I don't think that it is really any of our business what HOT does with
its funds.
I do consider it slightly ironical that HOT is approaching non-HOT OSM
for funds to distribute to what are in the end OSM groups though, surely
we can do that ourselves if it should be done at all. Wouldn't we
rathe
2017-12-16 17:04 GMT+01:00 Eugene Alvin Villar :
>
> And surely saying that the decision-making process is "completely
> intransparent" is just being plain lazy. Here are several blog posts and
> documents providing quite a bit of detail into the process and results that
> can be reached with just
On Saturday 16 December 2017, Eugene Alvin Villar wrote:
>
> I'm not sure if you are aware of how the microgrant system is run,
> but local OSM communities, such as OSM Zambia, submit grant proposals
> which are then selected by HOT. This is what is meant by Tyler when
> he wrote "OSM community lea
On Fri, Dec 15, 2017 at 2:44 AM, Christoph Hormann wrote:
> On Thursday 14 December 2017, Tyler Radford wrote:
> > [...] big-impact projects conceptualized by OSM community leaders.
>
> I had hoped that HOT learned from the tasking manager problem a few
> months back that properly referring to OS
On Thursday 14 December 2017, Tyler Radford wrote:
> [...] big-impact projects conceptualized by OSM community
> leaders.
I had hoped that HOT learned from the tasking manager problem a few
months back that properly referring to OSM in a way that clarifies the
difference between HOT and OSM is i
Dear all,
In 2016 hundreds of you supported the dream of starting a small grants
program to grow and sustain the activities of emerging OSM communities.
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team (HOT) was proud to administer this
"Microgrants" program, distributing more than $38,000 to 9 small-scale,
big-im
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