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Community and beyond: building a sustainable co...

Poren Chiang
December 17, 2018

Community and beyond: building a sustainable community

A better-refined, 2 ½-hour talk on the formation and core spirits of SITCON and NTUOSC community, providing examples on community transparency and collaborator sustainability. Huge thanks to Open Development Cambodia and all staff members!
2018/12/17 Talk @ 1st Cambodia ICT Camp, Siem Reap, Cambodia.

Poren Chiang

December 17, 2018
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Transcript

  1. • Senior Law student at
 National Taiwan University • Organizer

    of SITCON 2017 • Founder of NTU Open Source Community Basically these mean free labors RSChiang a.k.a. RS Photo by Passionfruit on Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0
  2. What this session is about • Issues we face as

    an IT-interested student • The founding of SITCON and how we are dealing with the problem • What you could do to make impacts, either as a individual or as a club member • Open Data, Open API, and how FLOSS spirit could change your campus (I’ll try to cover this as much as possible in time)
  3. How many of you have IT / Computer Science courses

    in middle school? What is it about? Does your school encourage indie projects?
  4. Here’s what occurs in Taiwan • Computer courses from 3rd

    grade to 10th grade • Official course outline requires the coverage of: • the ability to operate and repair computer • image, document, and multimedia processing • the understanding of database and programming languages
  5. Here’s what actually occurs in Taiwan • Computer course are

    mostly occupied by tests • For fortunate ones, actual courses usually cover: • asking 3rd-graders to memorize circuit pieces • copy and pasting pictures from Internet • 90s clip-art borders with Microsoft® Word™ • stuff your PPTs with pop music MP3s
  6. Here’s what actually occurs in Taiwan • Computer course are

    mostly occupied by tests • For fortunate ones, actual courses usually cover: • asking 3rd-graders to memorize circuit pieces • copy and pasting pictures from Internet • 90s clip-art borders with Microsoft® Word™ • stuff your PPTs with pop music MP3s legal?
  7. • Ministry of Education in Taiwan strongly favors algorithm competitions,

    which suffers from decade-old rules and restrictions. • Informatics Olympics and Science Fair are the two only ways that would benefit university applications. • Vocational schools still teach VB6. • Students interested in real-world technologies are virtually separated, discouraged, and isolated.
  8. The origin of SITCON • In 2012, IT conferences in

    Taiwan coincidentally aligned in a monthly basis • Tech communities called for volunteers, which many high school clubs and university students joined the effort • Impressed by each others’ projects, the concept of students’ conference gradually matures
  9. SITCON is about a stage, where tech wizards could freely

    share their works and insights; a summit, where clubs and societies can gather and meet new friends; a community, where newcomers may be enlightened through their journey toward IT world
  10. Within two days, twelve students gathered for the first meet

    up without knowing each other; more than a hundred students introduced themselves and joined the Facebook group discussion; website launched a day after; logo and mascot proposed on the following day.
  11. SITCON aims • To encourage indie projects and researches, •

    To spread and support student communities, • To promote FLOSS technologies and belief, • To impact the education system, saving future students from misery and pain.
  12. Grass-root transparency • walk-ins are encouraged for all sorts of

    meetup • discussion records are publicly available for community members • Quotes and punchlines welcomed • Release early, release often • Bad communications cost
  13. – joked Rifur, Vice Organizer of SITCON 2013 “We founded

    SITCON community 
 just in case you have no friends
 to eat late-night snacks together while discussing geeky stuff.”
  14. Extending influence • SITCON Conference • HackGen Hackathon • SITCON

    Camp • The Open Source Way Workshop • SITCON Hour of Code • Regular meetups
  15. • 臺北 Taipei (Sunday)× NTUOSC • 桃園 Taoyuan (Tuesday) ×

    YZU ITAC • 新⽵竹 Hsinchu (Monday) × NCTU CCCA • 苗栗 Miaoli (Wednesday)× NUU CSIE • 臺中 Taichung (Saturday) • 雲林林 Yunlin (Sunday) • 臺南 Tainan (Monday) × NCKU C4Labs • ⾼高雄 Kaoshiung (Saturday) • 花蓮 Hualien (Saturday) × SOSCET Regular meetups Photo by Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Taiwan
  16. NTU Open Source Community Action Hacka- thons Open Source (movement)

    Tech Dissenting
 Groups Indie
 Projects Awareness
  17. With a supporting club, NTUOSC complements SITCON’s emphasis on IT

    education, calling for “write code to change society” and encourage FLOSS contribution; Co-host local meetups and lectures, facilitating the quasi-legal entity status to introduce great insights; Bring mutual awareness and participation, guarding the community’s future sustainability.
  18. Tips on running a community • Be transparent • Be

    willing to share • Hold training sessions • Bond locally • Collaborate with local groups