Here is a face to this discussion: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w3amtfjP9GY We have a bit of coordination with playful minds at my end to. We actually evolved a culture of hacking in Pakistan during the last decade and this involved a lot of grassroots efforts: I have spent a few hours occasionally with various groups around the world. The latest was with the Hackerspace in Budapest http://hsbp.org, it was a wonderful experience. In the past I was also part of various efforts to educate activists, journalists, developers from nearly 40 countries to design advocacy campaigns using open technology. I also got the opportunity to lecture during my visit to Central European University in June this year on how to design online advocacy campaigns using simplistic open source tools. On the other hand, I have been working with multilateral institutions to impart Linux and FOSS knowledge in developing countries since 2004. I just completed two training missions to Kabul Afghanistan and Islamabad training trainers using Ubuntu Desktop, Ubuntu Server, other distributions, Open Standards, Open ICT Ecosystem, various tool kits and shared the opportunity in sustaining Freedom and Common Good offered by Open Source! I covered 35 participants/trainers from 10 organizations, govt departments, regulators and universities. Here are pictures from Kabul and the guy in black is you know who: http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.276788829038093.85766.194521240598186&type=1 I sustain the Ubuntu Linux LoCo Team for Pakistan since 2004. Here is the link to it:http://www.facebook.com/groups/27138955736/ I very much have access to people and communities, one thing we lack is access to a physical space and lots of internet but lacking funds remains the only issue. I have funded myself nearly 10 events, campaigns, 50,000 live cds etc but its hard to sustain the effort especially in the conditions like my region but yes, the effort has been here on the ground for quite some time now. In the west, there are just so many small and easy ways to raise funds through sites like http://www.ulule.com/ and Kiva and so forth. Its not the case in regions like Pakistan. Only single faces have access to support from a particular class. We on the other hand contribute on our own as much as we can and the efforts do move on. I take you advice and will stay in touch. -- Regards. -------------------------- Fouad Bajwa On Tue, Dec 13, 2011 at 9:39 AM, Moritz Bartl <moritz@torservers.net> wrote:
For Piratebox, pretty much any OpenWRT compatible router with USB should do: http://wiki.openwrt.org/toh/start There is also a version for Android that turns your phone into a Piratebox: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=935157
As you might be aware I plan a hackerspace Europe tour for next year, and naturally have been thinking about exactly this area a lot. It would be nice to connect mentors you who are willing and able to travel and help you build spaces, and there are some efforts in that direction, for example the Space Federation.
http://schoolfactory.org/content/space-federation-overview
In the center of my trip is exactly this kind of organizational information that I hope to add to hackerspaces.org eventually.
In general, infrastructure should come first. You only need to find a small handful of people and a place where you can regularly meet and work cooperatively. The nice thing about Hackerspaces is that every single one of them is unique, formed from a core idea of a very small group of people.
http://hackerspaces.org/wiki/Design_Patterns
On 12.12.2011 23:44, Fouad Bajwa wrote:
I wonder if I can get one of these boxes to Pakistan. We will just need one example and I can use these in my Internet Freedom Workshops here in Lahore.....or during some activist activities/meets......there are numerous ideas...
I am thinking about starting a hackspace effort in this region but need some mentoring and advice too. DIY tools like this could help us alot down here, maybe add solar battery charging etc to it to combat the power/energy crisis in Pakistan.....building networked learning applications in local language and visuals.....the biggest tool to bring community empowered change.....with open technology...
all this gets me thinking!
-- Moritz Bartl http://www.hackerbus.eu/ https://www.torservers.net/ _______________________________________________ liberationtech mailing list liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu
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participants (1)
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Fouad Bajwa