key to next generation virtual worlds

[09:08] Pathfinder Lester: and 2) we actually build worlds and consult to help others build experiences,

[09:08] Pathfinder Lester: focused mainly on immersive learning and simulations.

[09:09] Pathfinder Lester: So we make tools and then use our tools too.

[09:09] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:09] Pathfinder Lester: back

[09:09] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:09] Pathfinder Lester: that’s a pic of what Jibe is

[09:09] Pathfinder Lester: lol

[09:09] Pathfinder Lester: don’t worry

[09:09] Pathfinder Lester: it’s complex. but that’s the point.

[09:09] Hour Destiny: Ah, SmartFox Server. I have that. Also works for Unity3d.

[09:10] Pathfinder Lester: it’s not monolithic. it’s an ecosystem of tools.

[09:10] Delenn Daines: will it be on the test?

[09:10] Pathfinder Lester: some of them are commercial “best of breed” tech we’ve chosen. like unity3d and smartfox

[09:10] Pathfinder Lester: and other parts are written from scratch by us

[09:10] Pathfinder Lester: the point is…it’s modular

[09:10] Hour Destiny: And you’re in a different market than HeroEngine.

[09:10] Pathfinder Lester: which means, over time, as we look at using WebGL and HTML5, we can grow beyond Unity3d.

[09:11] Ellie Brewster doesn’t see voice

[09:11] Pathfinder Lester: I think any next generation virtual world needs to be like that. Flexible enough to swap out parts so it can evolve to take advantage of new tech.

[09:11] Pathfinder Lester: voice is in there

[09:11] Pathfinder Lester: we use Vivox

[09:11] Pathfinder Lester: but are also exploring teamspeak as a voice platform too

[09:11] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko) nods.

[09:11] Pathfinder Lester: integrating it all is hard

[09:11] Pathfinder Lester: it’s easier to build monolithic code

[09:12] Hour Destiny: Tried looking at Awesomium?

[09:12] Pathfinder Lester: but in the long run, modular system are more future-proof. they can evolve more easily.

[09:12] Pathfinder Lester: Hour, I think our CTO has looked at that. I haven’t tho.

[09:12] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:12] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): But it’s harder to evolve if you fall behind the tech curve …. 🙂

[09:12] Pathfinder Lester: This slide is just a pic of my Jibe demo world, which you can explore whenever you like.

[09:12] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:12] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko) nods.

[09:13] Tank Thibedeau (liltank.thibedeau): < is scared of giant chickens

[09:13] Pathfinder Lester: and this pic shows examples of you could embed something like a pre-existing web-based whiteboard with Jibe

[09:13] Pathfinder Lester: or a google slideshow

[09:13] Pathfinder Lester: the point is, scripts in the virtual world can communicate with scripts running on the webpage

[09:13] Pathfinder Lester: bidirectionally

[09:13] Ellie Brewster: what about seeing things together, at the same time?

[09:14] Pathfinder Lester: that’s truly being not just *on* the web, but being *part* of the web

[09:14] Pathfinder Lester: Ellie, what do you mean exactly?

[09:14] Pathfinder Lester: You mean synchronizing events between avatars?

[09:14] Ellie Brewster: The dragon, it spits fire, but I see it differently than someone else in the same space.

[09:14] Ellie Brewster: Your dragon, I mean.

[09:14] Pathfinder Lester: Gotcha. Yes, you have the option to make an event either “local” or “networked”

[09:14] Ellie Brewster: We don’t see it at the same time

[09:15] Ellie Brewster: Ah! thank you

[09:15] Pathfinder Lester: For many things in my demo world I just left things “local”

[09:15] Pathfinder Lester: that’s actually a very useful feature. for example….

[09:15] Pathfinder Lester: In one project we worked on, we had NPCs that everyone would see behaving and moving around like everyone else

[09:15] Pathfinder Lester: (a networked event)

[09:15] Pathfinder Lester: But, we also wanted each person to have their own personal guide helping them around the world.

[09:16] Pathfinder Lester: We made each personal guide a “local” event. Only each person saw and heard their own personal guide.

[09:16] Pathfinder Lester: So there’s the option of two realities. That’s actually common in things like MMOs.

[09:16] Pathfinder Lester: Some things, everyone sees at the same time and the same way.

[09:16] Hour Destiny: Propbuckets.

[09:16] Pathfinder Lester: Some things, each person sees only their unique “instance” of reality.

[09:17] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:17] Pathfinder Lester: So, moving on to broader ideas

[09:17] Pathfinder Lester: I think the most important thing to watch with virtual worlds to get an idea of next generation applications is the artists.

[09:18] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko) nods.

[09:18] Pathfinder Lester: Artists are ALWAYS the ones who figure out the true range of new media tools.

[09:18] Pathfinder Lester: There are many artists in SL who do this.

[09:18] Pathfinder Lester: pushing boundaries

[09:18] Pathfinder Lester: so, whatever new virtual world platform you are exploring….

[09:18] Pathfinder Lester: I would encourage you to find the artists. 🙂

[09:19] Pathfinder Lester: I know there are some really amazing things happening with Cloud Party and artists

[09:19] Pathfinder Lester: and also on Opensim

[09:19] Pathfinder Lester: it’s worth keeping an eye on them

[09:19] Pathfinder Lester: this slide is a pic of some immersive art that has been created using Jibe. you can visit it too

[09:19] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:19] Pathfinder Lester: This is my last slide. 🙂

[09:20] Pathfinder Lester: I think the real future of virtual worlds in general will lie at the intersection of virtual spaces and physical places.

[09:20] Pathfinder Lester: the intersection of Augmented Reality and Virtual worlds

[09:21] Pathfinder Lester: There’s a lot happening right now with Augmented Reality, but I think there’s a single serious roadblock.

[09:21] Kate Miranda: Artists and the adult industry have been pioneers here, just as they were on the internet at large 🙂

[09:21] JoJa Dhara agree

[09:21] Pathfinder Lester: I think the roadblock is the fact that our mobile device are tiny screens we have to pull out of our pockets to see.

[09:21] Grizzla (grizzla.pixelmaid): like using Lumiya

[09:21] Pathfinder Lester: For things to really take off, I think we need something like Google’s Glass hardware.

[09:21] Pathfinder Lester: Something we wear.

[09:22] Pathfinder Lester: Something that gives us a seamless malleable view of the world.

[09:22] Pathfinder Lester: It’s interesting tho….

[09:22] Pathfinder Lester: The first demo videos of Google Glasses are really not innovative at all…

[09:22] Pathfinder Lester: they are just applications that already exist on your phone…now stuck on your face

[09:22] Pathfinder Lester: maps, reviews, chat, pics, etc.

[09:22] Pathfinder Lester: But that’s common with any new tech

[09:23] Tank Thibedeau (liltank.thibedeau): or maybe integrating the phone Applause!! with a tablet app and/or game system apps

[09:23] Tank Thibedeau (liltank.thibedeau): APPLAUSE!!!

[09:23] Chimera Cosmos swats things away from face…

[09:23] Pathfinder Lester: we just use it like old tech at first. over time, new applications arise

[09:23] Pathfinder Lester: For example, imagine looking at a wall in the physical world

[09:23] Pathfinder Lester: and seeing it change. fade away. and you see a new room where the wall used to be. a fully virtual room.

[09:24] Pathfinder Lester: you can talk to the avatars/people sitting in that room just as easily as if they were physically there…

[09:24] Hour Destiny: I was able to use a WiiMote with a jailbroken iPhone to play a GameBoy game. 🙂

[09:24] Pathfinder Lester: I think the future lies in creating such malleable places. Blends of physical and simulation.

[09:24] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): Question: What are your thoughts about where IO devices fit relative to future worlds & “must have”, e.g. BCIs and natural motion capture vs. mouse+keyboard?

[09:24] Frans Charming: Or have real people be replaced by their avatar.

[09:24] Pathfinder Lester: And all of the work everyone here has done with virtual worlds will be critical in building that broader future of malleable reality, in my opinoion. 🙂

[09:24] Pathfinder Lester: next

[09:24] Pathfinder Lester: That’s it.

[09:25] Frans Charming applauds

[09:25] Pathfinder Lester: My slides are also on slideshare at http://slidesha.re/PvQkeR

[09:25] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko) applauds.

[09:25] Pathfinder Lester: and you can grab a copy of the board behind me if you wish.

[09:25] Pathfinder Lester: questions

[09:25] Gentle Heron: What a great vision, Pathfinder. Thank you for sharing.

[09:25] Pathfinder Lester: >

[09:25] Pathfinder Lester: ?

[09:25] Chimera Cosmos: Thanks Path – was going to ask about slideshare!

[09:25] Zinnia Zauber: Yay! Thank you!

[09:25] Pathfinder Lester: I saw Jerry’s question

[09:25] Pathfinder Lester: IO devices

[09:26] Xon Emoto: Thank you John. Great talk!

[09:26] Octagon for Creative Exploration: Creative Coaching Oct.29 at 3pm SL!

[09:26] Ozma Malibu: Thanks for catching us up, and reporting from your vision of the future.

[09:26] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Any questions for Pathfinder

[09:26] Ellie Brewster: Really encouraging, John

[09:26] Pathfinder Lester: I think the real future of IO devices will be machines learning how to interpret our desires rather than us learning how to enter information into machines.

[09:26] Second Life: You decline ‘Creative Coaching, Oct. 2012’  ( Prism Lila (51,231,24) ) from Octagon for Creative Exploration.

[09:26] Ozma Malibu: (What about nonverbal communication? With the virtual room.)

[09:26] jacmacaire Humby: Bravo!!

[09:26] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): Can you elaborate, John?

[09:26] Xon Emoto: John, are you experiencing an upswing in adoption of the avatar interface?

[09:26] Pathfinder Lester: So for example….imagine if your google glasses could sense from your body language/blood pressure/whatever that you are anxious becuase you are lost.

[09:27] Pathfinder Lester: it could then toss up a map before you have to ask for it.

[09:27] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): Hmmmm 😀

[09:27] Pathfinder Lester: that’s kind of the ultimate IO in my opinion. understanding intent and desire without having to be explicit about it.

[09:27] Ozma Malibu: machines reading our minds then.

[09:27] Pathfinder Lester: ozma, kinda yes!

[09:27] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): Well machines interpreting our output… 😉

[09:27] Pathfinder Lester: Jerry, yes

[09:27] Gentle Heron: Pathfinder, kind of like a virtual wife then, anticipating and fulfilling?

[09:28] Pathfinder Lester: that’s more of what I mean

[09:28] Ozma Malibu: BFF

[09:28] Xon Emoto: Ok, once we have that, our avatars will just come along naturally:)

[09:28] Pathfinder Lester: our body language is so complex

[09:28] Pathfinder Lester: we send so much data nonverbally

[09:28] Glitteractica Cookie: i’m interested to know if any nonprofits are using any of the tech you spoke about yet. (google glasses, new VW tech that is in reaction grid)

[09:28] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): @Xon, I think so… would make the tech more transparent to the user.

[09:28] Pathfinder Lester: Google Glasses are not yet availble to the public

[09:28] Pathfinder Lester: but they will be soon

[09:28] Frans Charming: For people interested in a future with Google glasses type devices and it replacing what you see in Real Life, I will recommend the book Rainbows End by Vernor Vinge. It’s a amazing novel.

[09:28] Sarvana Haalan: cool

[09:29] Pathfinder Lester: Frans, yes. That’s a great book

[09:29] Rhiannon Chatnoir: no… they werent even available when I was at Singularity University this summer to play with

[09:29] Rhiannon Chatnoir: they are still under wraps for the most part

[09:29] Xon Emoto: ty Frans

[09:29] Pathfinder Lester: I think once Google Glass-type devices are out there, we’ll see a real revolution happen. A blended reality where many of our dreams of virtual worlds will be able to take root and grow.

[09:30] Rhiannon Chatnoir has hugged Verner Vinge

[09:30] Pathfinder Lester: It will just take probably about 10 years, methinks.

[09:30] Frans Charming: :O

[09:30] Pathfinder Lester: But all the skills you all here have learned…

[09:30] Rhiannon Chatnoir: at Singularity.. he spoke to us

[09:30] Desmond Kestrel: suspects less than 10 years

[09:30] Hour Destiny: I suspect we’ll see nonprofits using VWs before VR, mostly because with VWs they can interact with other organizations.

[09:30] Pathfinder Lester: in how to create virtual spaces and explore them….

[09:30] Ozma Malibu: I guess I will have to read Rainbow’s End again. It made me cry.

[09:30] Pathfinder Lester: those skills will be critical when exploring how to innovate in the future.

[09:30] Gentle Heron: Very very true, Hour!

[09:31] Pathfinder Lester: any other questions?

[09:31] Chimera Cosmos: I think that virtual spaces that are tied to the outside world have their own limitations. I favor a future with options for multiple kinds of immersion. 🙂

[09:31] Pathfinder Lester: Chimera, I agree.

[09:31] Chimera Cosmos: For different purposes and situations

[09:31] Chimera Cosmos: and people

[09:31] Pathfinder Lester: Imagine being able to switch your glasses into “fully simulated” mode

[09:32] Delenn Daines: Let’s take a virtual field trip to your jibe world John

[09:32] Pathfinder Lester: Delenn, I hold regular office hours in it

[09:32] Ellie Brewster: me/imagines herself falling down the stairs wearing google glasses

[09:32] Delenn Daines: cool

[09:32] Pathfinder Lester: lemme find the page and schedule…

[09:32] Rhiannon Chatnoir: maybe a followup field trip would be nice.. when is your next office hours

[09:32] Rhiannon Chatnoir: k

[09:32] Chimera Cosmos: so right Ellie! I can do that just checking email on my phone LOL

[09:32] Pathfinder Lester: http://becunningandfulloftricks.com/office-hours-and-tutorials/

[09:32] Delenn Daines: thanks

[09:32] Gentle Heron: Deleen, we did that at a recent business conference set up by AgileBill Firehawk. I suspect that session is still online at Metaverse TV.

[09:33] Pathfinder Lester: I have an office hour today at noon PDT

[09:33] Pathfinder Lester: so if you visit at that time, I’ll be there 🙂

[09:33] Rhiannon Chatnoir: great

[09:33] Rhiannon Chatnoir: 🙂

[09:33] Pathfinder Lester: i think my time is up, so I’ll sit back down now

[09:33] Pathfinder Lester: ty for inviting me to speak today

[09:33] Pathfinder Lester: it’s great to see many familiar faces too 🙂

[09:33] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thank you Pathfinder !

[09:33] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): Great presi, John! Thank you! 😀

[09:33] Grizzla (grizzla.pixelmaid): Thanks for this! Really good info.

[09:34] Frans Charming applauds

[09:34] Pathfinder Lester: my pleasure

[09:34] JoJa Dhara: Thank you for this inspiring speech 😉

[09:34] Glitteractica Cookie: Great presentation as usual, Pathfinder

[09:34] Gentle Heron: Thank you Pathfinder. Fascinating as always.

[09:34] Ellie Brewster: Really helpful, Path, thanks

[09:34] Shailey Garfield: Thanks, Pathfinder; fascinating and inspiring, as always!

[09:34] Xon Emoto: TY John, so encouraging 🙂

[09:34] Delenn Daines: thanks path, very interesting lecture

 

— OPEN MIC/ANNOUNCEMENTS —

[09:34] Rhiannon Chatnoir: It’s time for Open Mic!

[09:34] Frans Charming: Hi, I showed a ‘Twitter Garden’ last week, that displayed tweets in floating text and I promised to share the code. You can find the code and instructions here. https://github.com/VesuviusGroup/Twitter-Garden-SL

[09:34] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Does anyone have any announcements to make

[09:34] Jerry Buchko (jerrybuchko): Thanks, Frans 🙂

[09:34] Rhiannon Chatnoir: ok Frans – thanks

[09:35] JoJa Dhara: Cool Frans thk

[09:35] Rhiannon Chatnoir: anyone else?

[09:35] Zinnia Zauber: I do

[09:35] Rhiannon Chatnoir: ok Zinnia

[09:35] Gentle Heron: I do also.

[09:35] Zinnia Zauber: It is Ozma’s Rez Day!!!!

[09:36] Zinnia Zauber: Ozma is amazing and we celebrate her today!

[09:36] Gentle Heron: Thank you for sharing that code, Frans. You are most kind.

[09:36] Frans Charming: Happy rezziversary! 😀

[09:36] Gentle Heron: Hey Congrats Ozma!

[09:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: aww… happy Rez Day Ozma

[09:36] Brena Benoir: Woohoo Ozma! Happy Rez Day!

[09:36] Morgaine (morgaine.borgin): Thank you all and congrats Ozma

[09:36] CarynTopia Silvercloud: Thanks!

[09:36] Brena Benoir raises hand for open mic

[09:36] Ozma Malibu: Why thank you! I am having a perfect day, thus far.

[09:36] Bevan Whitfield: Happy Rez Day Ozma !

[09:36] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any other announcements

[09:37] Bevan Whitfield: Rockcliffe University is doing its 6th Open House tomorrow from AM – PM

[09:37] Brena Benoir: Our Halloween Party will be at Wharf Ratz on Tuesday October 30 from 7 to 9pm with DJ lilTank

[09:37] Gentle Heron smiles at Bevan.

[09:38] Rhiannon Chatnoir: as a reminder we hold weekly meetings, same day/time.. so join the TechSoup.org group if you want announcements and IM me if you are interested in speaking

[09:38] Chimera Cosmos: Oh! My Rez Day is Nov. 1. Almost forgot!

[09:38] Chimera Cosmos: Last year I DID forget.

[09:38] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): Happy Rez Day!

[09:38] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any links Bevan for the ROckliffe U open house?

[09:38] Frans Charming: Happy early Rez day!

[09:38] Kim Anubis: happy rezday 🙂

[09:38] Ozma Malibu: Yay us Fall babies, Chimera. 🙂 Happy rezday.

[09:38] Zinnia Zauber: Happy Rez Day Chimera!

[09:39] Chimera Cosmos: My Rez Day is the same day and year as Eshi Otawara. Now if only I had her artistic talent….hehe

[09:39] Chimera Cosmos: Well, it isn’t for a few days yet.

[09:39] Violet Meadow (nancy.hilltop): i’m playing violin for tips at my linden home from 6-8am sunday money goes to virtual ability

[09:39] Ozma Malibu: Hah well Chimera you certainly have talent, just use it in a different and also important direction.

[09:39] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Gentle… you have an announcement

[09:39] Chimera Cosmos: Thanks Ozma 🙂

[09:40] Chimera Cosmos: Back atcha

[09:40] Gentle Heron: ***

If anyone wants to see how a virtual world can be used for medical education, I invite you to participate in research by Indiana University.

[09:40] Gentle Heron: Medical and nursing students are studying a curriculum about communication and teamwork.

[09:40] Gentle Heron: The researchers are asking for volunteers to become “virtual patients” to observe and critique the students.

[09:40] Gentle Heron: If interested, please IM me and I’ll send you a couple of notecards, one describing the study, the other the sign up demographic notecard to return to Kali Pizzaro.

[09:40] Gentle Heron: (that’s all)

[09:40] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thanks

[09:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any others?

[09:41] Chimera Cosmos: Oh! I heard from Kali Pizzaro that you were working with the IU folks Gentle. Cool!. Cool!

[09:41] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): me!

[09:41] Gentle Heron: Yup Chimera! It’s so exciting.

[09:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: ok, Carl

[09:41] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): I host a very fun event every Sunday… 

and this week we are at Burning Life … the SL version of Burning Man… 

 

I am hosting a Poetic DRUM CIRCLE at BURNING LIFE 9am SLT Sunday @ Burning Man- Black Rock (72,184,2)

 

I’d love to do a drum circle here at NonProfit Commons too!

[09:41] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): Meet some “Burners” on Sunday! It will be a hoot!

[09:41] Rhiannon Chatnoir: thanks

[09:42] Chimera Cosmos: Oh right…Burn2 – I have to get back over there before it’s all over.

[09:42] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): ends on Sunday! fyi

[09:42] Frans Charming: oh wow. I wouldn’t have even known,

[09:42] Rhiannon Chatnoir: good to know

[09:43] Chimera Cosmos: Yeah, and we are traveling all day Sunday. So that leaves today and tomorrow. Yikes!

[09:43] Chimera Cosmos: When are the Temple burns? Sunday?

[09:43] Rhiannon Chatnoir: any more announcements before we wrap things up for this week

[09:44] Ozma Malibu: Mentor(ing) meeting?

[09:44] Carl Solutionary (carlicann): Main Website for Burning Life http://www.burn2.org/

[09:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: Zinnia.. mentoring meeting following this?

[09:45] Glitteractica Cookie: Thanks all for a wonderful mtg

[09:45] Zinnia Zauber: yes

[09:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: And again, here are the many ways to can get involved with the Nonprofit Commons in Second Life:

 

Nonprofit Commons Blog: http://nonprofitcommons.org

 

 – Wiki: http://npsl.wikispaces.com

 – Twitter: http://twitter.com/npsl

 – Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nonprofitcommons

 – Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/TechSoup-Second-Life

 – Google Calendar: http://bit.ly/2tMEYh

 – http://flavors.me/nonprofitcommons

 

About TechSoup the sponsors of the Nonprofit Commons:

 

 – http://www.techsoup.org/stock/howtousetechsoup.asp

 – http://flavors.me/techsoup

 

 

Thanks everyone and see you next week!

[09:45] Zinnia Zauber: Mentors!

[09:45] alebez: Thank you all!

[09:45] Zinnia Zauber: Let’s have a 5 minute break

[09:45] Rhiannon Chatnoir: and again.. thanks Pathfinder for speaking

[09:45] Frans Charming applauds

[09:46] JoJa Dhara: thank you..have a grand weekend!

[09:46] Zinnia Zauber: Everyone is invited to Mentors Meeting!

[09:46] Pathfinder Lester: My pleasure Rhiannon. TY for inviting me.

[09:46] Rhiannon Chatnoir: next week we will have Anna Jaeger speaking on Cloud services and the survey TechSoup did

Written by: Rhiannon Chatnoir