BeWelcome Newsletter - September 2008
2008-09-12 | Filed Under news |
Summer is almost over in the Northern Hemisphere and you've probably been travelling or just relaxing, so here's an update of what happened at BeWelcome in the meantime. Read about the General Assembly held in Essen, Germany, in early June 08, have a look at the New Tour and front page design and share your travel experiences in
the brand new blog and trips features. Enjoy!
Results from the General Assembly
The GA is one of the highlights of the year and a great way to meet, work together, make decisions and socialize. This year's GA took place in early June at the Linux Hotel in Essen, Germany. Volunteers from everywhere participated through live audio-stream and chat facilities. Topics discussed included the finances, new features and volunteer work. The participants also elected the new board of directors which is now made up by Claudia, Frank, JeanYves, Pierre-Charles and Thomas. More details in the volunteer blog.
The New Tour
You probably noticed we made a new home page that looks way cool. To explain to newcomers what BeWelcome is all about there is now a guided tour. You can
take the tour yourself and share your opinion on the BeWelcome forum. This tour is all about sharing experiences and hospitality exchange.
Tell us your travel stories!
New features are constantly being integrated into BeWelcome. The latest examples include travel blogs and trip-planners. These features are still under development and can be a bit 'buggy' so if you experience any problems, let us know! If you have a great anecdote about BeWelcome you can send it to us for inclusion on our front page.
Amsterdam BeWelcome Collective
Bringing developers together face-to-face is a very effective way of making connections, brainstorm about new ideas and get new things working on the website. New and old developers met in Amsterdam at the end of June 08 for two weeks (some even longer) to work together in the same place. More details in our wiki.
SHE Amsterdam and Antwerpen
Part of the Amsterdam BeWelcome Collective was the 3 day Open-Space Conference on hospitality exchange: SHE or "Sustainable Hospitality Exchange". The idea of the conference was to bring people together to discuss the different concepts of hospitality exchange, from a personal to a practical and also a theoretical perspective. General topics discussed involved: Ideal structure for the networks involved, the main practical challenges and the concept of SHE itself. One of the ideas that sprung out of this weekend was to create a "Bill of Rights" for social network users. This idea was subsequently also discussed in the BeWelcome forum. The Amsterdam SHE-event will be sequeled by a new meeting in Antwerpen on October 18-19th.
Stay updated, get involved!
www.bevolunteer.org is the main
portal if you want to get involved or if you simply want to know more about what's happening at the moment in Bevolunteer, the organisation that runs BeWelcome.
You don't want to receive BeWelcome news any more? Please disable the tick box in your personal preferences.
Posted by philipp
Post Links
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Page | Leave a Comment
Rethinking volunteer management and the forum
2008-07-15 | Filed Under Uncategorized |
A remark I hear far too often is “I want to volunteer in BeWelcome, but I don’t know how/where/what!”. Of course, on the one hand it’s never easy to start getting involved in something, but surely we can do better?
What makes it so hard to get involved and to stay involved?
- There’s a lot of barriers in place: You have to have a BW profile, enter your name here, there and everywhere.
- It’s often unclear who is supposed to help you along, so you’re just sort of waiting for a reply from someone.
- You have to pick a team or teams and then it’s still not clear what your actual tasks might/could be.
As always, I think it’s important to start from good principles, so that the actions afterwards taken are logical and effective. The main principles I see here are:
- Getting involved should be clear, fast and straight-forward.
- It’s important to have a personal connection to your responsibilities. Our best work is done by people that have a very clear view of what is expected of them.
- Keep it simple!
I think having “coordinators” like Philipp is actually very helpful, but the idea of all those “teams” seems quite far from the underlying reality. Think about it, we have almost 1 team per two active volunteers (let’s say active means a post per week) and most active volunteers are part of multiple teams… It is also clear that almost everyone works ad-hoc and only on things they are interested in. To me, this is fine, but it also means we have to work with that in mind.
So, I would like to propose a few things.
First, I think task-based thinking should prevail over team-based thinking. Theoretically, any active volunteer can pick up any task that is desired, as long as they are clearly defined. That in turn means that the current coordinators should primarily focus on finding and writing down possible tasks, from consensus or decision in the organization or from a bug report or question. They should also focus on supporting and (re)activating volunteers that pick up tasks within their “area of expertise”. As an example, a translation coordinator could say “language … needs better translation, who can help?” and subsequently support anyone who volunteers with access rights, explanations, etc.
Secondly, I think the BeVolunteer forum (at least) should reflect this ideology. We shouldn’t be dividing posts by topic, but by intention: What is their purpose? Is it a question? A general idea? Does someone need help? Is it a task that can be done? That way, anyone can look into the right area to either get an answer, to volunteer or to make a remark, regardless of topic.
So, what could an intention based forum look like?
- Help
Are you stuck with something on BeWelcome or BeVolunteer? Find help here. - Questions and answers
Ask questions about BeVolunteer or BeWelcome here. - Volunteer
Looking for something to do? We have plenty of things to work on.
(This could be split into “open tasks” and “closed tasks”.) - Big Ideas
Do you have a great idea? Post it here! - Organization
Polls, reports, etc. This would be the “official stuff”.
Ideas could be developed in “big ideas”, submitted to a poll in “Organization” if necessary, to be broken down into tasks in “Volunteer”. In “Volunteer”, there would have to be clear links to the relevant coordinator (preferably it’s who submits it there), should the volunteer need support. Depending on a someone’s available time and personality, it would make sense to help out with small things (Q & A) or to get involved in the big theoretical discussions in “Big Ideas”. And again, coordinators would need to be able to extract polls, conclude discussions and formulate tasks.
The “old” forum would need to be put into an archive, possibly with interesting threads moved to relevant new locations.
An interesting idea would also be to have multiple coordinators per topic (why not?) and perhaps even a few “multipurpose coordinators”, being people that can help coordinate with just about any topic. (People like Frank, Philipp, Claudia, Kasper, Jean-Yves and myself come to mind.)
I’m hoping the current coordinators are enthusiastic about these ideas or at least willing to try it out. Let’s hear some feedback and get the fire burning!
Update (2008-07-17): After some discussion, I think a good point can be made to combine “Help” and “Questions & answers”, if only because it is quite difficult for an average user to see the difference between them.
Posted by tgoorden
Post Links
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Page | 8 Comments
Significant improvements!
2008-07-15 | Filed Under Big Picture, Communication tools, Ideas, Information flows, On Communicating, in progress, organisation, technology |
Things always take a bit longer than you wish (except for vacation, which is almost always too short), but I think it’s a good time to announce the successful move to the new server of BeVolunteer.org.
Callum is the first to be congratulated and thanked, as it was he who moved most of the applications and databases. Almost everything was running smoothly in a days work (a few hiccups in test.bewelcome.org, our test environment and some mailing related challenges), which shows just how good our team really is at this stuff! (Let’s not forget the rest of the sysadmins who helped smooth out the process: Tobias, Philipp and Kasper.)
The Blog has received a major overhaul:
- The three blogs (main, internal, tech) were united again! I have strong hopes that centralizing our public communication will improve our transparency even more and provide an easy way to track what is going on inside BV. All of the user profiles should still be accessible, although you might have to reset your password.
- Upgraded to 2.5 and added the Akismet spam filter.
- A proper skin, with all the relevant logo’s and colors.
- All the important links (Wiki, BeWelcome and forum) are now added in the navigation. If you’re logged into the blog, you will even see OTRS and Trac as links!
There is still a lot to do however. Let’s see what’s left on my “todo list” from last week:.
- Update the access list (who has access to what).
- The forum needs a sharp, reorganizing mind. How can it be made public? (My current approach would be to move the current non-public boards to “archive” and restart the board with a much simpler structure that is open to the public.)
- Remove the old RSS feeds in BW.org and include the feed of this blog in a proper, visible location on BeWelcome.org.
- Conform the style of the blog, forum and Wiki. (Special note: I’ve put common design files such as logo’s in /html/common/.)
- Not everything has been moved from the old Joomla installation yet. Downloads (press releases, logo’s and pictures) especially should not be abandoned!
- After everything else is satisfied: disable old blogs and joomla. I think this should be possible on Thursday.
Besides these very practical tasks, I would like to put some effort into reorganizing the volunteer management structure. I think it would be a good exercise to see how a potential volunteer would explore both BV and BW and how they could get going in the most transparent way possible.
I’d like to continue this cleaning effort until the end of July so please, if you have time, join in and make this work!
Cheers!
- Thomas
Posted by tgoorden
Post Links
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Page | 2 Comments
Summer cleaning: This Saturday! (12th of July)
2008-07-09 | Filed Under Big Picture, featured, organisation, technology |
To really get something done, you have to plan for it. So, this Saturday I’m calling upon everyone that can spare some time to help us restructure and update www.bevolunteer.org. Drop in at any time during the day to help with one or several of the following tasks (I will be present starting 9 am CET, but Callum will come online sooner). If you need certain access to be able to do something, somebody will get that for you. Some things can also be prepared in advance, to go online on Saturday. This list is of all things that I believe have a large general support, so no controversial actions should be included here. It’s an ad-hoc activity, so you’ll have to coordinate yourselves within the group.
The majority of the work will have to be coordinated with moving bevolunteer.org to the new server (Mule), hopefully we’ll have a couple of sysadmins online. However, not all work is technical or even needs server access, so anyone can help.
The end goal of Summer Cleaning is to create a BeVolunteer site that is more easy to navigate, where it’s easier to find the right up-to-date information and where it’s a lot easier to help out.
Please, be pragmatic and look at what actually works at this moment and what doesn’t. This is not an exercise in management theories! Another good guideline is: centralize information, decentralize access.
What can you do for the BeVolunteer Spring cleaning?
Blog
- Moving the blog to the new server and merging the tech blog into the main blog.
- Make the blog the homepage and add links to the wiki, trac and the forum.
- Create a simple “about” page, similar to the Wiki homepage (if we can just include the content of the Wiki homepage, maybe that works too!)
- Grab content that is still relevant from Joomla and work it into a static blog page or the Wiki.
- Create a new skin for the Blog, so the styling is more conform to the “BV style”!
- Include a feed on the BV homepage of the most recent Wiki updates.
Wiki
- Update organizational pages (who is responsible for what?) and clean up the linking to those pages.
Volunteer management
- Map out a clear plan of how volunteers are “guided” through BeWelcome/BeVolunteer and simplify, simplify, simplify! (Suggested improvements are: link the “contact us” page on BW to the relevant sections, look at the application procedure, etc.)
- Can we simplify the team structure? Right now, there are far too many non-active groups and it’s the same people in many places anyway. Is there a possibility to have a more task- (ad-hoc) or person-based approach? Work out a practical plan!
Forum
(Note: Since this is - IMHO - the most controversial one, I won’t suggest too many radical actions. I do - strongly - feel we should improve the forum significantly.)
- Make a report on the (technical) possibilities to open up the BV forum and how it would affect older threads.
- Look at possible merging of boards.
How to participate? You can leave a comment here indicating you will be able to help out and what you’d like to work on. Then, just show up online on Saturday. You’ll find people in Skype, Ajax chat and (probably) IRC as well.
The ultimate goal is to switch BeVolunteer.org to the new server on Saturday night, with as many improvements as possible. If we don’t get everything done, that’s fine, but let’s give it a try!
Posted by tgoorden
Post Links
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Page | 6 Comments
Amsterdam BeWelcome Collective wrap up
2008-07-07 | Filed Under organisation, technology, unconference |
Sitting in the same room on the same couch is a good motivation to get work done. The Amsterdam BeWelcome Collective was exactly announced for this reason. I was very happy to see old and new friends. The SHE conference that took place at the weekend was a great opportunity to brainstorm about transparency, trust, the gift economy and anything else that can be slightly linked to Sustainable Hospitality Exchange.
Thanks to our star coder lemon-head, who is next to me on the couch right now I finally feel that I got into the BW Rox code and I’ve been able to clean up the code in big ways. At the same time I also have doubts about the current development pace. The framework we use is only used for BeWelcome, and our star coder is the only one who knows his way in it. We started an overview of possibilities to move forward more rapidly. At the start of the Collective I had already been tempted to try out Drupal, which has a thriving community of developers and tons of modules. This doesn’t mean giving up our code base, and it doesn’t mean another long transition. I am going to try to integrate our existing BW Rox code into Drupal and if it works well we can decide to use it. We’ve also looked into the use of CakePHP and other PHP frameworks, but we already have most of the feature of pure OOP/MVC frameworks.
I enjoyed Thomas’ post about improving communication within BW/BV - well, I was sitting in the same room while it was written. Yesterday, I actually experienced a communication issue myself. I posted something in the BeVolunteer forum and then found out that most people who are putting a lot of effort into BeWelcome are not even able to read it…
In order to reinforce the organizational identity of BeWelcome and strengthen ties between BV volunteers we at the ABC just came up with a radical idea for all our real-life meetings: paper hats. ^ Team coordinators get to wear paper hats, so that their status is known to other volunteers. /\ Members of the Board of Directors get A3 format paper hats. In order to increase the flow of ideas, you can write them down and attach them to your hat. Or even write them on your hat directly. So the more ideas you have, the bigger your hat. To avoid any silly icons on BW profiles we propose to make a picture of the volunteer with their hat. Caroline Zeller, our brand new coordinator of the paper hat team, will exploit all innovative technology for our first prototypes.
Opening the wiki took a lot of time. I think it will be easier for the forum. We get rid of the BV/BW volunteer distinction and go through the existing threads to see if they can all be opened up. lemon-head also had some suggestions for improving the functionality (with a better skin, extra links), and I totally think he should get admin rights for the forum.
Final words from Robin about the Collective: it was great to see so much creative bits and bytes flying around our ears. So, where’s the next one? Hamburg, Israel, Bretagne, Berlin, Antwerpen, Aachen or even Africa?
Thank you all for participating in any kind of way - Alicia, Amylin, Andreas, Anu, Caroline, Claudia, Dante, Frank, Harold, Jonas, Julien, Lena, Marc, Marlou, Pascal, Petter, Robin, Rose, Thomas, and many more in Amsterdam and elsewhere.
P.S. The default WordPress skin is very boring. I hope everyone is happy with the new skin - if not, suggestions for improvement are welcome.
P.P.S. I hope to see more wrap ups by more people on this blog - contact me if you need access.
Posted by guaka
Post Links
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Page | Leave a Comment
Improving the communication within BeWelcome/BeVolunteer?
2008-07-01 | Filed Under Big Picture, organisation |
I’ve been challenged by many people over the last year to improve upon our communication. The main objection is the amount of fragmentation of information and discussion, but I do believe most (if not all) information can be found somewhere. Here’s what I see as good, general guidelines (practical suggestions will follow) that I hope you will agree upon and that can guide us in making the right decisions:
- Transparency
We should strive for radical transparency. This means on principal everything is public (not behind a password!), with exceptions being made only for privacy reasons (personal data like addresses and full names for instance) and security related information (like passwords). However, this does imply that all decision making should be publicly viewable. Anything that can’t see the light of day simply should not be part of our organization. - Syndication
Some information does have more than one relevant location. For example, things on this blog are often interesting for “regular” BeWelcome members. Syndication implies then that the information is entered in one central location and then (hopefully automatically) published in other locations as well. The trick is to choose the best primary location for each piece of information and have a good publishing mechanism. - Cut the fat
If something is hardly used at all, cut it out. I’m all for experimenting with new tools, but we have to admit when something doesn’t really help. Unused tools and locations are confusing and therefor negative to communication. - Simple solutions first
Yes, I know that we could code all sorts of things ourselves, but that takes time and a lot of effort. So, solutions that require fairly little effort are greatly favored over complex new implementations. - Decentralization
There are too many “single points of entry”, situations where people have to wait for usually one person to give them access to a trivial function or information. On the other hand, there is a large group of volunteers that I feel we can “trust” perfectly to make the right decisions in those situations. I believe, to be able to allow the organization to really grow, we have to trust each other radically. (If we give each other keys to our houses anyway, this shouldn’t be such a big step. Think of how many people in BeVolunteer you really trust to handle user accounts, my count is over 20.)
OK, on with the show. Based on the above principles I want to make the following suggestions:
- Remove the Joomla front-end and promote the blog to the first page of bevolunteer.org. Joomla doesn’t seem to be used and we have more popular solutions for what is on there right now (basically two “blog” type posts and some download information, which can either go in the Wiki or on BW).
- Merge the tech blog into the main blog. Again, it’s not used much at all and can be solved with a simple “tech” tag.
- Syndicate (through RSS) the main BeVolunteer blog into the BeWelcome homepage. This makes sure BW members “feel” the activity of the organization behind it. However, I do think the primary source should be bevolunteer.org, so it doesn’t start getting mixed with purely social activity on BeWelcome.
- Scrap OTRS. The ticketing system doesn’t seem to add anything we couldn’t solve on the forum or in BeWelcome itself. It is very infrequently used and is just another place where we need to manage usernames/passwords. It is also a completely closed system (no transparency). Most general questions can be done in one of the two forums or can be addressed directly to a coordinator or BoD member (easily reachable).
- Open as much of the forum as possible (preferably all), by making it readable to non-logged-in users. Tons of good information is being hidden from the general public for no good reason at all. Even in the BoD forum, maybe 5% of the posts seem to have a need to be “hidden” and in most cases I think we shouldn’t even have them there anyway. We’ve managed to open up the Wiki, with no negative impact at all, so I think we should apply this to the forum as well. “Fleeting conversation” (conversation of which we do not want a public record, usually because it’s simply uninteresting personal chit-chat) can be done in Skype or IRC, where there is a lot of chatter anyway. This probably implies some posts will have to be archived (or deleted), but I’m sure it’s worth the effort.
- Give as many people relevant rights as reasonable. Areas where we should give way more people the right to create accounts: translation, SVN accounts, forum, etc. Only access to the production server (especially the database) should be heavily restricted, to protect members’ privacy.
- 4-8 May: 4th Berlin Beach Camp for Hospitality Exchange (open to all networks), Berlin, Germany
- 7-8 June: General Assembly BeVolunteer, Essen, Germany (location to be confirmed)
- 20-23 June: Mont Royal Summer Camp Part II, Traben-Trarbach, Germany
- people to start the real life network of BeWelcome: BeLocal
- people helping with texts, newsletters and internal communication
- a little donation once in a while to cover our server costs: our donation page
- More hot topics - check the BW volunteer pages
I hope you will agree that the efforts that have been done so far to simplify and open our organization have all proved to be beneficial: We are attracting very good volunteers, there’s a good vibe in general and the organization simply feels more mature. I really haven’t seen any negative effects (like backlash from CS or HC), so let us take the next logical step.
Kind regards,
Thomas
Posted by tgoorden
Post Links
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Page | 33 Comments
S.H.E. roundup: thoughts from Amsterdam
2008-06-30 | Filed Under Big Picture, Conference, organisation |
Yesterday we rounded of the SHE (un)conference in Amsterdam. The what? Sustainable Hospitality Exchange. In short, it was a coming together of all kinds of people that wanted to think about the future of hospitality exchange and especially of ways to make it (more) sustainable. Needless to say, it was fun and exciting with quite a remarkable list of attendants. As is probably predictable, BeWelcome volunteers were strongly represented and with Frank, Claudia and me there we even had half of the BoD! But, we were also very happy to see a few CS ambassadors there and some people from other related networks (eg. the “traveling school of life”). Unfortunately I didn’t see anyone that identified himself or herself as a current HC volunteer.
There were too many topics to discuss (see the Wiki page for all the details), but the general topics were: Ideal structure, practical challenges, the concept of SHE itself and sharing experiences. Interestingly enough, I felt that there was an enormous amount of similar ideas and values being shared within the group. Also remarkable was the obvious need to “do practical things”, so often the discussions would conclude with some form of practical suggestion. For BeWelcome, these practical outcomes have already proved to be a great impulse for new and better features (for instance the new verification procedures came partly from work done in Antwerp), so I certainly hope people will look at some of the suggestions being made this time as well. They are often very well thought out and worth the effort.
One outcome that I am particularly proud of is the draft of a “Bill of Member Rights“. It basically bundles a range of values that were felt to be most important in the context of a sustainable hospitality exchange service and, quite on purpose, it is formulated in a fashion that can be adopted by any social network, even outside of hospex. It is certainly my hope that one day this - very high - standard can and will be adopted by many social networks. For BeWelcome, we agreed to work on it until the next general assembly (which might very likely be on the 18th-19th of October in Antwerp!) and then hopefully adopt it the BeWelcome our statutes. For fairly obvious reasons, I’m skeptical that such a document would be adopted by HC or CS, but I still think it is interesting to learn what volunteers from those networks think of the ideas in the Bill of Member Rights.
I’ll be in Amsterdam for a couple more days and will try to make some time to get some other things moving as well within BW. There have been some concerns and suggestions about our communication and structure that I feel can easily be addressed. So, expect a post with some basic suggestions that I hope you will be enthusiastic about tomorrow or the day after.
Ciao,
Thomas
Posted by tgoorden
Post Links
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Page | 1 Comment
General Assembly 2008
2008-06-16 | Filed Under Big Picture, Communication tools, Conference, General, organisation |
On 7/8 of June our 2nd General Assembly (GA) was hold in the Linux Hotel in Essen.
The GA is one of the highlights of the year, and a great way for everybody to work together, take decisions and socialize.
A total of 13 persons gathered physically at the conference center to have real life discussions about the past and the future of BeVolunteer. Among the 13 participants three were visitors and two of the ten BeVolunteer Members were not yet eligible to vote according to our Statutes.
Additionally a group of online participants was connected to the conference room via a “Skype Group Call”. These online participants contributed their ideas via a written chat which was projected to a wall in the conference room.
Our treasurer Jean-Yves presented the Financial Report for 2007/2008 and the Budget for 2008/2009 which were later on accepted by the participants via a online voting system. The voting was done online in order to give volunteers the opportunity to vote even if they could not be physically present at the General Assembly.
The next step was the election of the new Board of Directors. The candidates presented themselves beforehand in the wiki. At 11 am Sunday morning polls closed and the new Board of Directors was confirmed.
During further discussions we got to the conclusion that in order to make tax refunding possible for more members we are going to create a national branch of BeVolunteer in Germany during the next year. Most part of this process has already been finalized during the GA with a first meeting of the future ‘Verein’.
Additionally the General Assembly decided to use a Creative Common License for the Wiki content of BeVolunteer.
In order to put the financial base of BeVolunteer on a wider fundament we decided to launch a BeWelcome Shop. In this shop everyone can buy BeWelcome promotional material and choose whether they would like to pay a higher price with a higher donation part going to BeVolunteer.
Furthermore, the General Assembly discussed the posibility of an application for the European Volunteer Programm. Finally the decision about this issue was transfered to the BoD for later decision because at this time some aspects remained unclear about financial and labour burden for BeVolunteer.
Part of the new Verification Process was tested and implemented during the General Assembly, so that everybody present can now verify members in their local communities or during their travels. This feature is still available in the alpha-version, only, but will be put in production after some more testing and layout work.
During the General Assembly the participants did a lot of Brainstorming about several issues like the inactive member procedure for BeWelcome, Blogs, Forum, Ajax Chat and the structure and tools for BeLocal. All this brainstorming does not imply any desicion making process. It is just a brainstorm of members on BeWelcome.
Posted by fabzgy
Post Links
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Page | 1 Comment
BeWelcome in the press
2008-04-27 | Filed Under Big Picture, organisation |
Vicky Baker from The Guardian News recently travelled through Middle and South America on her quest to “test” the different hospitality networks. Quite naturally she came across BeWelcome and even managed to meet Pierre-Charles in Caracas, Venezuela - one of our founding members. Her articles appeared both in the Spanish and the UK based version of The Guardian, online edition. Read here what Vicky Baker has to say.
What do you think about the article? Does it describe well our aims?
Your comments here ![]()
Posted by kiwiflave
Post Links
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Page | 2 Comments
News - April 2008
2008-04-15 | Filed Under featured |
2008 has been an exciting time for BeWelcome so far. More than 3,000 members are now part of our community - new members especially from Latin America, where we were mentioned in various newspaper articles : Bienvenidos! At a technical angle the new member search page makes it even easier to meet up with members on your next vacation. It’s time for action: BeLocal started. This initiative is about building up the BeWelcome local communities all around the world. And, finally, all our BeVolunteer wiki pages are public - check them out!
BeLocal
Until now we put our work focus on building the website and providing the technical foundation for a strong and vivid online community. The new challenge now is to build the local communities for meetings and exchange.
Fabian (fabzgy) and Pierre Charles (pietshah) brainstormed about community building and local volunteers and started discussions in the BW forum. You would like to meet people, exchange ideas and take part in some international action? Now it’s your time, share your ideas in the forum.
Open source - open wiki
BeWelcome is the first travel community based entirely on open source programming. Thanks to the help of BW member Kasper (guaka), we finally also managed to open up all our wiki pages where you find information about the project BeWelcome, the organisation BeVolunteer, teams and ideas. Many discussions and work sessions were necessary to find the right balance between private data protection and most possible organisational transparency. All those who said that they would participate in BW once the wiki was open have now no excuses anymore… Join, help, build and take part in the community. Check it out!
BeVolunteer annual meeting in Germany, 7-8 June 2008
Beginning of June the general assembly of BeVolunteer will take place in Germany. Proposed location (not yet confirmed) is the Linux Hotel and open source center in the city of Essen. The chosen location represents the strengths of BeWelcome: open source, innovative community. The annual meeting is the perfect spot to get to know other members and exchange ideas. The new board of directors (the organisations representatives) will be elected among BeVolunteer members and work sessions will take place all over the weekend.
Upcoming events:
Wanna help? We need :
Posted by philipp
Post Links
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Page | 1 Comment