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SeeYourImpact: A revolutionary way to help those in need around the world and next door

September 27th, 2011
All Chapters, All Chapters, Girls In Tech, Portland
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Ivo Lukas

Follow me @MsSonicflare
I had the pleasure to chat with Shari Goetsch, Director of Digital Media Communications from SeeYourImpact. A great non-profit organization of making a difference whether you would like to contribute in a small or large scale.

Tell us more about SeeYourImpact.org, your role and your team?

SeeYourImpact.org is a non-profit that shows donors exactly who they’re helping and how. If you give a $25 home garden to a woman in Rwanda, we’ll email you the photo and story of the real person you helped in just 2 weeks. We want people to know exactly how their donation impacts a life. In fact, we’re so committed to the idea that we ensure 100% of your donation goes to the gift you selected.

We’re a start-up technology organization, which makes us a little different. Our focus is on helping effective non-profits leverage technology to show you who your donations are helping. We let you help people directly in countries all over the world. If you’re passionate about water, $10 will help build a well for a family in Cambodia. Or if you’re passionate about girls’ education, you can cover the monthly tuition of a child in India for $20.

Sometimes, it’s hard for people to believe they can make a tangible difference. My role at the organization is to help empower people to take that first step. We launched last year in September 2010. Our team of volunteers and supporters is growing quickly. Our job as a team is to make your giving experience so unforgettable that you’ll want to tell your friends.

Tell us more about SeeYourImpact and the initiatives you’re currently working on?

Currently, we’re helping people find inventive ways to make philanthropy a part of their every day lives. For example, children like Ellie are dedicating their birthdays to fundraise for people in need. Parents want to raise kids who give back, but it’s usually so hard to teach children what that ethereal concept “philanthropy” is all about. But when a child raises money, and in a matter of days, they see the face of a person they helped, suddenly giving is brought to life. And it’s not just the youngest of the citizen philanthropists who are getting involved. Businesswomen are donating their birthdays. Even couples are dedicating their wedding registries.

One mom whose children are from Ethiopia recently reached out to us. She had been watching the devastating famine in East Africa unfold on the news, and she knew she had to do something. Her adopted children could have been 2 of the many children who have died from hunger. So she launched a campaign called Ask $5 for 5 to deliver life-saving food and water. Over 700 people are already involved! It’s easy to help, and I hope you’ll consider joining us.

Where does SeeYourImpact.org work?

We have over 100 innovative gift solutions in 18 different countries. We’re in Latin America, Asia, Africa, and we’re also partnering with organizations doing powerful work here in the US.

What’s next for SeeYourImpact.org? How can corporations help make a difference?

We tailor partnerships to the vision of the organization. Some companies boost staff morale through employee campaigns. Others provide matching gifts. Still others look for ways to promote our work to their customers. In every case, we look for ways to show the results of the company’s work. Not just in contributions raised, but also by showing how people have been helped.

You’ve mentioned using technology as the means to drive this effort; what type of technologies drives this initiative?

We customize open-source technologies that receive broad developer support. We look for solutions that provide flexibility and stability, in addition to the creativity that comes with an army of free developers. We see social media as content delivery platform that connects our supporters to one another and to their Impact Stories. By using Facebook connect, we can send the updates of which the donor is helping to them through email or to Facebook. When people share their Impact Stories in their news feed, it invites their friends to get involved. And that’s a crucial part of our strategy. We know most organizations spend a lot on fundraising. But we think this is a new era. People don’t want to see organizations spending their donations on fundraising. They want to see their contributions going to work. By integrating with viral platforms, we help people share our work through word-of-mouth recommendations, and that’s the best way someone can hear about us for the first time.

 How can we help spread the word?

1.Go to Seeyourimpact.org and learn more about our work.

2. Women entrepreneurs: look for a way to give back through your company! Contact us, or set up a business page.

3. Upcoming women leaders and entrepreneurs: volunteer! If you’re looking for a way to use your skills to give back, we’d love to connect you with an opportunity to change the world. Email us.

So what are you waiting for? Spread the word and make a difference today!

Follow me @MsSonicFlare

 

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Tags: ivolukas, mssonicflare, nonprofit, Philanthropy, seeyourimpact
Posted in All Chapters, All Chapters, Girls In Tech, Portland | No Comments »

Google: The Expressiveness of GO

August 1st, 2011
All Chapters, All Chapters, Events, Girls In Tech, GIT Mentorship, Portland
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Ivo Lukas

I had a chance to sit down with Rob Pike from Google last week at OSCON 2011.  Rob Pike is a Distinguished Engineer at Google, Inc. He works on distributed systems, data mining, programming languages, and software development tools. Before Google, Rob was a member of the Computing Sciences Research Center at Bell Labs, the lab that developed Unix. While there, he worked on computer graphics, user interfaces, languages, concurrent programming, and distributed systems. He was an architect of the Plan 9 and Inferno operating systems and is the co-author with Brian Kernighan of The Unix Programming Environment and The Practice of Programming. More recently he was a co-designer of the Go programming language. Other details of his life appear on line but vary in veracity.

Tell us more about you, your role at Google and your team?

I was at Bell Labs for over 20 years, most of which were wonderful, but the last years at Bell Labs weren’t as much fun.  In 2002, I moved to Google, where I work on infrastructure- the technology behind the scenes. Lately I’ve been working on the Go team. At Google, I’m having fun. There’s strong interest from the engineers to learn more about Go, and we have users from from neophytes to experienced gophers. About 3 years ago, a few of us decided to address the problem that the programming languages we were using at Google for building system software were old and not well suited to the problems and the machinery we were working with. Right now, there are about 10 strong engineers on my team. We work on helping Google use this new language, but do all our language and library development as open source. As it says in my talk abstract, Go is not a small language but it is a simple one. By “simple” I mean that it is built upon a small number of ideas that combine orthogonally to generate power. Go may have fewer features than most mainstream languages but in expressiveness I argue it is ahead. Orthogonality lets elements be combined without unpleasant surprises. Simplicity makes Go easy to understand, fast to use and fast to compile. Go launched in november 2009. We are all over the world. we have team across the world from US to sydney as well.

What does the future look like for Go in the next 2 years?

It’s a maturation process. We want to grow a much larger community of users, which means we need a lot more exposure. Our focus now is to have it adapted by many users while we to continue to develop the language, libraries, and tools. We are giving talks and doing lots of advocacy. From the technical side, we are working on better libraries and making it even faster. It’s already very competitive; we just need to get the word out there: fun and fast.

What would be a single take away for the attendees that you want them to gain from your session?

You can have a nice language that is fun to use, safe *and* efficient

Whats next for GOOGLE?

Couldn’t speak to much besides my project, Go. But, this success of our social networking experiment, Google+, has been awesome!

You are one of the most accomplished individuals and a successful engineer, What can we learn from you?

it is important to do what you believe in. Some IT jobs can be very unrewarding and you can get trapped doing something that you dislike. So, if you find yourself in that position then you must switch to something you’re passionate about. What is  your goal and your interests?  What excites you the most? You should find them and make them what you do!

Which session(s) are you most excited about?

Sad to say I haven’t been focusing on others, except things related my project, and our sessions. I’ve just been swamped, but I know that I’ll be catching up by video afterwards. (I wish my talk had been videoed, hint hint.)

Is this your first time being part of Oscon? If not, then how’s it different from previous years?

This is my second year here. Last year, Go did not have a big presence – I was just a newcomer myself, although Google has been a major sponsor for years. This year, our team is more visible, with multiple talks and giveaways. Have you seen our Gophers? My wife, Renee French is an artist and she designed the gopher. There’s a plush incarnation, made by Squishable, and every attendee got the vinyl version, made by KidRobot. Renee’s name and a link to the Go are on the bottom of the vinyl gopher.

What’s a current device that you couldn’t live without?

Either my 11 inch mac air or my little digital camera. If there is no wifi, then it’ll be my digital camera for sure.

Read, download and check out the presentation by Rob on “Go” here. Good Luck Rob!

Follow me @MsSonicFlare


 

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Tags: 24notion, Engineer, girls in tech, gitpdx, go, Golang, Google, gopher, Ivo Lukas, ivolukas, mssonicflare, OSCON, OSCON2011, Portland, programming, technology
Posted in All Chapters, All Chapters, Events, Girls In Tech, GIT Mentorship, Portland | 1 Comment »

OSCON + Global GIT Mentorship Pilot Programs 2011

July 4th, 2011
All Chapters, All Chapters, Events, Girls In Tech, GIT Mentorship, GIT U, Portland
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Ivo Lukas

Register now for OSCON 2011, happening July 25-29, 2011, at the Oregon Convention Center in Portland. For 13 years, OSCON, the O’Reilly Open Source Convention, has put open source to work building the future. OSCON’s program encompasses 20 tracks to explore all things open source. New tracks have been added to OSCON this year, including Citizen Science, Geek Lifestyle, Open Data, Programming, and Emerging Languages, while Healthcare returns for its second year.

OSCON Java and OSCON Data – two new distinct events co-located with OSCON, debuting on July 25-27. OSCON Java combines Java and open source to take on the tech world’s juiciest challenges—in cloud computing, big data, mobile, and more. OSCON Java tracks include Client, Cloud, Craftsmanship, JVM, and Trends. At OSCON Data, learn about the open source technologies for gathering, storing, and analyzing data that make it possible to use new data sources and do new things with existing data. OSCON Data tracks include Analytics and Visualization, Hadoop, NoSQL Databases, Real-Time and Streaming, Relational, and Roulette. Don’t miss all the valuable tutorials, keynotes, hundreds of sessions and events. Girls in Tech readers can use discount code os11git to save 15% on your registration.

Girls in Tech will be at OSCON 2011 as they kick off the inaugural GIT Mentorship Pilot Programs globally (everyone is welcome). Learn more about the mentorship programs(for k-12, colleges/universities, working professionals), get involved and participate,  and how you could help spread the word. If you are attending Oscon 2011, don’t forget to join us on Thursday on July 28th 1-2pm in room #D134.  http://www.oscon.com/oscon2011/public/schedule/detail/21239

For more info contact: ivo@girlsintech.net     |    Follow me @MsSonicFlare

Need a press pass to cover GIT mentorship session? contact : ivo@24notion.tv

 

 

 

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Tags: 24notion, colleges, girls in tech, gitpdx, global mentorship, Ivo Lukas, ivolukas, k-12, Leadership, Mentorship program, O'Reilly, open source convention, oregon, OSCON, OSCON2011, Portland, STEM, universities, working professionals
Posted in All Chapters, All Chapters, Events, Girls In Tech, GIT Mentorship, GIT U, Portland | No Comments »

“Great beer selections, no sales tax; come to Portland, move your family and start your business here” ~ Mayor Sam Adams

August 3rd, 2010
All Chapters, Portland
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Ivo Lukas

Mayor Sam Adams gave a closing speech at OSCON this year – “Great beer selections, no sales tax; come to Portland, move your family and start your business here”. I’ve had the liberty to sit down with Mayor Sam Adams to chat about tech scene, start ups and a great lifestyle by living in Portland, Ore

Sam Adams – Mayor, City of Portland, Oregon.

Mayor Sam Adams of Portland, Oregon was elected Mayor of Portland in May 2008. Prior to being elected Mayor, Adams served as a Commissioner on the City Council for four years earning a reputation as a “policy-driven” advocate for sustainability, public transit, transportation planning, the arts, and gay rights. As a City Commissioner, Adams was Commissioner in Charge of Portland’s Office of Transportation and the Bureau of Environmental Services, and council liaison to, among others, the Regional Arts & Culture Council, the Association of Portland Neighborhood Business Districts, and Worksystems, Incorporated. In his role as Mayor, Adams is the lead Council member on Economic Development, Planning and Sustainability, Education, Arts and Culture, and Transportation.

During his first year as Mayor, Adams has launched a number of initiatives designed to showcase and provide support to Portland’s open source software community. Notably, Mayor Adams and City Council approved the nation’s first open source and open data resolution, which places open source software on equal footing with commercial software for purposes of City contracts. Also, Portland recently launched Civic Apps for Greater Portland, which is the nation’s first regional open data and open source app contest. Mayor Adams brings renewed focus to developing and implementing plans that will not only keep Portland livable, vibrant, and economically healthy, but will also increase Portland’s status as a national leader. He is proud of Portland’s open source software community, and he wants to do his part to ensure Portland maintains its reputation as an international hub for open source innovation.

Q&A

Exciting how the city of Portland is hosting OSCON again this year! How’s OSCON in Portland this year?

Portland, Oregon is the perfect host city for the open source convention. As a city, we have a wide breadth of un-matched talent; proprietary and open source software development, digital media firms, programming, coding and creative skill-sets. As a city, we are faster, cheaper and more creative. We have to be to compete with the other cities.  We have the quality and value – all in one city.

How has the tech scene evolved over the last several years?. What’s next? Where do we grow?

The Portland technology community has been able to take collaborative and open source philosophies to the next level. We’ve done some creative stuff; from digital development through productization.

Take Civicapps for example; CivicApps is an open data / open source project sponsored by several Portland-area government agencies to promote innovation in the public and private sectors. Currently over 120 civic data sets are available, including geographic, 911, transit, streets, and parks data. The aim is social change. The path is regional collaboration. The focus is local. A cool transportation app that displays arrival times for public transport in Portland, Oregon –PDX Bus—was developed using these public datasets, and it is available on a number of platforms including iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad

Technology products and services developed in Portland are most appealing to end-users because from the underlying software to the user experience we really figure them out to the fullest–we have high expectations. In the future, we need to focus on delivering value, quality and creativity in the most competitive ways. Portland has the potential be the most creative technology community in the world. We have so much opportunity here!

What’s your thought about expanding the women/girls presence in technology in Portland?

I think a mentoring approach is the way to go. We’ve had success with Rock and Roll Camp for Girls, which is a summer program that helps girls build confidence as musicians and learn about the music industry. That model could be used to help girls learn about other industries –like tech.

What current device/technology could you not live without? iPhone. It’s the one source that I rely on to get all of my news, connect with constituents. I tweet a lot, and I rely on a couple of applications for tweeting, including tweet deck. Beyond that I’m a news junky.  I use fluent news, incorporate, dig, and other apps.

Favorite apps? Pdxreporter.

What do you want people outside of Portland to learn about one of the most dynamic cities in the US?

Besides our worldclass beer and no sales tax?  We are a very open city that rewards creative thinking and values innovation.

We seek to be the best place to have both a fulfilling career and a balanced personal life. You really can have it all.

Also, this is a welcoming place and one of opportunity for people who want to make a difference. I am an example—I grew up poor, worked hard in public service, and now I have the honor of serving as Mayor.

To learn more about the city go to http://www.portlandonline.com/mayor/index.cfm

and be sure to follow @mayorsamadams

Be sure to join Girls in Tech Portland Chapter at OSCON 2010 this year at Portland Oregon. Girls in tech Portland is sponsored and powered by 24Notion

For More info for our local Portland chapter, go to our facebook page. If you are interested in being a guest speaker and/or panelist for our workshops and lectures, pls feel free to drop me an email: ivo@girlsintech.net

tweet @mssonicflare @oscon @24notion @gitweet #oscon #portland #opensource

photo by David Snyder

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Tags: 24notion, business, creative, designer, Developer, girls in tech portland, gitpdx, innovation, ivo, ivolukas, marketing, mobile apps, mssonicflare, open source, oregon, OSCON, Portland, PR, programmers, startups, technology, user experience, VC, women in technology
Posted in All Chapters, Portland | No Comments »

Today’s LAMP Stack(Facebook)-OSCON 2010

July 27th, 2010
All Chapters, Portland
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Ivo Lukas

David Recordon is the Senior Open Programs Manager at Facebook, where he leads open source and open standards initiatives. He joined Facebook from Six Apart where he focused on platform strategies, and previously worked at VeriSign in the emerging business group. David has played a pivotal role in the development and popularization of key social media technologies, such as OpenID and OAuth. He collaborated with Brad Fitzpatrick in the development of OpenID, which has since become the most popular decentralized single-sign-on protocol in the history of the Web. In 2007, he became the youngest recipient of the Google-O’Reilly Open Source Award.

Check out David’s Keynote presentation at OSCON

David is a native Portlander. He enjoys hanging out with his friends and family

Working in Facebook, what’s the most challenging task to date?

Scale to continue to grow. Active users double in the year after year. Constantly continue to scale; new products and platforms; new version of API and more…We have about 400 Engineering team that support 500M growing users by day.

What’s current technology/device that you couldn’t live without- if you could take in a deserted island?

Kindle; I love to read.

Follow David on twitter @Daveman692

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Tags: 24notion, api, david recordon, Developers, Engineers, facebook, girls in tech portland, gitpdx, ivo, ivolukas, mssonicflare, open source, oregon, OSCON, technology
Posted in All Chapters, Portland | 4 Comments »

Android for Java developers- Mobile technology(Day 1: OSCON)

July 20th, 2010
All Chapters, Portland
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Ivo Lukas

Had a brief discussion with Marko to learn more about open source and android for Java developers at OSCON yesterday.

Android for Java Developers is an action-packed, hands-on presentation that takes you through the anatomy of an Android application. The sample application includes most major Android building blocks (Activities, Intents, Services, Broadcast Receivers, Content Providers) to illustrate the philosophy of Android application development. It assumes basic Java knowledge.

Tell me more about Marko and your company, Marakana

Marko is creator of Marakana Android Training series. He has taught Android to over 1,000 developers at companies such as Motorola, Sony-Ericsson, Qualcomm, Ericsson Canada, Cisco, Sharp, Texas Instruments, DoD and many others. Marko is a co-founder of San Francisco Android Users Group and regularly teaches Android Bootcamp at Marakana.

Marko founded Marakana in 2001 to help underprivileged youth, minorities, and inner-city kids learn web technologies and get ahead in life. So Marakana emerged with goal of helping people get better at what they do professionally, focused on open source software training.

Marakana founded and continue to run a few user groups such The San Francisco Java User Group, The San Francisco Agile User Group and The San Francisco Android User Group. It’s a community organized user groups.

How’s your session today?

I’ve taught Android class last year at San jose and only 10 people attended. Today we’ve had over 120! So much love in Portland. So great!!

What can we expect from your session?  Any take away for the attendees?

If you know java, then android is pretty straight forward. Learn it and use it. Mobile is where the action now. We are in the early stage but there is so much opportunity.

Open source is ubiquitous. It’s been the same since back then; but how the technology is being applied constantly changing. Also leverage our video tutorials under community; it is such a great resources http://marakana.com/forums/android/general/ and http://marakana.com/forums/android/examples/

Which sessions/keynote speakers you are most interested in?

I’m planning to see some tomorrow and also to relax! Looking forward to seeing some of the keynote speakers. Follow Marko @marakana or go to http://marakana.com/ to learn more

Be sure to join Girls in Tech Portland Chapter at OSCON 2010 this year at Portland Oregon. Register today and receive special discount by being a Girls in Tech member.

OSCON takes place July 19-23, 2010 at the Oregon Convention Center in Portland, Oregon.

Register now and save 15%. Use discount code os10pgit when registering at: http://www.oscon.com/oscon2010

For More info for our local Portland chapter, go to our facebook page. If you are interested in being a guest speaker and/or panelist for our workshops and lectures, pls feel free to drop me an email: ivo@girlsintech.net

tweet @marakana @mssonicflare @oscon @24notion @gitweet

#oscon #portland #opensource

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Tags: 24notion, Android, Developers, girlsintech portland, gitpdx, ivo, ivolukas, marakana, marko, mobile, mobile apps, open source, oregon, Portland, programmers, tech, technology, women in tech
Posted in All Chapters, Portland | 1 Comment »

Celebrate NCWIT Symons Innovator Award

April 29th, 2010
All Chapters, Events, Portland
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Ivo Lukas

This year 24notion and Girls in Tech Portland is the partner/co-sponsor of National Center for Women & Information Technology. NCWIT believe that inspiring more women to choose careers in IT isn’t about parity; it’s a compelling issue of innovation, competitiveness, and workforce sustainability. In a global economy, gender diversity in IT means a larger and more competitive workforce; in a world dependent on innovation, it means the ability to design technology that is as broad and creative as the people it serves.

The NCWIT Symons Innovator Award promotes women’s participation in information technology and entrepreneurship by honoring an outstanding woman who has successfully built and funded an IT business. By recognizing women IT entrepreneurs, the NCWIT Symons Innovator Award hopes to inspire others to pursue IT entrepreneurship, and increase awareness about the importance of women’s participation in IT innovation and business. This year, we are please to announced the 2010 NCWIT Symons Innovator Award Winner is Kim Polese, CEO of SpikeSource, Co-founder of Marimba, and the original product manager of Java at Sun Microsystems.

Be sure to join us for the 2010 NCWIT Innovator Award celebration, 6:30-8:30PM, Thursday, May 20, at the OHSU South Waterfront Atrium in Portland, Oregon. Many thanks to our local host, the Software Association of Oregon, guests will enjoy fine cocktails and decadent treats, the lovely musical styling of local vocalist Sarah Billings, and the opportunity to ride Portland’s famous Aerial Tram to experience a breathtaking view of the city at night. We invite you to purchase tickets early as space is limited at this venue.

KEY FACTS:

  • Girls represented just 17 percent of Advanced Placement computer science (CS) exam-takers in 2008; that’s the lowest female representation of any AP exam.
  • In 2008 women earned only 18 percent of all CS degrees. Back in 1985, women earned 37 percent of CS degrees.
  • Women hold more than half of all professional occupations in the U.S. but fewer than 24 percent of all computing-related occupations.
  • Only 16 percent of Fortune 500 technology companies have women corporate officers.
  • A study on U.S. technology patenting reveals that patents created by mixed-gender teams are the most highly cited (an indicator of their innovation and usefulness); yet women were involved in only 9 percent of U.S. tech patents.

Learn more about Girls in Tech Portland

Learn more about 24Notion / tweet with us @24notion and @mssonicflare

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Tags: 24notion, girls in tech, gitpdx, ivo, ivolukas, oregon, Portland, symons award, technology, women in IT, women in tech
Posted in All Chapters, Events, Portland | No Comments »

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