Hi all!
The People's Open Network <https://peoplesopen.net> is just beginning - an
effort to create a community-owned wireless mesh network in the East Bay,
providing free wi-fi and a resilient local network hosting local
applications. It works by mounting low-cost routers on rooftops and outside
of people's homes. The routers are running software that enables them to
automatically connect to each other and share connectivity.
For those who haven't heard, last week Sudo Mesh
<https://sudomesh.org>announced our
developer launch <https://sudoroom.org/wiki/Mesh/Blog#Developer_Launch>.
We're testing the firmware with an initial batch of ~20 nodes run by folks
with networking skills who can help us debug. If this is you, please get in
touch! We have a mailing list <http://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/mesh> and
an IRC channel <http://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=peoplesopen.net>, and
meet weekly at Sudo on Thursday evenings starting at 7:30pm.
The point of this email, however, is to request folks to add to our community
outreach spreadsheet<https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Ao_Q7DQvNFT-dC1mVjlaeTVSckhrZU…>.
We're reaching out to non-profits, schools, churches, libraries, coops and
other communities who may be interested in supporting the mesh - either
through hosting a node, getting the word out, creating a partnership w/
People's Open Network, and/or working on local services and applications we
can run on the network.
The link to edit the spreadsheet is here:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Ao_Q7DQvNFT-dC1mVjlaeTVSckhrZU…
- please do a search for the name of the org you're adding before adding a
new row.
Thanks for any help you can provide in helping to develop relationships and
expand the network :)
Mesh the planet!
Jenny
http://jennyryan.nethttp://sudomesh.orghttp://thevirtualcampfire.orghttp://technomadic.tumblr.com
`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`
"Technology is the campfire around which we tell our stories."
-Laurie Anderson
"Storytelling reveals meaning without committing the error of defining it."
-Hannah Arendt
"To define is to kill. To suggest is to create."
-Stéphane Mallarmé
~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`
Can anyone help Ivan?
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ivan Silva <brito.ivans(a)gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Feb 25, 2014 at 7:19 PM
Subject: [lol-hackers] Arduino kit
To: lol-hackers(a)googlegroups.com
Does anyone have an Arduino kit I can borrow on Friday?
Or, what's the fastest way to buy a kit by Friday?
TY
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My favorite bumper sticker might be "Abolish human rentals! Support worker
cooperatives"
BUT
that doesn't mean I don't believe in corporate inoculation by recommending
principled, justice-driven folks to consider jobs like this
https://jobs.flowingdata.com/job/thumbtack-san-francisco-ca-full-time-data-…
Also, relatedly, is http://nptech.io/ making an impact? I was initially
excited to see it but had no sense of what organizing had been carried out
to cultivate a critical mass of early adopters...
curious,
Danny
I've been asking this question a lot recently, and I think it's
particularly important in the context of noisebridge / sudoroom. "Safe
space" has been used in a lot of contexts, sometimes in feminism, sometimes
in mental health, sometimes just on an individual level. I've also been
getting variants in answers to this question, and I'm really interested in
what this means for you in the context of open communities like
hackerspaces.
I'd really love to hear your answer: it doesnt have to be long or
complicated, just whatever comes to mind first, and feel free to email me
privately. I may talk about general results at an upcoming 5mof or
something similar, but I'll maintain individual privacy and confidentiality
to whatever degree you desire.
1) what does safe space mean for you?
2) if you can think of a time where you felt safe and heard and creative /
productive at NB/SR, how were people treating you or others? How did it
make you feel?
3) if you can think of a time where where felt unsafe at NB / SR, how were
people treating you or others? How did it make you feel?
Much love,
Praveen
http://oaklandnorth.net/2012/07/26/oakland-celebrates-groundbreaking-for-re…
Have we checked out this place yet as a potentials future Sudoroom home
Oakland celebrates groundbreaking for renovation of historic California Hotel
The California Hotel was a popular venue for acclaimed recording artist like James Brown, Ray Charles and Billie Holiday. Photo courtesy of EBALDC.
The sound of jazz―a melody, harmony, rhythm, or timbre―hadn’t filled the lobby of the California Hotel, just off San Pablo Avenue, for more than a decade. And as over a hundred people filled into the hotel on Wednesday―Billy Strayhorn numbers setting the mood―for a groundbreaking marking the city’s decision to revitalize the historic hotel, passersby, many of them with iPods, didn’t know the hotel was a venue for the most preeminent figures on their playlists: James Brown, Ray Charles, Billie Holiday, Sly Stone, Aretha Franklin and Big Mama Thornton.
The ceremony, which included tours of the building, a display of the impending designs, and five-minute short films, attracted several political figures including Oakland Mayor Jean Quan, Katherine Kwong, congressional Aide for Congresswoman Barbara Lee; Assemblymember Nancy Skinnner from California’s 14th district; Tony Smith, superintendent of the Oakland Unified School District; and Jumoke Hodge, school board member and vice-president (District 3).
The California Hotel was built in 1929 and operated as a commercial hotel. It was one of the few hotels where blacks could stay and black musicians could express their art. For nearly three decades, beginning in 1936, many blacks relied on “The Negro Motorist Green Book: An International Travel Guide” to help them decide where they could travel during an era of racial division. The hotel’s ballroom was also famous for the celebrities who played there. From the ‘20s through 1971, the site boosted a “who’s who” reputation, drawing jazz and blues greats who ranged from Fats Domino to Ike & Tina Turner as well as fans who came to listen and dance.
“I remember as a little kid seeing them do a dance they called the Lindy Hop,” said Beverly Jackson, an East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation employee, of her parents, who used to go dancing at the California Hotel during the swing era. “They were living in San Francisco during the time―they were doing shipbuilding during or after the war. There was no place for African-Americans to dance; there was no place for them to stay. This hotel was one of the few environments where African-Americans could go when they came from out of town. I was still little when they were talking about this―missing half what they were saying because I was still laughing at them dancing.”
The site was added to the National Register of Hispanic Places in 1988, and its interior remains filled with original Mission and Spanish Colonial Revival Style architecture. But the neighborhood and building began to change after suburbanization and the construction of the 580 freeway, which has been adjacent to the building since the early 1970’s. By the 1980s, the hotel was abandoned; it remained boarded up for 16 years.
Then Oakland Community Housing, Inc. (OCHI)―a non-profit developer―converted the national landmark into affordable housing. In 2007, OCHI dissolved after lawsuits and a bankruptcy, forcing residents of the building to put up a fight against eviction. The building was placed under the care of the managing attorney of the Eviction Defense Center, allowing people to keep their living space, before East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation (EBALDC), a corporation that develops affordable housing, acquired the hotel for redevelopment in 2011. The group’s plan is to turn the California Hotel into a place where local economic development can thrive. In addition to affordable housing, the redeveloped site will help bring community and commercial retail spaces nearby, organizers said, and offer non-profit services as well as community gardening.
The project will provide 137 affordable homes. There will be two stages of work in revitalizing the California Hotel, according to organizers and wall displays at the event. Phase 1 includes construction on the apartments facing San Pablo Avenue, which began in March, 2012. Those apartments can be filled in late 2012 or early 2013. Phase 2 will focus on the units facing 35th Street with construction beginning in January 2013 before ending in August of that year. More apartments in Phase 2 will be available that coming fall.
While historic preservation is a central focus of the project―they’re keeping the carved bear and floral crest corbels on the lobbies columns and adjacent mezzanine―so is going modern and green. The hotel will have new elevators, a solar-powered thermal system, and the historic ballroom will reopen for residents.
At Wednesday’s groundbreaking, the music began to soften before Quan―wearing a burgundy blazer, knee length skirt, sensible flats and a pearl necklace―took the stage. “Good afternoon, San Pablo!” Quan said with vigor. “How many of you live on the San Pablo border?”
“Yeah! I do!” several in the crowd replied.
“I’m particularly proud to be here today because you’re on the edge of a renaissance―starting with the mural over here,” she said, looking out of the hotel’s large windows at a newly painted mural under the bridge on San Pablo Avenue and 35th Street. (You can read more about the mural here.)
Quan turned back to the audience. “We live in Oakland,” she said in a firm voice. “Don’t talk down on our city. Don’t talk down on our neighborhoods. I love the history of this city. We were the end of the transcontinental railroad―this is not San Francisco―but where all those people from back East came out and they stayed at these wonderful hotels: the Hotel Leamington, where my dad was a union cook, and they stayed at the Hotel California.”
The crowd roared with cheers.
“The Hotel California was actually the site―in typical Oakland tradition―of really the desegregation of hotels. Remember all of the guys in West Oakland who were working on the railroad? They created the first African-American union in this country. They ran a campaign that said, ‘We don’t work at places where we can’t eat and stay and become customers.’” She paused for more jubilation. “Among the high-class hotels, this became one of the first ones and they were so successful. I know you guys remember this―in the 50’s―when no great jazz artist would come to Oakland without playing in the ballroom back there. How many of you remember that? It’s wonderful to see this West Coast monument come back alive.”
Quan then unveiled a $260,000 check towards the project from the City of Oakland and the U.S Environmental Protection Agency. “We’re going to make this what it use to be―one of the best neighborhoods in Oakland with more restaurants and businesses on this end,” she said.
People then heard several more speakers―Peter Sopka, EBALDC interim executive director; Carlos Castellanos, EBALDC director of real estate development, and EBALDC project mangers Karoleen Feng and Elaine Kam―before people shuffled around the lobby to sign waivers to tour the hotel (it’s still under construction), climbed steps toward the mezzanine to see blueprints and finish eating mini chicken sandwiches with Yukon Gold potato salad.
Howard Wiley on tenor saxophone and Kev Choice on piano stayed true to the black diaspora in jazz by playing music that focused on black composers. Their standards―Duke Ellington, Billy Strayhorn, Horace Silver, and Tadd Dameron―made a soft susurrus underneath the conversation. Both musicians used to play with Lauryn Hill―an R&B and hip hop singer and rapper best known for her album The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill―as her back-up band and were performing at the California Hotel for the first time.
“It feels lovely,” said Wiley while Choice played a soft number before they continued on as a team. “All the sprits and the vibes in West Oakland―there was a major West Oakland blues scene, there was a major West Oakland jazz scene. My grandfather was a tenor [sax] player that used to play with Count Basie. He would tell me about all the acts that would come here, and the California Hotel is where Count Basie came a lot. It’s really cool.”
Throughout the event people were invited to check out the People’s Grocery urban farm in the back of the hotel. The large garden―with narrow paths ways, sprouting fresh vegetables, several chickens and a greenhouse―has several murals painted on its surrounding wooden fence.
Larry Davis, a greenhouse manager for the People’s Grocery, will lead the farm next year. Davis said there are currently 7 to 12 people living in the hotel throughout the renovation process. The garden always belonged to the California Hotel, he said, but during recent years it was not being cared for. “That’s when the People Grocery, and other organizations came in to make it viable,” he said. “The renovation will bring a lot more people into the garden.”
“We feed an enormous amount of people,” he added. “On Fridays we host an event called ‘Flavors’ and let the community and current residents of the hotel come eat and harvest.”
Davis, who grew up in Oakland heard a lot about the hotel as a kid. “There would be Aretha Franklin or Richard Pryor,” he said. “Anyone you can imagine came through here. This was the spot―anybody that wanted to be somebody came to the California Hotel.”
----
Snowyla.comRomyilano.com
Someone I know says hewas at both events over the weekend, and has been
sick with a horrible stomach bug since Sunday night. The most likely
causes are food poisoning, norovirus, or salmonella.
If anyone else has come down with diarrhea, vomiting, or bad stomach
cramps, please post to this list. It's important to know a) what you
ate & drank at the events, and b) whether you used the SR bathroom
during or since the events.
If this turns out to look like norovirus going around, it will be
necessary (as in, "not optional") to nuke the bathrooms ASAP with bleach
(do not mix bleach with ammonia) on all surfaces including toilet seats,
bowls, and flush handles, TP dispensers, sink and faucets and counters,
wall switches and door knobs including areas around door knobs.
Norovirus is extremely contagious and persistent, transmissible from
surface contact, and difficult to stop from spreading except by
ferociously sanitizing all relevant surfaces.
If it's food poisoning or salmonella, that will become apparent from
looking at commonalities in what people were eating. Food poisoning and
salmonella are not directly contagious, but would call for greater care
about food sources & preparation methods to prevent another occurrence.
-G