
The Diaspora Project Diaspora (software) The project was founded by Dan Grippi, Maxwell Salzberg, Raphael Sofaer and Ilya Zhitomirskiy, students at New York University's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. The group received crowdfunding in excess of $200,000 via Kickstarter. A consumer alpha version was released on November 23, 2010. Diaspora is intended to address privacy concerns related to centralized social networks by allowing users set up their own server (or "pod") to host content; pods can then interact to share status updates, photographs, and other social data.[6] It allows its users to host their data with a traditional web host, a cloud-based host, an ISP, or a friend. A key part of the Diaspora software design concept is that it should act as a "social aggregator", allowing posts to be easily imported from Facebook, Tumblr and Twitter. Development was shifted to free office space provided by Pivotal Labs in San Francisco, California. Jump up ^ Diaspora Project (12 December 2013).
Rincón Zapatista Guadalajara invita: Taller de verano: percusiones con cotidiáfonos. Domingos de julio 12 a 14 hrs. jul052012 El Rincón Zapatista Guadalajara te invita al: El taller se impartirá en 4 sesiones, todos los domingos de julio de 12 a 14 hrs. Costo: $80 Lugar: Sta Mónica #310, Col. Les compartimos la invitación del Ensamble “Comandanta Ramona”: Somos un grupo de personas que tenemos en común la preocupación por la problemática social y el gusto por la música y llevamos unos meses realizando un taller de cotidiáfonos. Inspirados por los ideales zapatistas y reconociendo en su manera de organizarse, una nueva forma de relación social, hemos formado un grupo de personas con muy distintas formas de ser y pensar y pese a ello, logramos acoplarnos; agarrar el ritmo, el modo, el paso del otro, y crear entre todos, una melodía; un propósito. Aunque un percusionista reconocido en el medio artístico acompaña nuestro aprendizaje (Héctor Aguilar) la forma de compartir nuestros saberes da pie a que todos seamos estudiantes y maestros. ¡Para todos todo! No hay comentarios todavía.
The diaspora* Project - Social Media Decentralization Instead of everyone’s data being held on huge central servers owned by a large organization, diaspora* exists on independently run servers (“pods”) all over the world. You choose which pod to register with, and you can then connect seamlessly with the diaspora* community worldwide. Find out more » Freedom You can be whoever you want to be in diaspora*. Find out more » Privacy In diaspora* you own your data. Find out more » 1. Find a pod that suits you. Find out more » 2. Once you’ve decided which pod is right for you, based on the ratings and information at Pod Uptime and maybe recommendations from people you trust, sign up there and create a profile with as much or as little personal information as you like. Sign up » 3. Start following some #tags related to your interests: it could be #music, #photography, #privacy or #linux - whatever you’re into. Find out more » Aspects Find out more » Features Hashtags give you the freedom to label and follow your interests with ease.
What's New? | The Conversation Prism v4.0 What’s different from 3.0 ? Well, version 4.0 brings about some of the most significant changes since the beginning. In this round, we moved away from the flower-like motif to simplify and focus the landscape. With all of the changes in social media, it would have been easier to expand the lens. Overview of Categories Added: Social Marketplace Enterprise Social Networks (shortened to “Enterprise” for formatting, companies included here were previously grouped under “Nicheworking”, which we redefined.) Categories Review: Virtual Worlds Blogs/Conversations sCRM (Candidate for new Prism) Attention/Communication Dashboards (Candidate for new Prism) DIY + Custom Social Networks (Candidate for new Prism) Collaboration (Candidate for new Prism)
Decentralize the web with Diaspora by Daniel G. Maxwell S. Raphael S. Ilya Z. We're fully funded! Check out some of the other great projects on Kickstarter Diaspora - the privacy aware, personally controlled, do-it-all distributed open source social network We are four talented young programmers from NYU’s Courant Institute trying to raise money so we can spend the summer building Diaspora; an open source personal web server that will put individuals in control of their data. What is it? Enter your Diaspora “seed,” a personal web server that stores all of your information and shares it with your friends. For a little more detailed explanation, checkout this blog post. What is the project about? We believe that privacy and connectedness do not have to be mutually exclusive. Why are we building it? This February, Eben Moglen, Columbia law professor and author of the latest GPL, gave a talk on Internet privacy. But why is centralization so much more convenient, even in an age where relatively powerful computers are ubiquitous? Why do we need money? Our Promise.
ÚLTIMO MENSAJE DE CUAHTÉMOC Ó CONSIGNA DE ANÁHUAC Según se dice, un matlactlihuan yei cuestzpallin ilhuitl, ipan tlaxochimaco metztli, ipan yei calli xihuitl, ipan ic macuiltetl Tonalli ("dia trece lagartija, en el mes se ofrendan flores, en el año tres casa, en el Quinto Sol"), lunes 12 de agosto de 1521, se reunió el Consejo de Gobierno de la Confederación Anáhuac, presidido por el huey tlahtohuani Cuauhtemoctzintli y decidió enviar este mensaje a los cuatro rumbos del antiguo Anáhuac. El comunicado habría sido enviado al sistema mnemotécnico oral de conservar los hechos que era fundamental en el Calmécac del antiguo Anáhuac. Hasta el presente, en muchas localidades de habla autóctona siguen existiendo depositarios de la tradición oral anáhuaca. En Ichcateopan se guardó la memoria del entierro de Cuahtémoc a través de once "cartas vivas", la primera de ellas habría nacido en 1519. La Consigna de Anáhuac que se representa aquí trata de ser completa. .. . (EN ESPAÑOL): .
WIKI - Jitsi Jitsi (formerly SIP Communicator) is a free and open source multiplatform[4] voice (VoIP), videoconferencing and instant messaging application for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X. It supports several popular instant-messaging and telephony protocols, including open recognised encryption protocols for chat (OTR) and voice/video/streaming and voice/video conferencing (SIP/RTP/SRTP/ZRTP), as well as built-in IPv6, NAT traversal and DNSSEC. Jitsi and its source code are released under the terms of the LGPL.[4] History[edit] Originally the project was mostly used as an experimentation tool because of its support for IPv6.[7][8] Through the years, as the project gathered members, it also added support for protocols other than SIP. Jitsi has received support from various institutions such as the NLnet Foundation,[9][10] the University of Strasbourg and the Region of Alsace[11] and it has also had multiple participations in the Google Summer of Code program.[12][13] Features[edit] Architecture[edit]