Xeni Jardin has written a nice wrap-up article on the Dharamsala wireless mesh in Wired online. This nicely complements the four-part NPR series she did earlier this month (series which includes audio, of course, plus online components at the NPR web site).
Xeni Jardin writes “Hacking the Himalayas” for NPR and Wired
Xeni Jardin (Boing Boing et al – also see her entry in Wikipedia) has created a four-part series entitled Hacking the Himalayas that includes lots of coverage of the TibTec wireless network (sponsoring the upcoming AirJali Summit) in Dharamsala. You can find an online version of the series at the NPR web site.
The four segments are:
- The Gaddi People of Dharamsala
- Connecting Tibet’s Exile Community
- A Wireless Network for ‘Little Lhasa’
- Tradition vs. Change in ‘Lhasa Vegas’
It’s well worth catching!
Hello – you’re in the WordPress world!
Well, after all of this time I have switched my blog from MovableType to WordPress.
The reason being that MovableType’s (paid) licenses only allow a small number of authors to participate in posting to a blog. The model they use is basically that of the “lone author” who writes a blog in first person without collaboration from others. What I have found is that the best way to keep a blog fresh, growing and fluorishing is to have several authors, each of whom posts periodically. That is prohibitively expensive using the MovableType model.
WordPress, on the other hand, is free software and open source. And thus it can be modified and improved. And the team of folks working on this software has done a marvelous job. It has everything I could want.
So it may not make a difference to you the visitor to my blog, but it makes a vast difference to me, to non-profits and NGOs and everyone who likes the “group blog” model.
Wireless Summit in India – October 2006
The Tibetan Technology Center (TibTec) announced that it will host the Air Jaldi Summit on wireless technologies in Dharamsala, India in October 2006. This will be an international gathering of experts and “learners” where the latest in community-based wireless will be discussed and showcased. (Press Release)
The Return to Dharamsala // Meshing Again
A fellow traveler has written a great story about the Dharamsala mesh, which has now been published in a mag in the UK.
In The Mesh Becomes Reality I wrote up my impressions in October, 2005. The “Father of the Dharamsala Mesh,” Yahel Ben-David, has just returned to Dharamsala and is working on “what’s next” for the mesh right now.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 12
- 13
- 14
- 15
- 16
- 17
- Next Page »