Greetings!
User:Jtmorgan and I are organizing another set of data science
workshops. As in previous years, we'll be using the Wikipedia API as
one of our main examples. If you've been interested in learning
programming and the Wikipedia API, this might be a great opportunity!
If you register, mention that you're a Wikipedian and on the list and
we'll try to make space for you.
Details are below.
Regards,
Mako
----- Forwarded message from "Benj. Mako Hill" <makohill(a)uw.edu> -----
Date: Fri, 25 Mar 2016 20:05:33 -0700
From: "Benj. Mako Hill" <makohill(a)uw.edu>
To: cdsw-announce(a)uw.edu
Subject: [cdsw-announce] Community Data Science Workshops
Message-ID: <20160326030533.GT8536(a)yukidoke.org>
Greetings!
[ Please feel free to forward this on to any other people or lists you
think might be interested! ]
By popular demand, I am helping organize another round of the
Community Data Science Workshops. The workshop series consists of one
Friday evening and three Saturday sessions in April and May. These
workshops are for anyone interested in learning how to use programming
and data science tools to ask and answer questions about online
communities like Wikipedia, free and open source software, Twitter,
civic media, etc. The Spring 2016 series will be an updated version of
workshops we ran four times in 2014 and 2015.
The workshops are for people with no previous programming experience
and, thanks to sponsorship from eScience and the Department of
Communication, are free of charge and open to anyone.
Our goal is that, after the three workshops, participants will be able
to use data to produce numbers, hypothesis tests, tables, and
graphical visualizations to answer questions like:
- Are new contributors to an article in Wikipedia sticking around
longer or contributing more than people who joined last year?
- Who are the most active or influential users of a particular Twitter
hashtag?
- Are people who participated in a Wikipedia outreach event staying
involved? How do they compare to people that joined the project
outside of the event?
Details and dates are online here:
http://wiki.communitydata.cc/CDSW_Spring_2016
If you are interested in participating, please fill out our
registration at the link above before Saturday April 2. Register soon
because we tend to be oversubscribed.
If you already know how to program in Python, it would be really
awesome if you would volunteer as a mentor! Being a mentor
involves working with participants and talking them through the
challenges they encounter in programming. No special preparation is
required. If you’re interested, there’s a link on the page above, or
you can send me an email. If you mentored before, it’s still easier if
you fill our form again. Thanks!
Regards,
Mako (On behalf of Jonathan, Tommy, Dharma, Ben, Mika, and all the CDSW
mentors.)
--
Benjamin Mako Hill
http://mako.cc/academic/
Creativity can be a social contribution, but only in so far
as society is free to use the results. --GNU Manifesto
_______________________________________________
cdsw-announce mailing list
cdsw-announce(a)u.washington.edu
http://mailman12.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/cdsw-announce
----- End forwarded message -----
--
Benjamin Mako Hill
http://mako.cc/
Creativity can be a social contribution, but only in so far
as society is free to use the results. --GNU Manifesto
TA3M is tonight!
Pine
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Ann Summy" <ann.summy(a)gmail.com>
Date: Mar 21, 2016 10:30
Subject: [Ta3m-Seattle] TA3M March meeting tonight
To: <ta3m-seattle(a)ta3m.org>
Cc:
Greetings! A friendly reminder that the TA3M Seattle March meeting is
tonight.
When: March 21, 2016, 6:30-9:00pm
Where: Seattle University School of Law
Sullivan Hall Room 309
Sullivan Hall is located at the intersection of 12th Ave and E Columbia St
and is the main law school building.
<http://www.law.seattleu.edu/about-us/directions>
Presentations:
1. “Cyber Citizenship Through the Lenses of Access to Justice & the ADA”
by Brian Rowe
Abstract:
The line between human and machine is becoming more blurred each day.
For many of us our technology defines who we are and how we interact with
the world, unplugging is no longer an option when our hearts and minds are
part of the technology that provides lifesaving functions, reasonable
accommodations, and access to justice. The synergy that comes from humans
and machines melding together gives us new opportunities for enabling
previously disenfranchised populations or creating new walled gardens.
Which future will we enable with our technology polices and best practices?
Bio:
Brian Rowe is a professor and techie working at Northwest Justice
Project, managing the National Technology Assistance Project and teaching
at the University of Washington and Seattle University. He is also a former
Chairman of the Board for Washington Lawyers for the Arts and the
Washington State Access to Justice Boards Technology Committee. Brian
teaches in the areas of Privacy law, Ethics, Copyright and Information
Policy.
Brian has worked for Creative Commons, Public Knowledge, the Washington
State Access to Justice Board, Microsoft, Wizards of the Coast, and
Disability Rights Washington. He is also a social media expert with a
modest YouTube following. Brian was the winner of the 2009 WSBA IP Section
Scholarship Award and a Google Public Policy Fellowship.
2. “An Introduction to the Distributed Web on IPFS” by Jeromy Johnson
Bio:
Jeromy is a distributed systems programmer working for Protocols Labs
working on the next iteration of internet technologies. He also happens to
like Go, coffee and rainy weather.
_______________________________________________
Ta3m-seattle mailing list
Ta3m-seattle(a)ta3m.org
https://lists.ghserv.net/mailman/listinfo/ta3m-seattle
Hi all,
Notes from our most recent meeting are below.
** WikiConference USA 2016 + WikiProject Medicine Conference 2016:*
Peaceray is our point person on this. He will be in contact with
Bluerasberry. Nothing notable to report yet.
** Museum collaborations with Wing Luke, Burke and/or MOHAI.*
We need an outreach coordinator because all of the Cascadia regulars are
too busy to volunteer for this role. There are lots of opportunities for
GLAM activities and increasing our number of participants in the Seattle.
In Portland, Art+Feminism events have been well attended but there is
little continuity in the participants from one event to the next. Again,
having an outreach coordinator would help.
We have made multiple requests for funding for a part-time outreach
coordinator that WMF has consistently denied. Peaceray will discuss this
issue at the Wikimedia Conference in Berlin.
Joe mentioned the upcoming Pop Conference at EMP which will happen April
14th-17th. See
http://www.empmuseum.org/programs-plus-education/programs/pop-conference.as…
** Alaska Native Elder stories and Wikisource (see email from Feb 17)*
Pending follow-up from our contact in Alaska. This would fit in with the
interests of Pine, Brian and others in outreach to Native American tribes,
and is aligned with outreach regarding language preservation via Wiktionary.
** Art+Feminism*
We had a contact in Tacoma that was interested but then stopped responding.
Art+Feminism is popular in Portland. Again, having an outreach coordinator
would help.
Joe suggested that we contact Kelly Lyles.
** Intellectual Ventures (see email from Feb 24)*
We hoped that someone from Intellectual Ventures would attend our meetup
but they didn't.
** Instructional video series*
Slow progress while Pine is busy with other activities. Plans for catch-up
in the next few weeks.
** OpenStreetMap 2016 State of the Map US Conference*
Peaceray will be in touch with Clifford.
** Scheduling our April meeting*
April meeting scheduled for the 4th Monday, April 25th.
** Other notes*
Peaceray will soon depart for the Wikimedia Conference in Berlin.
Bruce and Pine are interested in photographing the opening of the light
rail station at UW and the opening of the new Lake Washington floating
bridge. See http://www.ulink2016.org/launch-day and http://520golong.com/
Our grant midterm report is due soon. We are moving at a slower pace than
we would like because of our shortage of human resources capacity.
Financially we are ok.
Cheers,
Pine
Hi all,
Per discussion last month, for March we are meeting on the *third* Tuesday.
We will be at Cafe Allegro on March 15 at 6 PM.
Possible topics of interest:
* WikiConference USA 2016 + WikiProject Medicine Conference 2016
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:PEG/Cascadia_Wikimedians/WikiConfere…>
* Museum collaborations with Wing Luke, Burke and/or MOHAI
* Alaska Native Elder stories and Wikisource (see email from Feb 17)
* Art+Feminism
* Intellectual Ventures (see email from Feb 24)
* Instructional video series
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:IEG/Motivational_and_educational_vid…>
Feel free to add items to the agenda.
Hope to see you there!
Pine
For the Cascadians who are interested in such things in the Pacific
Northwest:
"A new data center in South Hill is providing industrial-sized
communications between Asia and the Pacific Northwest.
"The partnership between Wave, a broadband services company, and Centeris,
an IT infrastructure provider, represents the first transpacific broadband
data and fiber hub in the U.S.
"The facility’s clients are being kept confidential but initial customers
include gaming, content, technology, logistics, e-commerce, and financial
service companies."
http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/business/article65382812.html
Pine
Forwarding an announcement for those who follow WMF governance.
I feel that this is good news. Katherine is really good at building
relationships, and WMF needs a lot of that right now. I am hopeful for good
things to come. (:
Pine
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Patricio Lorente <patricio.lorente(a)gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Mar 10, 2016 at 6:55 PM
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Wikimedia Foundation executive transition update
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>, "
wmfall(a)lists.wikimedia.org" <wmfall(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Hello all,
I’m happy to announce that the Wikimedia Foundation leadership team has
proposed an interim Executive Director, and the Board has given our full
support. Starting on March 14th, current Chief Communications Officer
Katherine Maher (https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Katherine_(WMF)) will
step into the role of interim Executive Director. We thank the C-levels for
their careful consideration in this process, and Katherine for stepping up
during this period of transition.
In choosing an interim ED, the C-levels started by identifying immediate
priorities for the coming months, including building trust, improving
communications, and filling key leadership positions. They felt, and we
agree, that Katherine is the right person to lead the organization while it
addresses these and other important issues. Additionally, this will allow
the rest of the executive team to focus on critical organizational
functions, including community and engineering management, fundraising, and
strengthening our human resources function. You can read more about our
process and thinking here:
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Foundation_Board_noticeboard/Marc…
Katherine has been with the Foundation as Chief Communications Officer for
about two years now. During that time, she has developed a versatile and
effective team that serves the needs of the organization and movement,
collaborating closely with other departments and the community. She has
thoughtfully introduced new capacities and led her team through
transitions, and played a critical role in shepherding the strategy process
and the annual plan, in collaboration with other C-levels. She is known for
listening to and empowering the people that she works with.
For those who don’t know Katherine, she’s been a longtime advocate for
global open communities, culture, and technology. She previously led
advocacy for the international digital rights organization Access Now,
where she worked on freedom of expression, access to information, and
privacy. She has supported the efforts of citizens and governments around
the world to deepen transparency and participation in her roles at the
World Bank, National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, and
UNICEF (where her team built wikis for youth participation in major global
issues). She is a member of the advisory board of the Open Technology Fund.
With interim leadership in place, our next step as the Board is to move
quickly to plan and implement the search for a permanent Executive
Director. We will be working together over the coming weeks to clarify
roles and responsibilities in this search, and identify the best way for
community and staff to participate. We want this process to be inclusive
and incorporate many voices. We look forward to sharing an update on our
progress toward the end of next week.
As interim Executive Director, Katherine will report to the Board. Geoff
Brigham will continue serving as Board Secretary, and Jaime Villagomez as
Board Treasurer, reporting to the Board in those capacities. As of March
14, Katherine's reports include the C-team: Geoff Brigham, Jaime
Villagomez, Maggie Dennis, Lisa Gruwell, Joady Lohr, and Wes Moran. The
Communications team will continue to report to Katherine for the time
being, with support from the leadership of Juliet Barbara and Heather
Walls.
Thank you,
Patricio
Translation notice - This message is available for translation on
Meta-Wiki:
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Foundation_Board_noticeboard/10_M…
--
_______________________________________________
Cascadia Wikimedians,
FYI
Peaceray
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: *Clifford Snow* <clifford(a)snowandsnow.us>
Date: Tuesday, March 1, 2016
Subject: [opensource-107] Seattle to host the 2016 OpenStreetMap State of
the Map US Conference
To: opensource-107-announce(a)meetup.com
I am excited to announce that Seattle was chosen to host the OpenStreetMap
2016 State of the Map US Conference. The conference will take place July
23-25 on SeattleU's campus. We chose SeattleU for their low cost, proximity
to Seattle and access to public transit. The food trucks near by didn't
hurt either.
We are looking for help! Let us know if you want to help. Request for
presentation proposals should be coming fairly soon. Start thinking about
what you want to present or teach.
The formal announcement can be found at:
https://openstreetmap.us/2016/02/sotmus-2016/
Clifford
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For Wikimedia folks who are interested in possible collaborations with OSM,
now seems like a good time to start thinking about possible presentations.
Staff from the Wikimedia Foundation, and/or Wikimedia volunteers from
around the US outside of the Seattle area, may want to start thinking about
travel plans.
For Wikimedia volunteers outside of Cascadia Wikimedians territory, you
might consider applying for WMF Travel and Participation Support grants [1].
If you're inside of Cascadia Wikimedians territory and would like to attend
the conference, we may have funds in our budget that can support your
attendance. Contact me off-list for details.
Regards,
Pine
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:TPS
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Clifford Snow <clifford(a)snowandsnow.us>
Date: Tue, Mar 1, 2016 at 5:18 PM
Subject: [opensource-107] Seattle to host the 2016 OpenStreetMap State of
the Map US Conference
To: opensource-107-announce(a)meetup.com
I am excited to announce that Seattle was chosen to host the OpenStreetMap
2016 State of the Map US Conference. The conference will take place July
23-25 on SeattleU's campus. We chose SeattleU for their low cost, proximity
to Seattle and access to public transit. The food trucks near by didn't
hurt either.
We are looking for help! Let us know if you want to help. Request for
presentation proposals should be coming fairly soon. Start thinking about
what you want to present or teach.
The formal announcement can be found at:
https://openstreetmap.us/2016/02/sotmus-2016/
Clifford