Notes, Saturday July 23, 2011[]
- Mentoring Programs - led by Dave Neary and Rebecca Malamud
- How to be wrong gracefully - led by Sherri Carral
- Organizing and social networks - led by Andy O
- Facilitating International Collaboration - facilitated by Michael Downey
- Community Citizenship - facilitated by Cedric Thomas
- Offline Communities to Online Tribes - facilitated by Maryam Webster
- Gamification - Facilitated by Laurie Pattison
- Death Star Usergroups - Facilitated by Simon Phipps
- Not in My Community - facilitated by Schwern
- What do we do every day? - led by Evan Hamilton
- What the heck do Community Managers do everyday (alternative notes by mystery person, I am not that mysterious, I am logged in :-) )
- Health and social networking learnings
- Measuring Community Participation - facilitated by Jane from WordPress
- Agile/FLOSS & in-person inclusion - facilitated by Sumana Harihareswara & David Strauss, about making in-person hackfests/sprints inclusive, and making Agile software development processes inclusive of volunteers
- Giving Props - moderated by Jane Wells and Chelsea Otakan
- 2011/Notes/Community Leadership Mentorship Program for CLS - moderated by Eric Herberholz
- Community Built Software - moderated by Reid Beels and Audrey Eschright
- Communicating Change - by Sarah Manley and Sannse Carter Cushway
- Models We Use to Understand The World - facilitated by Sumana Harihareswara
- Grow your community by turning followers into leaders - moderated by Dan Allen
- 10 tips to grow a community - moderated by Andy Zhang
Notes, Sunday July 24, 2011[]
- What should an open source non-profit organization do? - led by Jacob Redding
- Anger Management Aikido - led by Your Name Here
- Building Community with Passion and Beer - led by Your Name Here
- Evolution of Community Curators - led by Laurie Pattison
- It Boots Ship It - led by Adam Williamson of Fedora Project
- What an Open Source Foundation Should Do - led by Jacob Redding
- Community as *Gasp* Marketing - led by Evan Hamilton
- Coopitition: Managing Competitors In Your Community - led by Dan Allen
- They Want What?! Managing User Feedback - led by Todd Gage
- Changing Your Communities Culture - led by Lars Kurth
- Remote Community Management WFH - led by Jefro
- Structure of Your Community's Nonprofit - led by Jacob Redding
- How to Find a Local - led by Koray Loker
- Surviving Building Consensus - led by Angie Byron
- Corporate Community vs Organic - led by Louis
- Maintain Internal Community During Company Growth - led by Kami Jana
- How to Juggle Rules & Responsibilities - led by Eric Herberholz
- We Do Awesome - Communicating Great Work to Managers & Shareholders - led by Jono Bacon
- Connecting Globally - Facilitating Participation by Non-native English Speakers - led by Koray Loker
- Influencing CEOs, Becoming CEOs - led by Pascal Pinck
- MetaCmgr Stuff - led by Van Riper
- Making Myers Briggs Work for You - led by Meryll Larkin
- Broadening Your Community by Dispelling Myths - led by Adam of 10gen/MongoDB
- Hack Germination: Bootstrapping Face to Face Community Spaces - led by Daniel Johnson
- Desperately Seeking Users - from consumers to active members - led by Alex LeFebvre
- Tiki Wiki Open Source CMS Groupware - led by Marc Laporte
- Finding Local Partners in Another Country - led by Koray Löker
Etherpad[]
- Consider using an etherpad instance for notes during meeting
- for example MeetingWords.com
- Easiest to use MediaWiki markup on the etherpad
- Transfer notes to this wiki after session.
How to add notes[]
- Click Edit to edit this page.
- Add a bullet point with the name of the session and who ran it.
- Select the name of the session and click the link button.
- Be sure to put 2011/Notes before the name of the page (e.g. '2011/Notes/Example Session')
- Why? This seems like deciding that we are not working in a wiki, but rather a file system.
- Save the page, and then click on your new link and add your notes. :-)