... attached a picture of the type of Tibetan Temple Bells that HO
refers to (there is a drawing of them on page 115 of the 3rd Edition of
the Users Guide). The ones pictured in your tool are very large...and
you would not need two of them. They remind me very much of the kind of
bells that are used at traditional formal meetings (in the West) and
used to bring order into the meeting. And pretty expensive at 229.99 to
589,99 on the amazon link provided by your tool, weighing 3 to 5 pounds.
Hempal Shrestha of Nepal
http://www.openspaceworldmap.org/moreinfo/businesscard.php?p_id=711&country_name=Nepal&c_id=127
brought two of them as a present for me. They now sit on my workdesk,
very impressive.
The ones in the attached picture are flat, 8cm in diameter, about 400gm
a pair and have a rather soft, dark sound that carries... you can hear
them in every corner of the room with 2000+ people gathered (OS in
Würzburg in 2003 with 2108 participants)... but they are good for
smaller groups because you can control the volume nicely (takes a little
practice). This type costs about 40 to 60 US$.
The pair I use I purchased in a Buddhist Temple in San Diego early in
this century... actually I got several, one of them I gave to Galina
Tsarkova, she holds them in her hands in her World Map entry
http://www.openspaceworldmap.org/moreinfo/businesscard.php?p_id=351&country_name=Russian%20Fed.&c_id=146
click on the picture to enlarge it to get a closer look.
cheers
mmp
On 16.05.2014 23:14, Lucas Cioffi wrote:
Hi All,
I'm quite excited to bring this topic up and I'm hoping there are a few
like-minded souls willing to explore this direction with me.
*The Goal:* /complement rather than replace this discussion list with a
searchable knowledge repository, consisting of stories and recommendations/
/
/
*What: *I'm building a tool which can help us share stories and
recommendations with each other in an efficient way. I would like to
put it to work in service of the OS community. When I floated this idea
on this discussion list a few months ago, I got some great feedback.
Some people see the potential for how we can better archive the
stories and insights that we are already sharing on this list.
*Why: *Every one of us probably has at least a few quick & useful
insights about OST and facilitation each month (that ends up being
thousands of insights per month!), yet we are collectively sharing only
a small fraction of all those insights. On a practical level, if
someone is planning an open space event and faced with a particular
challenge, they could perform a quick search on the knowledge repository
to see who has dealt with this in the past. After holding their event,
they can add their insights for what worked and didn't work for them.
*How:* The tool is called Bark!Best and it can do some fun things. At
the simplest level, it is a way to share questions and answers and to
make those answers easy to find. Most interactions happen like this--
people sharing short recommendations in text form. At a more advanced
level, it is similar to a 24/7 online open space; it lets participants
take any question and post it as a video-chat session at any time of the
day.
*Getting Started*
I took a few first steps. Harrison gave me permission to go through the
full text of the User Guide; I extracted 160+ recommendations and their
respective 270+ supporting reasons, organizing and posting them all here
in a Q&A format: http://www.barkbest.com/openspace
Those quotes from the User Guide are just a starting point for all of us
to build upon. */Think of a living book that is written and updated by
all of us, all the time-- what an amazing body of knowledge that could
be. /* For example, the User Guide describes two "ways to empower
participants <http://barkbest.com/s/DuQLY>"; as a group, we might be
able to think of a dozen more based on all our experiences.
*Next Steps*
* Some of you might have some exciting ideas for what might be
possible here. Please, please, please reach out to me or to
everyone on this list.
* It would be absolutely amazing to work with a few folks who would
donate a few hours of their time to go through some of the most
fruitful parts of the archive, to harvest insights and copy them
into the knowledge repository.
*Respect & Caution*
Having been on this list for five years, I respect and honor that this
discussion list has been going a very long time before I got here. I
recognize that I cannot succeed without a few other people who are
willing to take the lead and guide this project so that it meets the
actual needs of this community. I hope you'll join me!
--
Lucas Cioffi
Co-Founder, Bark!Best
NCDD Board Member, 2011-2013
Charlottesville, VA
917-528-1831
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--
Michael M Pannwitz
Draisweg 1, 12209 Berlin, Germany
++49 - 30-772 8000
Check out the Open Space World Map presently showing 396 resident Open
Space Workers in 68 countries working in a total of 143 countries
worldwide: www.openspaceworldmap.org
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