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How Can Techies Give Back? 85

KReilly asks: "As the school year starts back up for me, I have been looking for a volunteer program I could work in. This year I have been considering creating my own non-profit organization, but I still lack a clear picture of what I hope to accomplish. I have read about communities wiring classrooms for the internet in California, and repairing computers donated by businesses for schools. I would like to do this, but find many schools and libraries would deny this donation since its maintenance would be too big of an investment for them and they do not want to experiment with Open Source alternatives that would lower the PC repair cost. So my question to you is how do you, as a tech, give back to society and aid in social programs? And, any information/advice you wanted to share on my original idea would be much appreciated."
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How Can Techies Give Back?

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  • Lots of things (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dancin_Santa ( 265275 ) <DancinSanta@gmail.com> on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @08:51PM (#6681405) Journal
    Help in a gubernatorial election campaign.

    Volunteer at the soup kitchen.

    Donate unused stuff to Goodwill.

    Offer your time to the old-folks home.

    Pick up litter in your neighborhood.

    Give money to the Salvation Army.

    Offer to read to children in the hospital.

    Drop a few dimes into a homeless person's cup.

    Buy a couple dozen Krispy Kreme donuts for your coworkers.

    Start a community watch program in your neighborhood.

    There are so many things you can do that do not necessarily require technology. These things are easier to give and easier to receive because people in need do not always have the means to support technological donations. It's the human touch that is important in charity.
    • Re:Lots of things (Score:5, Insightful)

      by rmohr02 ( 208447 ) <mohr.42NO@SPAMosu.edu> on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @09:34PM (#6681684)
      There are so many things you can do that do not necessarily require technology. These things are easier to give and easier to receive because people in need do not always have the means to support technological donations. It's the human touch that is important in charity.
      This is true, but the submitter does have skills, and would rather utilize those skills than do something anyone can do. This is not dissimilar from lawyers doing pro-bono legal work.
      • Unless he's willing to support these machines at no charge indefinitely, then it's unlikely he will have very many takers. It's all about the TCO, of which startup costs (which he is offering to bring to zero) is only a small portion.
        • Re:Lots of things (Score:3, Insightful)

          by rmohr02 ( 208447 )
          That is assuming he would be installing something new. He could merely maintain something someone else has set up. If he could find enough other interested people in the IT field he could create a non-profit org (as mentioned in the article), and then it would be more realistic to support machines for a given period of time (though not indefinitely).
  • huh? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ceejayoz ( 567949 ) <cj@ceejayoz.com> on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @08:51PM (#6681406) Homepage Journal
    they do not want to experiment with Open Source alternatives that would lower the PC repair cost

    What Open Source software packages are going to lower the repair costs of a PC?
    • There are other infered costs other than the hardware. Paying a tech to reload Windows (or fix whatever Win32 software package which broke for whatever reason) is what the poster was talking about.
      • What, and Open Source software is automatically perfect and never breaks like a Win32 package? They're going to have to pay techs to repair stuff whether it's Linux or Windows.

        Not only that, but their card catalog software's most likely either web based or runs only on Windows - either way, it costs them nothing to stay with Windows.
        • Well, it's been known that Windows disintegrates over time with casual use, even when no updates to the system are made. Having to support a LAN full of Windows machines has always been more of time and resource intensive than a UNIX counterpart (Assuming competant admins); Anyone that's spent 20 minutes in the real world (academia or professionally) could tell you that.
          • All the sites I've worked at just have a ghosted image of the default setup - something that would work just fine for a library or school setting. If there's a problem with a computer, just load the default image - quick fix. Hell, do it every couple months as a precautionary measure.

            And you're assuming "competent admins" in a public library with no dedicated IT staff - not very likely.
            • Ghost images work fine if everyone is running essentially the same hardware. I challenge you to find a school environment where (outside of maybe a single lab that was donated at one time) you would find that to be true.
              • Set the ghost images up with the basic Microsoft Plug'n'Play drivers that are the default for stuff that it can't find a driver for, and just run WindowsUpdate once when the ghost image is installed. Windows'll automatically download all the necessary drivers - whee, done.
    • I dare you to make a diskless windows client without paying out of your as for the software and hardware. I can put the linux kernel onto a network floppy image and have machines remotely mount '/' via NFS. Whe I upgrade software on the server it immediately hits all the clients, because they share the same file system. Can't do that in windows, and thats one hard disk that's never going to fail for each machine, and TENS of O.S. reloads over it's lifetime.

      Imagine how easy PC support would be if you never
  • hmm (Score:1, Flamebait)

    by honold ( 152273 )
    that's a tough one since most of the slashdot posters have already been accepted to college
  • Are you patient? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by doc_traig ( 453913 ) on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @08:55PM (#6681425) Homepage Journal

    If you are, go to a retirement community and teach seniors how to use computers to access the Internet (mail and web). You will be bowled over by how thankful they are and how excited it makes some of them.

    • I can see the funeral now ...

      Rest in Peace Uncle Eddie.
      (whispers in the back)
      Ahem, do you have something to add, Mr /.?

      Yea, I was just saying too bad he died so soon in life, poor rascal almost had a firm grasp of the whole 'double click' vs 'single click' concept.

      -:-

      If you are going to teach, teach kids.
      • If you are going to teach, teach kids.

        I *completely* disagree with you! To say that elderly individuals should not be taught due to their age is appalling. It's not just about giving people skills so that they can give us some sort of economic return later -- it's about improving quality of life. To allow elderly individuals that have little or no mobility to more fully take part in the larger community via the internet is to unshackle them from bodies that may have pretty much abandoned them. Maybe

        • I disagreed with me too - see the next post, from me, with the word 'experiences' in all caps.

          Then again if you are going to do the old people justice, don't bother trying to teach them anything - learn from them. Let them teach you, draw from their history, wisdom, experience and knowledge. It would be a LOT more rewarding to them at the end of the day to know that they passed on their knowledge and wisdom to someone that was going to carry it forward, than to learn how to surf the Internet. In sharing
    • On second thought ...

      Actually this would be a good idea if instead of trying to teach them computer literacy (which would be a waste) or surfing the web (another waste) .. give them (via technology) something nobody else can : EXPERIENCES.

      Everquest
      Flight Simulators (good ones)
      Pr0n - and not the tame stuff either, dig out your personal private reserve of the good stuff.
      NASCAR, including the Logitech wheel / pedals
      WWII based air combat sims

      Multi-Player with the other residents would be even better.

      You giv
  • by ceri ( 161894 ) on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @08:59PM (#6681464)
    Look for non-profit organizations such as the local Food Bank, the American Heart Association [americanheart.org], the Red Cross [redcross.org], or Junior Achievement [ja.org].

    Even if these organizations don't need technical help, volunteer your time and encourage friends/coworkers to join you. It won't (or at least, it shouldn't) kill you to walk away from the computer world for a few hours a week.
  • huh. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by duck 'o death ( 597155 ) on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @09:01PM (#6681478)

    I don't know about where you live, but I know there's a lot of small non-profit/charity orgs in my neighbourhood (Eastern Canada) that already have some sort of net access. But what they *do* need is help in getting the best out of their often old hardware, or just getting it to work at all.

    I'm not talking classrooms (afaik most classrooms around here have access to *paid* staff of some sort, no?) but more like your local literacy council, small library, soup kitchen, women's shelter, yadda yadda ...

    They usually have the hardware. What they need is the (open) software, and the training. And then you've just made a difference in their operation, and their life.

  • be a warm body (Score:2, Interesting)

    by ajrs ( 186276 )
    Most service groups need bodies more than they PCs. If a problem with a tech fix presents its self, offer to solve it. You might even shudder have to support some windows apps. When a real problem that is best solved with open source software happens, you'll be on hand to do it.

    I'm doing some some office work for my church, and I set up a mysql database to make it easier. Nobody but me knows, or cares, that it takes half the time it did before.
  • by pillohead ( 553676 ) <dirtywetback AT hotmail DOT com> on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @09:12PM (#6681562) Journal

    I found a small homeless youth advocate non-profit that needed a lot of computer help. Since they were small I spoke directly to the Executive Director and convinced her to let me solicit donations for old computers and fix em up. She even gave me a budget for a new computer when I explained I could use 1 server to power the desktop of all these old computers she had. Now they have 3 computers (soon to be six) running FreeBSD with no licensing costs that she can give access to these homeless kids. I networked up the whole place and setup their dsl and firewalled it with some other old computer. She couldn't be happier, but since I was a volunteer and I couldn't find work I had to move back to California to save money. I can do most administration tasks from here (thank god for ssh) but sometimes the dsl modem gets disconnected and I have to walk a kid there through ifconfig down, ifconfig up routine, bleh.

    The great thing about this is now that I'm moving back they can help me find work and an apartment since I'll be a homeless youth, YAY!

    • I found a small homeless youth advocate non-profit that needed a lot of computer help. Since they were small I spoke directly to the Executive Director and convinced her to let me solicit donations for old computers and fix em up. She even gave me a budget [...]

      This is exactly the sort of approach you should take, KReilly. Thinking "This year I have been considering creating my own non-profit organization, but I still lack a clear picture of what I hope to accomplish." is putting the cart before the h

  • Check with CityCares (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
    CityCares specializes in matching volunteers with local opportunities. Check their website [citycares.org] for links to your local CityCares affiliate.
  • how do you, as a tech, give back to society and aid in social programs?

    I try to stay employed and pay my taxes. Seriously. That's it. I've done the giving back bit and I got sick of the waste, people working the system, watching my organizations get ripped off (how desperate do you have to be to steal from a church or a volunteer organization?) and especially the inevitable volunteer vs. paid staff battles.

    The only other thing I do today is help with the kids at my church, but that's because I can't

    • I try to stay employed and pay my taxes. Seriously. That's it. I've done the giving back bit

      No, you haven't. Taxes are an obligation, not a charitable donation. You owe this money.

      While I understand your point, since some portion of taxes are supposedly directed to help the less fortunate, because their payment is required, the principle is effectively, "You owe those who earn less than you simply because you earn more".

      That is not charity, that is theft.

      Charity comes from a desire to help others wh

      • Well we could rephrase that a little.

        If 60% of my income wasn't being STOLEN in the form of taxes, I could probably afford to give a lot more to charity. How's that?
        • If 60% of my income wasn't being STOLEN in the form of taxes, I could probably afford to give a lot more to charity. How's that?

          BRAVO!

          Unfortunately, so many think that paying their "fair share" of taxes means that the collection of taxes is somehow legitimate, and not theft. Arguing against this on principle will prove difficult.

          Therefore, to get people to wake up and see the lie, one has to attack the system by exposing it's hypocricy. Then perhaps, the moral bancruptcy can be exposed as well.

          But,

  • by Anonymous Coward
    At work, they made it mandatory that every employee do some sort of community charity event. They even pay for the day you are off working for charity. (Unless you are Salary, and you just loose your day off)... They also tied it to the performance and yearly raise, so it was basically required.

    Not bad enough, your sys-admins work 60 hours a week, have no life, and get to spend 1 day with the wife and kiddies, they have to spend their day off ripping out bushes at a fish spawning lake, so some CEO gets t
  • I'm more interested in how techies can get some in the first place :-)
  • by gokubi ( 413425 ) * on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @10:11PM (#6681888) Homepage
    I work for NPower [npower.org], a nonprofit that works with other nonprofits to help them use technology. We do all sorts of things around technology: training, planning, building networks, building applications--all at heavily subsidized rates.

    We also match volunteers with nonprofits that need help and don't want/can't pay consulting rates.

    I don't know where you are, but there are 9 NPowers nationwide [check our site] plus a number of "sister" organizations of ours do similar work in cities we don't have a presence in, like Compumentor [compumentor.org] in San Francisco.

    Check us out. Also check out N-TEN [nten.org], a national membership organization of nonprofit technical assistance providers.
    • I also work for a non-profit organization called Technology Access Foundation [techaccess.org]. We teach computer and job skills to high school students of color in the Seattle area.

      We're always looking for teaching assistants to lend a few hours a day to help with classes. It certainly helps if they have techinical backgrounds as our classes cover HTML, VB, ASP, and Networking.

      If you're in the Seattle area, and want to volunteer please check out the website.
    • by b!arg ( 622192 )
      I was going to suggest NPower, but there also some decent websites out there that list opportunities. Two of note that I know of are www.volunteermatch.org [volunteermatch.org] and www.idealist.org [idealist.org]. I'm working on a volunteer project that I found on the latter.

      If you are in a U.S. city there is probably also a non-profit organization that essentially finds volunteers for other non-profits. Here in Seattle it is called Seattle Works [seattleworks.org] and there are a bunch of them throughout the U.S. that are all related [citycares.org]. They are a good sou
  • by Joe Tie. ( 567096 ) on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @10:47PM (#6682054)
    How about give back to your less well-todo brothers.

    1. Buy raman noodles and mountain dew.
    2. Donate to someone at the local lug.
    3. Nonprofit!
  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @11:11PM (#6682221) Journal
    If in the US, jobs are disappearing at a frightening rate, esp techie jobs. Consider the idea of creating a for-profit company that create jobs. Then use some of that profit to help drive the non-profit.
    • This is about the smartest thing I have heard all day. I used to wonder about CEO's and VP's that roll up their sleeves on a hot and dusty Saturday afternoon mowing the church yard and cooking soup for the homeless.

      Lets see here, use some pretend numbers and see where they lead us :

      CEO earns $1M a year - that is about $500 an hour.
      VP earns $200,000 a year, about $100 an hour.

      Instead of spending 8 hours a month (2 hours each Saturday) doing menial labor, pool 8 hours worth of salary each for a total of $
      • You got it. I use to tutor and teach for fun, but at this point, if I can help create jobs, then that is more useful. Sad though. Personally, I am working on 2 companies (actually I work at a start-up and am doing a start-up). If all goes well, both will need new techies by the end of august. I just wish more techies would work towards that.
  • by 1iar_parad0x ( 676662 ) on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @11:15PM (#6682256)
    I hate to get on my soapbox, but this is Slashdot and it's a slow article. Incidentally, the first half of my post is a relevant rant and the second half is my deduced idea. Ever in the Slashdot tradition, I delimit my rant in non-W3C compliant XML for all of you.

    /
    I'm one of the many dot com layoffs. I returned to school to finish my degree. In doing so, I've been getting by as a contract programmer. It's not stable so I've had to pick up some side work. However, most non-tech businesses won't even touch me. Ever try getting a job at a wal-mart when your last salary was twice the store manager. I tend to water down my background on those applications, but they won't even look at me. So, I've been working some pretty ugly labor-intensive temp work. My co-workers (and bosses) are severely uneducated. I'm not trying to be arrogant. It's just a fact. A couple of them are quite bright, but they never applied themselves.

    For instance, one coworker who I've become friends with is a perfect example. He has quite a bit of street smarts. I think he has a lot of potential. He even had a chance to go to college on a football scholarship. However, he somehow has it pounded into his head that school is impractical or completely unnecessary. (Of course given the state of urban American high schools.....) All of his plans are nothing but a bunch of get rich quick schemes. They also have a fair amount of holes in them as well. I think he also had trouble in school. However, he's been taking classes at a local community college and his grades have vastly improved.

    I'm pretty much a self-taught kind of guy. On the one hand, I think college is somewhat just a piece of paper. However, I realize the relevance of that paper in attaining a job. It's an unfortunate but necessary certification. We live in an age of watered down and proliferated certification. On the other hand, I'm probably more self-educated that the average person. When I was younger I spent quite a bit time acquiring books (on the cheap) on everything from computers, mathematics, physics, etc. I didn't even own a computer as a kid and had a bit of a steep learning curve in my first CS course.
    I can only imagine the digital divide is even worse. The guy I mentioned earlier wants to learn about computers. So I'm plan on helping him set up a home network with some older PCs I'm picking up at a local surplus auction. I'll introduce him to Linux. Maybe I even try to get him to learn a little about electronics and build a radio. Even if he doesn't plan to study CS, Math, or EE etc, hopefully he'll gain some insight in how to solve problems and think in a more analytical way. Hopefully he'll pick up a few job skills as well.
    /

    Here's my idea. Try finding a community center and teach a class in programming or networking. Not a stupid intro to the web/HTML class. Offer a serious course. Get the students to open up a few machines. Set up a LAN. Throw a LAN party at the end [run Quake if the machines are too old]. Trust me, if you go to a real inner city neighborhood, they probably won't own high-end PCs anyway. Most colleges and gov't agencies sell old PCs in bulk at low rates. DON'T TEACH TO THE LOWEST COMMON DENOMINATOR. Try the Feynman approach. Make it challenging and throw hooks that will catch the interest of your listeners. Raise the standards of the students. Sure, some will get bored, confused, or drop out. However, there will be those one or two students who will get hooked. This is why public schools SUCK in this country. Always lowering the standards to meet the needs of the worst students. Apparently the average EdD hasn't hard of Zeno's Paradox. Let's reduce our education to an infinitesimal level. Great idea!! Anyway, personally I'd love to design a GPL type collection of books to introduce CS.
  • I have read about communities wiring classrooms for the internet in California, and repairing computers donated by businesses for schools. I would like to do this, but find many schools and libraries would deny this donation since its maintenance would be too big of an investment

    You'll see a lot of this, I'm afraid. It's not just the maintenance issue either... schools have to find room for the new machines, their already-overloaded air conditioning systems (in the south) have to handle the increased heat
    • Actually one of the other main reasons for knockbacks is that a very large number of libraries already receive PCs through grants/donations etc. The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation provides lots of computers with all the software too so they don't need to look elsewhere (anti-Windows feelings aside, it helps a lot of communities).

      The other issue that that those libraries that don't get computers this way get them via sponsorship arrangements or commercial deals with computer vendors. It's a stupid arrang
  • by cognomen ( 695772 ) on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @11:34PM (#6682397)
    I got an email about this place:

    NGP Software [ngpsoftware.com]

    that said they're looking for programming interns to build a database for Democrats who want to fundraise. Mostly when I hear about tech help needed from anyone doing something social or political, it's pretty small-scale stuff, but these guys look like a big, interesting operation. I assume there are similar orgs. serving other major political parties.

    Also, Geekcorps [geekcorps.org] has always looked like a great bunch, if you want to go overseas.

    Finally, you mentioned libraries. I volunteered for quite a while just training people to use computers & the internet a few years back. Libraries may be more willing to accept volunteer labor to run community education classes than for stuff like wiring, because the education volunteers aren't giving something with an on-going support cost.

    Or, you could always do what I did...decide that programming just doesn't offer the opportunities for volunteer work that you want from your career, and then go to law school (law school being the absolute least pleasant experience under the sun, AFAICT) ;-).

    Good Luck.

  • by UnifiedTechs ( 100743 ) on Tuesday August 12, 2003 @11:45PM (#6682475) Homepage
    I work at a public High School and turn down many donations for computers, the main reason being they are too old, I can't talk about all school systems but anything I am offered is usually much worse then what I currently have and will not support the software I am running.

    That said one thing we have looked at is repairing the computers we ourselves throw away and giving them to needy students. Our main hurdle has been finding the manpower to do this. Try contacting local schools and see if any are trying to do something similar, Or just ask them what they think you can do. Asking is alot easyer and more productive then trying to quess what you can do for them.
  • Write software (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Tom7 ( 102298 ) on Wednesday August 13, 2003 @12:50AM (#6682831) Homepage Journal
    Well, I'm not a tech, but one way you can benefit society is to put your skills to work and write a free replacement for some needed piece of software. It's the kind of thing that not many people can do, and, since your work can be copied by millions of people once it's written without much extra work, it has the potential to have a great impact.

    If you're interested in helping society at a different level, you could volunteer to make or maintain a web page for some community organization that you support.

  • I work with a charity organization called Promise Of Iris - Pagan Outreach [promiseofiris.org]. I'd recommend looking outside of the tech industry, since while there are a few options looking for geeks, there are lots of other organizations desperately in need of one. How many smaller scale Non-Profit groups do you know that could use someone to set up their web server?
  • United Way (Score:2, Informative)

    by Seraphim_72 ( 622457 )
    Consider looking into the local branch of the United Way [unitedway.org]. Here in Minneapolis they run a volunteer needed column in the paper and I just checked they had at least 9 positions open looking for techies in Minneapolis/St. Paul. The cool part about the United Way is that they are a roll up of many different organizations. You can easily find one that you like and work with them. Hmmm...a place needs a database developer...might have to give them a call

    Also look for something like this - Volunteer Twin Cities [volunteertwincities.org]
  • Teach! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Jellybob ( 597204 ) on Wednesday August 13, 2003 @06:14AM (#6683924) Journal
    If you're in the UK (since I'm talking in general here, rather than specifically for the OP), then find your nearest UK Online or Learn Direct centre, and ask what they need help with... in all liklyhood, they *will* need help.

    I work in one as their sysadmin, and we're constantly looking for people either to maintain the machines here (I'm not full time), or do one to one teaching of the clients in everything from using a mouse, to database design.

    It's a great thing for yourself as well... when I started here I assumed I'd just be doing sysadmin, but because people know me, they'll ask me how to do things - and it's turned out to be the best part of the job, since I get the satisfaction of someone knowing something they didn't before.
  • by bluGill ( 862 ) on Wednesday August 13, 2003 @07:14AM (#6684085)

    Maybe I'm a cynic, but when someone days computers in the classroom I respond with why. Nobody has given an answer to that. Classrooms are for learning, and computers are a tool. A computer in every classroom makes as much sense as a hammer in every classroom. A hammer is a useful tool, and your education is incomplete if you don't take one shop class where you use one (in todays world you shouldn't spend much time with it, but shop is at just as important as art, music, and home ecconomics classes - give everyone a basic introduction to the subject and let those who like it take more), but there is no place for a hammer in many classrooms. A computer lab is useful. Perhaps several, because there are useful things to do with a computer in school, and some teachers will require many papers written on the computer.

    So your first task is to ask why when you have an idea.

    As for ideas: that is up to you. I recomend you stay away from things that need your day job skills. You don't want to get burnt out on the day job. Obviously if things are going to be wired for computers it takes an expert, but try not to burn yourself out.

    How about orginizing your local parade, or town days. These commities need a lot of help, and you get to meet people in the comunity useful to know. Is there an orginization that you support? Ducks unlimited [ducks.org] is my favorite, but there is also the EFF, which gets more press on slashdot. As a kid I was in 4-H, and they need help all the time, what groups where you in as a kid? How about local parks? Not the playground, (they might or might not get all the help they need from local taxes), but the state and federal parks that maybe nearby, which generally need more help than they get.

    • Maybe I'm a cynic, but when someone days computers in the classroom I respond with why. Nobody has given an answer to that. Classrooms are for learning, and computers are a tool. A computer in every classroom makes as much sense as a hammer in every classroom. A hammer is a useful tool, and your education is incomplete if you don't take one shop class where you use one (in todays world you shouldn't spend much time with it, but shop is at just as important as art, music, and home ecconomics classes - give

    • Agreed.

      When governments are happy to throw money at computers in classrooms but refuse to increase salaries for teachers you have to ask 'what's wrong here?'.

      I'm sure that in a decade or so we'll find out that kids who grew up with computers from day 1 will not have the writing, comprehension and reading skills that those who grew up without did.

      Computers are needed in schools, but yes you're right, they should be in a lab.

      • Giving teachers a raise is not proven to increase quality of teaching. (There is in fact a small number of bad teachers who will stay in teaching if their wage goes up, but some good teachers who will leave if they get more money elsewhere)

        The first clue of how good someone will do in school is at home. Parents that don't care about their kids end up with kids that fail, while parents that care end up with kids that pass. In general of course - we can all think of exceptions of the best familys turning

    • Maybe I'm a cynic, but when someone days computers in the classroom I respond
      with why.

      Maybe I'm a cynic, but when someone says books in the classroom I respond with
      why. Nobody has given an answer to that. Classrooms are for learning, and books
      are a tool. A book in every classroom makes as much sense as a hammer in every
      classroom. A hammer is a useful tool, and your education is incomplete if you
      don't take one shop class where you use one (in today's world you shouldn't
      spend much time with it, but shop is

      • Mostly good points, but a few nits:

        Everyone knows that publishing an electronic document costs next to nothing. and Availability. If the book is on the net and costs $0 to reproduce, then essentially it becomes available to everyone, and not just those that can afford it. Reproduction costs nothing, but editing still costs. Nobody would publish my works on slashdot on paper. The grammer and spelling are too horrid for that. However it seems that anyone would publish and read them electronicly. Edi

  • by mike77 ( 519751 ) <mraley77&yahoo,com> on Wednesday August 13, 2003 @08:00AM (#6684390)
    I think you're too involved in "the big picture". Being involved in social causes, when all said and done, comes down to a single person, doing something, giving something, helping out someone who needs it. you don't have to do something grandoise. Pick a local school, offer them your services free of charge to set up and maintain (administer) a computer lab, or teach an afterschool program for the kids, or hell, do that at the YMCA or something. you don't have to get famous or well known, just do something that makes a difference to someone, just find someone in need and help 'em out.
  • I do Merit Badge counseling for the Boy Scout Troops in my area. Specifically, the Computers merit badge.
  • One of the most rewarding ways I have given back to my hometown is to teach seminars to students learning computer technology. You coordinate with the instructors of the course or class, and you prepare a 2 hour presentation and invite as many students that can fill an auditorium. Teach something cool that you know about that students can relate too. Maybe it will be related to their specific field of study. I teach web development practices, and it is usually well received. It's a bit of work to prepa
  • School Districts (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Door-opening Fascist ( 534466 ) <skylar@cs.earlham.edu> on Wednesday August 13, 2003 @09:18AM (#6684802) Homepage

    Over the summer, I did volunteer work for a school district [k12.wi.us]. I started off helping them clean their ~1500 client machines, spread between over 25 buildings. Once that was done, they let me observe/work at one of their new schools, which was being re-modelled. I learned a lot about pulling cable there. Volunteering isn't just about giving....

  • Open Source Software. Many of us here at Slashdot think writing Open Source Software is a great way to give back to the community. Welcome to Slashdot, friend. Perhaps I can show you around the YRO section, too? Ooo! watch out for the trolls!
  • First and foremost, have a clear picture of what you're hoping to accomplish before even thinking about starting a NFP. I've seen a lot of people who have excitement like you and want to help out, but get hung up on being an NFP, which is a bit horse before the carriage IMO.

    Second, figure out what you do best (it sounds like hardware) and find existing local organizations so you can meet like minded people in your area and share ideas/resources. If you don't have anyone doing similar things in your area,

  • Just build systems (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Gherald ( 682277 )
    Over the years I've slapped together a good number of computers from semi-obsolete parts businesses get rid of (think Pentium IIs, Celeron 533mhz's, etc).

    To which I'll add a $20 Geforce MX, slap on a pirated version of XP, install a few games like the Sims, Fifa Soccer, Putt-Putt.. and lots and lots of educational software.

    I used to also load MS Office but I've been finding that OOo is good enough that I may just go with that in the future.

    I'll harden the system as much as possible.. install all the late
    • It will keep the kids out of trouble until the feds come busting through the door and busting them for having a sh*t load of pirated/illegal software! Come on, use Linux and some open source or free software. There's quality free stuff out there; check out the Knoppix Linux distribution.
      • Oh please, the feds have much better things to do than bust people on welfare for copyright infringement.

        I love the quality free stuff, its improving greatly. But I just don't have time to configure/support it for this many users.
  • some suggestions (Score:4, Informative)

    by dan_bethe ( 134253 ) <slashdot&smuckola,org> on Wednesday August 13, 2003 @03:20PM (#6688637)
    • GeekCorps [geekcorps.org] for international stuff
    • TechCorps [techcorps.org] for American stuff (maybe just California, I don't remember)
    • VolunteerMatch [volunteermatch.org] to find all volunteer opportunities around the world, some even virtual over the Internet
  • I'm a day away from finishing an internship at a local church, after which I head off to college. Yes, I got paid, so it wasn't necessarily volunteerwork, but churches have a surprising need for computers and technological services. Any help you can offer, be it Sundays or after school, I'm sure they'd love it. Certainly did here. :-)

    -JP
  • Real communities (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    As a techie, I've spent countless hours setting up virtural communities. Now though as a way to give back to the community I'm working with my real community setting up an online presence that all of my neighbors can use to exchange information about city council meetings, park rules, road work information in the neighborhood... The stupid crap that would normally be on a physical bulletin board, but due to the size of my neighborhood (we're talking about 2 square miles in the heart of midtown Atlanta) si
  • If you have skills with databases, webapp programming, web design, server administration, then volunteer your time towards running websites. Practically every organization either has or wants a website. They don't even need to be something that's tech-related.

    Besides, you should probably branch out and find some other interests while you're at it. Running a website for something not techie is a great way to do it.
  • If you don't even know what you'd do with a NFP, steer clear of the rocks and do NOT do it. The world does not need another NFP. The more that are created for a similar cause, the smaller the pool of volunteers and money are. It makes it very difficult to be successful.

    Remember that volunteering is not about getting recognition for doing good deads, or a pat on the back. You'll get to meet new people, and learn new skills, and sometimes it will suck and sometimes it will be really rewarding. But also, don'
  • Do your job (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jazman ( 9111 ) on Thursday August 14, 2003 @06:27AM (#6693616)
    Um, not sure why you think doing your job isn't contributing to society. You're paying taxes, you're not sponging, you're doing something useful to someone, and your spare cash is pushing the economy along as you spend it. You want to contribute to society - do your job well, get pay rises etc.

    So you're a student. Getting an education, even if it's at the country's expense, *is* giving to society. Instead of leaving and sponging, you're seeking to improve your skills, and thus eventually be able to do the above even better. Most societies, if not all, recognise the value of education and know the future lies in that route, even if it does cost a lot of tax$$$. Not educating people has a much greater impact on a society than educating people at that same society's expense. If you really feel you must do volunteer work as well, make sure your first, second, third and fourth priorities are your education and that you cannot possibly do better, then and ONLY then look to do a few hours outside that. You probably have a lot of homework - excel at that, then you can do the volunteer stuff when you're doing a 9-5. Don't underestimate the value of idle time - you need time to recover so that you can do your top priority best.

  • At my University, there are two service organizations that take advantage of my technology skills. There is a consulting club on campus that provides free consulting to non-profit and student organizations. As a technology consultant, I help groups decide what sort of solutions would be best for them and then help implement the solutions. Another organization designs Web sites for organizations that otherwise don't have the resources to build them. We provide free hosting, design, and, depending on the
  • The problem with Charities is theres too darn many of them. I should elaborate before I get berated. I think that hollywood/sports stars have too many foundations. Instead of helping an existing foundation they put together there own. I'm sure there is some tax write off involved as well. Don't get me wrong if a Star sheds light on a new issue that needs recognition by all means make a foundation but don't create Joe Bazooka's Cancer foundation when there is already an American Cancer foundation. - I d
  • I've been working as a volunteer at my local volunteer bureau doing bits of web-design, leaflets, forms & stationary that kind of thing for the local charities and voluntary organisations the bureau's in contact with.
  • Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net], Grumpy Watkins [uklinux.net],

For God's sake, stop researching for a while and begin to think!

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