Sounds like what they are doing is great. I know AMT has(had?) Hacker
Scouts. And Sudo Room at one time had some kid programs. This seems to be a
growing idea, that "hacker spaces" can be a way to help counter our failed
public school system. While I don't think its the only solution. Its a good
start. Anything that gets kids out of fucked up schools and into spaces
that are actually focused on learning, creating, and challenging the status
quo gets a thumbs up from me.
On Jun 15, 2014 2:28 PM, "Maximilian Klein" <isalix(a)gmail.com> wrote:
In this last East bay express there was an article
"Hacking local in
Hayward" about a new hackerspaces Hayhackers. The article emphasizes their
young education aspects. Then a quote from Christina Depulta on other East
bay hackerspaces :
"they're either young singles or techies and software engineers or mothers
with children. We wanted to have a space for everybody. "
Do you think this is a valid rubric for a hackerspace's demographic, and
does sudo fit into one category? I wonder if having that kind of all
inclusive space is even a fantasy holy grail?
Just pondering the current state of our sudo-populous as we've now come to
be a reference point for new hackerspaces to judge themselves by.
@notconfusing
_______________________________________________
sudo-discuss mailing list
sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org
https://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/sudo-discuss