Re: What keeps me going...

2009-01-13 Thread Ankur Verma
+1!

Very well written with highly inspirational thoughts.

--
Ankur

On Tue, Jan 13, 2009 at 3:28 AM, Sameer Verma sve...@sfsu.edu wrote:

 So, a lot of people have been asking me this lately in the OLPC
 context. What keeps you going? Of course, this question has been
 asked by different people with different intentions. Some are
 genuinely surprised that I have so much free time, while others
 suspect a hidden treasure. So, I decided to shoot off this e-mail to
 the lists for two reasons. One, I am not sure which list is
 appropriate, and two, I think many of us do question the merits of
 this project from time to time, and I want to share my sentiments with
 you all. Feel free to delete if you don't like it.

 During my visit to India a long time friend asked me this question.
 What keeps you going with a project like this? He wanted to know
 where I got all this free time from. Well, the assumption is a bit
 off. A lot of the time I put into the project aligns with my
 profession as well. Sustainable IT, network infrastructure, software
 development, collaboration, etc. are all parts of my research stream.
 so is FOSS development, adoption and use. So, finding time isn't that
 much of a stretch. Its a two way street. I am able to bring these
 things into my classroom and into my research. Of course, without
 support from my family, this would be extremely difficult. For
 instance, when I am off, gallivanting in Jamaica and working on a
 pilot there, my wife has to cover for me and she does so with a lot of
 effort, but we think its all for a good cause. We hope some of this
 will make a difference in the lives of communities there.

 Others, such as some of my students, have asked me the same question
 but with a little wink wink glint in their eye. They think there is
 something ulterior or somehow I am getting paid or I am bucking the
 system (wonder where they got that idea from). Getting across the
 volunteer ethic is very hard. Either you get it or you don't. Of
 course, volunteer-ism is driven by many things including ego, fame,
 and little green laptops. It is also driven by a desire to make a
 difference in the system. Sometimes the system doesn't want that
 change, but we still push for it. But that's another e-mail.

 Then there are some of us who have an addictive desire to take things
 apart. You know who I'm taking about! Take apart and put back together
 things that most people would leave untouched. People who subscribe to
 Make magazine or own a soldering iron would know. Its a strange itch,
 but its an ethic that brings people together. Its hard to explain
 these things to people who've never opened a radio, or a watch. On the
 other hand, if you are the Maker type, you would instantly know. We
 were surprised at the courage of attendees at the December OLPC-SF
 meeting. They took their XOs apart and put them back together. Well,
 most of us did. Only Robert needed some help from a 7 year old
 attendee :-) (Sorry Robert. Couldn't resist!)

 I think its a lot of these reasons that keep us all together in this
 project and its offshoots, but one experience has captured my
 enthusiasm unlike any other. This was a trip to Khairat, India's first
 pilot site (http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Khairat_school). I had seen
 pictures, and even videos and news clips of Khairat. But driving out
 there with the folks from Reliance (the pilot partner) was a turning
 point. Seeing five year olds handling their XOs with ease was just
 amazing. Seeing them document their lives and showing me photos via
 the journal suddenly made a lot of sense. All discussions of a lack of
 a file manager were moot at that point. Rahul and Manisha sure don't
 need a file manager to show me what they did! They could care less
 about /etc or /usr/local/  I wish I could get the journal on my Ubuntu
 Thinkpad laptop.

 They had documented a tight rope walker who visited Khairat. They had
 documented Gandhi's birthday (2nd Oct) and showed me the photos. They
 didn't care that Sugar was slow. After all, for them to know that
 Sugar is slow, they would have to know something faster! They love
 their XOs and it shows. Then there is Mr. Surve, the teacher at
 Khairat. With very little training, this man gets his gang going. He's
 built solar system animations in e-toys and precipitation cycle in
 Paint. He has made his own lesson plans in Write and is constantly
 yelling in Marathi (local language) Go to the neighborhood. Join the
 mesh. Who woulda thunk it? In the middle-of-nowhere-Khairat, a
 teacher is yelling a his kids to join the mesh. A draft version of
 802.11s has made it that far! Of course Rahul and Manisha don't know
 that. And they don't need to, because we have a team of do-gooders who
 take care of all that. And that's where my respect and unconditional
 support for this group comes from. I've met very few of you in person.
 But, my sentiments for this group as a whole are always equated with
 the joy that is now in 

What keeps me going...

2009-01-12 Thread Sameer Verma
So, a lot of people have been asking me this lately in the OLPC
context. What keeps you going? Of course, this question has been
asked by different people with different intentions. Some are
genuinely surprised that I have so much free time, while others
suspect a hidden treasure. So, I decided to shoot off this e-mail to
the lists for two reasons. One, I am not sure which list is
appropriate, and two, I think many of us do question the merits of
this project from time to time, and I want to share my sentiments with
you all. Feel free to delete if you don't like it.

During my visit to India a long time friend asked me this question.
What keeps you going with a project like this? He wanted to know
where I got all this free time from. Well, the assumption is a bit
off. A lot of the time I put into the project aligns with my
profession as well. Sustainable IT, network infrastructure, software
development, collaboration, etc. are all parts of my research stream.
so is FOSS development, adoption and use. So, finding time isn't that
much of a stretch. Its a two way street. I am able to bring these
things into my classroom and into my research. Of course, without
support from my family, this would be extremely difficult. For
instance, when I am off, gallivanting in Jamaica and working on a
pilot there, my wife has to cover for me and she does so with a lot of
effort, but we think its all for a good cause. We hope some of this
will make a difference in the lives of communities there.

Others, such as some of my students, have asked me the same question
but with a little wink wink glint in their eye. They think there is
something ulterior or somehow I am getting paid or I am bucking the
system (wonder where they got that idea from). Getting across the
volunteer ethic is very hard. Either you get it or you don't. Of
course, volunteer-ism is driven by many things including ego, fame,
and little green laptops. It is also driven by a desire to make a
difference in the system. Sometimes the system doesn't want that
change, but we still push for it. But that's another e-mail.

Then there are some of us who have an addictive desire to take things
apart. You know who I'm taking about! Take apart and put back together
things that most people would leave untouched. People who subscribe to
Make magazine or own a soldering iron would know. Its a strange itch,
but its an ethic that brings people together. Its hard to explain
these things to people who've never opened a radio, or a watch. On the
other hand, if you are the Maker type, you would instantly know. We
were surprised at the courage of attendees at the December OLPC-SF
meeting. They took their XOs apart and put them back together. Well,
most of us did. Only Robert needed some help from a 7 year old
attendee :-) (Sorry Robert. Couldn't resist!)

I think its a lot of these reasons that keep us all together in this
project and its offshoots, but one experience has captured my
enthusiasm unlike any other. This was a trip to Khairat, India's first
pilot site (http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Khairat_school). I had seen
pictures, and even videos and news clips of Khairat. But driving out
there with the folks from Reliance (the pilot partner) was a turning
point. Seeing five year olds handling their XOs with ease was just
amazing. Seeing them document their lives and showing me photos via
the journal suddenly made a lot of sense. All discussions of a lack of
a file manager were moot at that point. Rahul and Manisha sure don't
need a file manager to show me what they did! They could care less
about /etc or /usr/local/  I wish I could get the journal on my Ubuntu
Thinkpad laptop.

They had documented a tight rope walker who visited Khairat. They had
documented Gandhi's birthday (2nd Oct) and showed me the photos. They
didn't care that Sugar was slow. After all, for them to know that
Sugar is slow, they would have to know something faster! They love
their XOs and it shows. Then there is Mr. Surve, the teacher at
Khairat. With very little training, this man gets his gang going. He's
built solar system animations in e-toys and precipitation cycle in
Paint. He has made his own lesson plans in Write and is constantly
yelling in Marathi (local language) Go to the neighborhood. Join the
mesh. Who woulda thunk it? In the middle-of-nowhere-Khairat, a
teacher is yelling a his kids to join the mesh. A draft version of
802.11s has made it that far! Of course Rahul and Manisha don't know
that. And they don't need to, because we have a team of do-gooders who
take care of all that. And that's where my respect and unconditional
support for this group comes from. I've met very few of you in person.
But, my sentiments for this group as a whole are always equated with
the joy that is now in the lives of kids like Rahul and Manisha.

OLPC brings a level of hope that is rare in projects. Netbooks, while
an offshoot of what OLPC has done, still fail to address key issues.
They still have embedded Wi-Fi 

Re: What keeps me going...

2009-01-12 Thread quozl
+1
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Re: [Grassroots-l] What keeps me going...

2009-01-12 Thread sapan kadakia
Hey,

Well wriiten mail  with lot of motivation and a whole new source of
energy for every volunteer to work for . lets hope to join the
missing dots all over and try to achieve all the tagets of this
project.

cheers,
sapan

On Tue, Jan 13, 2009 at 3:28 AM, Sameer Verma sve...@sfsu.edu wrote:

 So, a lot of people have been asking me this lately in the OLPC
 context. What keeps you going? Of course, this question has been
 asked by different people with different intentions. Some are
 genuinely surprised that I have so much free time, while others
 suspect a hidden treasure. So, I decided to shoot off this e-mail to
 the lists for two reasons. One, I am not sure which list is
 appropriate, and two, I think many of us do question the merits of
 this project from time to time, and I want to share my sentiments with
 you all. Feel free to delete if you don't like it.

 During my visit to India a long time friend asked me this question.
 What keeps you going with a project like this? He wanted to know
 where I got all this free time from. Well, the assumption is a bit
 off. A lot of the time I put into the project aligns with my
 profession as well. Sustainable IT, network infrastructure, software
 development, collaboration, etc. are all parts of my research stream.
 so is FOSS development, adoption and use. So, finding time isn't that
 much of a stretch. Its a two way street. I am able to bring these
 things into my classroom and into my research. Of course, without
 support from my family, this would be extremely difficult. For
 instance, when I am off, gallivanting in Jamaica and working on a
 pilot there, my wife has to cover for me and she does so with a lot of
 effort, but we think its all for a good cause. We hope some of this
 will make a difference in the lives of communities there.

 Others, such as some of my students, have asked me the same question
 but with a little wink wink glint in their eye. They think there is
 something ulterior or somehow I am getting paid or I am bucking the
 system (wonder where they got that idea from). Getting across the
 volunteer ethic is very hard. Either you get it or you don't. Of
 course, volunteer-ism is driven by many things including ego, fame,
 and little green laptops. It is also driven by a desire to make a
 difference in the system. Sometimes the system doesn't want that
 change, but we still push for it. But that's another e-mail.

 Then there are some of us who have an addictive desire to take things
 apart. You know who I'm taking about! Take apart and put back together
 things that most people would leave untouched. People who subscribe to
 Make magazine or own a soldering iron would know. Its a strange itch,
 but its an ethic that brings people together. Its hard to explain
 these things to people who've never opened a radio, or a watch. On the
 other hand, if you are the Maker type, you would instantly know. We
 were surprised at the courage of attendees at the December OLPC-SF
 meeting. They took their XOs apart and put them back together. Well,
 most of us did. Only Robert needed some help from a 7 year old
 attendee :-) (Sorry Robert. Couldn't resist!)

 I think its a lot of these reasons that keep us all together in this
 project and its offshoots, but one experience has captured my
 enthusiasm unlike any other. This was a trip to Khairat, India's first
 pilot site (http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Khairat_school). I had seen
 pictures, and even videos and news clips of Khairat. But driving out
 there with the folks from Reliance (the pilot partner) was a turning
 point. Seeing five year olds handling their XOs with ease was just
 amazing. Seeing them document their lives and showing me photos via
 the journal suddenly made a lot of sense. All discussions of a lack of
 a file manager were moot at that point. Rahul and Manisha sure don't
 need a file manager to show me what they did! They could care less
 about /etc or /usr/local/  I wish I could get the journal on my Ubuntu
 Thinkpad laptop.

 They had documented a tight rope walker who visited Khairat. They had
 documented Gandhi's birthday (2nd Oct) and showed me the photos. They
 didn't care that Sugar was slow. After all, for them to know that
 Sugar is slow, they would have to know something faster! They love
 their XOs and it shows. Then there is Mr. Surve, the teacher at
 Khairat. With very little training, this man gets his gang going. He's
 built solar system animations in e-toys and precipitation cycle in
 Paint. He has made his own lesson plans in Write and is constantly
 yelling in Marathi (local language) Go to the neighborhood. Join the
 mesh. Who woulda thunk it? In the middle-of-nowhere-Khairat, a
 teacher is yelling a his kids to join the mesh. A draft version of
 802.11s has made it that far! Of course Rahul and Manisha don't know
 that. And they don't need to, because we have a team of do-gooders who
 take care of all that. And that's where my respect and