
Last night 20-30 people gathered at
Citizen Agency's Citizen Space (Thanks
Tara Hunt and
Chris Messina!) to hear
Larry Halff talk about
Ma.gnolia, and
Nica Lorber report back from
RootsCampSF.
The evening started out with Larry showing us a demo of how to create a group in Ma.gnolia by his creating a
NetSquared group. He described the difference between
del.icio.us and Ma.gnolia as that Ma.gnolia's primary goal is to bring information to a group and to create community. (You can read more about,
Why is Ma.gnolia Different on their site).
In addition to the
NetSquared group, other social changey Ma.gnolia groups you might want to check out are:
Nonprofit Technology (nptech),
Coworking Group,
Green Development Environmental Nonprofits and Charities, and
Philanthropy You can subscribe to any of the groups' bookmarks or discussions via RSS.
Larry also showed us a number of ways the bookmarks can be shared, such as publishing links into a sidebar of a blog. Tara Hunt pointed everyone to an organization they worked with,
The Inspiration Festival, whose Ma.gnolia links were published on their site and reformatted to match the site's branding.
While Nica set up her laptop to talk about RootsCampSF, Chris gave us a quick history of
BarCamp, which
RootsCamp is based on. You can read some of the story
here. The first BarCamp, "an ad-hoc gathering born from the desire for people to share and learn in an open environment," was created in six days by a handful of people in response to the invite-only
FooCamp. 300 people showed up to the first BarCamp, and since then there have been over 80 BarCamps all over the world, and the model has taken many forms, including RootsCamp.
RootsCamp was created by
Zack Exley after a conversation he had with Nica at a
New Organizing Institute (NOI) training this summer. The target audience for RootsCamp is everyone involved in campaign organizing from the volunteer to the campaign manager--everyone's experience is valued equally.
Nica helped to organize the SFRootsCamp during the November 11-12 weekend. Notes from the event are available
here. She described SFRootsCamp as an experiment in using techie tools to organize a non-techie group. Although she feels that the event was a success, there were challenges with the non-techie folks using the wiki, and the political organizers, unfamiliar with the BarCamp model, kept asking, "What's the agenda?"
"It's really hard to make organizers not organize," she said.
In addition to RootsCampSF, Andrew Hoppin organized a RootsCamp in Second Life November 8-14, which will most likely continue once a week through 2008, and other upcoming RootsCamps are: New York City. Nov 18, Bloomington, IN. Nov 17 and 18, Washington, DC. Dec 2-3, and Columbus, OH. Dec 1
The next San Francisco Net Tuesday will be on December 12 from 6-8 PM at Citizen Space (425 Second St. #300). Richard Cave, IT Director, and Barbara Cohen, Executive Editor, of PLoS (Public Library of Science) will speak. PLoS is a nonprofit organization of scientists and physicians committed to making the world's scientific and medical literature a freely available public resource. PLoS is helping to shape the global open access movement--which includes scientists, funders, publishers, librarians, patient advocacy groups, lawmakers, and many others. UPDATE: Our speakers have changed for this month's Net Tuesday. Matt Flannery, CEO and Co-Founder of Kiva.org, the first Web site to let anyone with a PayPal account be a "banker to the poor", and Pim Techamuanvivit (Chez Pim) a food blogger who raised $17,000 for UNICEF with her 2005 Menu for Hope campaign wil be speaking. More info here.