It was about projects and initiatives, ideas and missions, but above all it was about PEOPLE - yes, people like you and us, people seeking an alternative way for learning, sharing and teaching knowledge, people caring about the web and the freedom to express themselves.
In our previous experiences events are those things where you either listen to experts talking or attend to a show or a performance.
In both cases you're a spectator there
In terms of events this is the closest metaphore of a closed web could be.
As a user you're supposed to listen, consume, and follow.
And how thrilled we are to work with them.
Today it's time to share and reveal what is our work proposal into this project: as we're enthusiastic fans of social media, and social media strategies, we decided to develop one for Drumbeat itself.
So, in today's weekly community call, we're going to present this strategy to all the rest of the crew.
I can imagine your past workflow with our beloved Drupal CMS.
It has zillion of modules, and you get enthusiast of a million of them. You wanted to try them all.
I always do like this. My collegue hates me for that.
We enjoyed a lot all the meeting, indeed. It has very alive and fermenting attitude crawling beneath the Frites
For sure, we enjoyed a couple of things most.
First of all I want to thank Mark Surman for the incredible conversations, presentations and great attitude he showed to all of us.
It's going to be a thrilling year, I told you.
And I'm not sure that a 2010 web project has to rely on 2005 website concept.
YAY!
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1.) Congrats to Carlo Frinolli and the nois3lab team for lighting the city of Rome with Firefox. Carlo has also just put out a video chronicling their trip around Rome.
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