Results of the Mellon Foundation's Mellon Awards for Technology  
Collaboration (MATC) have just been announced
David Green
Knowledge Culture
http://www.knowledgeculture.com
davidgreen at knowledgeculture.com
203-345-3228

> From: Diane Goldenberg-Hart <diane at cni.org>
> Date: December 11, 2007 9:55:34 AM EST
> To: CNI-ANNOUNCE -- News from the Coalition <CNI-ANNOUNCE at cni.org>
> Subject: [CNI-ANNOUNCE]  Recipients of Second Annual Mellon Awards  
> for Technology Collaboration Announced


(WASHINGTON, DC) The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation today awarded  
$650,000 in prizes to ten not-for-profit institutions in the second  
annual Mellon Awards for Technology Collaboration (MATC).The Mellon  
Awards honor not-for-profit organizations for leadership in the  
collaborative development of open source software tools with  
application to scholarship in the arts and humanities, as well as  
cultural-heritage not-for-profit activities. The awards were  
presented at the Fall Task Force meeting of the Coalition for  
Networked Information by Sir Timothy Berners-Lee, Director of the  
World Wide Web Consortium and the inventor of the World Wide Web.  
More information on the awards ceremony, including podcast interviews  
with some of the recipients, will be available at www.cni.org  
beginning 11 December 2007.

After a worldwide, public nomination process, the ten recipients were  
selected by the MATC Award Committee, which included Berners-Lee,  
Mitchell Baker (CEO, Mozilla Corporation), John Seely Brown (former  
Chief Scientist, Xerox Corp.), Vinton G. Cerf (Vice President and  
Chief Internet Evangelist, Google, Inc.), John Gage (Chief Researcher  
and Director of the Science Office, Sun Microsystems, Inc.), and Tim  
O?Reilly (Founder and CEO, O?Reilly Media). The awardees, prizes,  
and projects for which they were recognized are as follows:

?       $100,000 to the American Museum of the Moving Image (Astoria, NY:  
www.movingimage.us) for the development and release of the  
OpenCollection museum collection management system  
(www.opencollection.org).

?       $100,000 to Duke University (Durham, NC: www.duke.edu) for  
leadership and development work on the OpenCroquet open source 3-D  
virtual worlds environment (www.opencroquet.org).

?       $100,000 to Open Polytechnic of New Zealand (Wellington, NZ:  
www.openpolytechnic.ac.nz) for leadership and development work on  
several open source projects including the New Zealand Open Source  
Virtual Learning Environment (http://eduforge.org/projects/nzvle/).

?       $50,000 to the Georgia Public Library Service of the University  
System of Georgia (Atlanta, GA: www.georgialibraries.org) for the  
development and release of the Evergreen open-source library  
automation system (www.open-ils.org).

?       $50,000 to Middlebury College (Middlebury, VT: www.middlebury.edu)  
for the development and release of the Segue interactive learning  
management system.

?       $50,000 to the Participatory Culture Foundation (Worcester, MA:  
www.participatoryculture.org) for the development and release of the  
open source Miro media player (www.getmiro.com).

?       $50,000 to Talboks- och Punkstkriftsbiblioteket (The Swedish  
Library of Talking Books and Braille: Enskede, Sweden: www.tpb.se)  
for the development and release of open source tools supporting the  
Daisy Project for talking books for the visually impaired.

  ?     Two awards of $50,000 each to University of Illinois (Champaign- 
Urbana, IL: www.illinois.edu): one award for the development and  
release of the Firefox Accessibility Extension (https:// 
addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/1891); and one award for the  
development and release of the OpenEAI enterprise application  
integration project (www.openEAI.org).

?       $50,000 to University of Toronto (Toronto, Ontario:  
www.utoronto.ca) for the development and release of the ATutor  
learning management system (www.atutor.ca).
Additional information on the awards will be available at http:// 
matc.mellon.org beginning 10 December.  Nominations for the 2008 MATC  
awards will also be accepted at that site, beginning 12 December.

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation is a philanthropic organization with  
offices in New York City and Princeton, NJ. The MATC awards are a  
project of the Foundation?s Program in Research in Information  
Technology (RIT). More information about the MATC awards is available  
at http://matc.mellon.org.

For more information, please contact:

Christopher J. Mackie
Associate Program Officer, Program in Research in Information Technology
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
282 Alexander Rd.
Princeton, NJ 08540
609-924-9424
cjm at mellon.org
http://rit.mellon.org

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