<br><br><div class="gmail_quote"><br><br><p>I sent the following general fundraising request as an unsolicited guest post to OLPCNews on Dec. 23. They haven't put it up or gotten back to me, and I don't have the connectivity right now to follow up on this. Can somebody - preferably somebody who has already done guest posts there - please take this off my hands? I do not care whose name appears as the post author, or whether you or they see the need to edit my post; all I want is for there to be a link to the fundraising page, and some kind of accompanying explanation, from OLPCnews, before the year ends (since I believe that many people are more likely to make tax-deductible contributions then). I am in an internet cafe now, and will probably not be able to reply to messages, so instead of replying "should I do it?", just take the task.</p>
<p><br></p>This message bounced with image attachments, so I uploaded the images I'd selected at <a href="http://sugarlabs.org/go/Image:Xocampattendees.png">http://sugarlabs.org/go/Image:Xocampattendees.png</a> and <a href="http://sugarlabs.org/go/Image:Sugarcamp_cool.JPG">http://sugarlabs.org/go/Image:Sugarcamp_cool.JPG</a><br>
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<div>Thanks,</div>
<div>Jameson Quinn</div>
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<div class="gmail_quote"><span>---------- Forwarded message ----------<br>From: <b class="gmail_sendername">Jameson Quinn</b> <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:jameson.quinn@gmail.com" target="_blank">jameson.quinn@gmail.com</a>></span><br>
Date: Tue, Dec 23, 2008 at 9:51 PM<br>Subject: Guest post: Give for XOCamp, help Sugar development and XO deployment<br>To: <a href="mailto:editors@olpcnews.com" target="_blank">editors@olpcnews.com</a><br>
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<div class="gmail_quote"><span>XOCamp 2 is coming up, January 12th to 16th. It's a meeting for the people who are doing the hard work developing Sugar and deploying the XO in countries like Uruguay, Colombia, Nigeria, and Nepal. It's an important chance for people to get to know each other, and for synergy to happen between different projects. And... we need your (or your company's) US-tax-deductible <a href="http://sugarlabs.org/go/XOCamp_2#Pledges" target="_blank">help for travel scholarships</a>.<br>
<br>Why? Let's start with deployments. Exciting things are happening with the XO in <a href="http://olpc-ceibal.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">Uruguay</a>, <a href="http://schoolkey.net/blog/2008/10/22/earth-treasury-africa-project-considering-a-sugar-on-a-stick-approach" target="_blank">Nigeria</a><a href="http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0704/07/i_if.01.html" target="_blank">,</a> <a href="http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/nicholas_negroponte_takes_olpc_to_colombia.html" target="_blank">Colombia</a>, and <a href="http://www.guatemala.gob.gt/noticia.php?codigo=1561&tipo=1" target="_blank">Guatemala</a>, and the volunteers and workers on the ground who are helping those things happen right would love to meet each other. But our salaries in these far-off places do not stretch very well to pay the full cost of tickets to Boston. We are taking the bus and train to make our plane tickets as cheap (and low-carbon) as possible; your tax-deductible contribution would help. <br>
<br>Then there's development. Sugar, as you know, is the free software that makes the XO run for kids. And the dirty secret is that free software is not actually a lot easier than the other kind. People who say "with enough eyes, all bugs are shallow" mostly aren't the people attached to the eyes which hurt from staring at the screen looking for those bugs. <a href="http://mako.cc/writing/funding_volunteers/funding_volunteers.html#id2447268" target="_blank">Experience suggests</a> that in-kind support, like travel scholarships, are one of the best ways to encourage open source development, safer even than directly paying for work because it doesn't create a division between volunteers and staff.<br>
<br>And finally, there's the synergy between the two. At the last experience like this - <a href="http://sugarlabs.org/go/Sugarcamp" target="_blank">Sugarcamp</a> - developers and deployers met and the sparks that were struck are bearing fruit. Developers need to know what deployers need; deployers need to know what features and workarounds are available. Hanging out on IRC or email lists is never going to result in the kind of concentrated knowledge transfer that happens at a real-world meeting. The cool photo on the left is a hacked up XO projector that was shown off at the sugarcamp.<br>
<br>So please make your tax-deductible year end donation today. Here's <a href="http://sugarlabs.org/go/Sugar_Labs/Donate" target="_blank">how to send money via Google Checkout, Paypal, or check</a>; please remember to <a href="http://sugarlabs.org/go/XOCamp_2#Pledges" target="_blank">note your donation on the wiki</a>, or we won't know to apply it to travel scholarships. All money raised will be divided between qualifying applicants: half divided equally, half proportional to any remaining direct travel expenses. Though there probably will not be enough to give full scholarships, if there is, then any leftover money will be used for other Sugarlabs purposes, possibly including future travel scholarships. If you can get your company to match your gift - or even to give on its own; this kind of direct donation is a highly effective use for a couple of thousand dollars - that would of course be much appreciated.<br>
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