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Inside the Entrepreneur Lecture Series

December 1, 2009 By Greg Falken 1 Comment

Chalkboard

Thanks to an “elevator grant”, our own Columbia College has been presenting a free lecture series entitled, Inside the Entrepreneur – Enlightening Lessons. Each month, local entrepreneurs are interviewed by a moderator, followed by an audience question and answer period. The series is being video taped and will be distributed to other communities on DVD.

I am pleased to be a panelist at the December event, along with Stuart Hince, my webdancers partner and Sharon Crost, of Social Media Alive. The event is billed as Enlightening lessons from Social Networking experts, although Sharon is the real expert of the bunch, having directed interactive strategies for companies such as HP, Adobe and NetApp. Stuart and I will have some ideas to offer about how the current economy has affected life on the web and how businesses can take advantage of some really great online tools at low or no cost.

It should be an enjoyable evening and we invite everyone in the Sonora area to come and join us. As an added incentive, refreshments are provided by the college’s culinary department and they are exceptional!

Date: December 11, 2009
Time: 7p – 9p
Place: Columbia College – Manzanita Building Rotunda
Information: (209) 588-5145

Download the poster (PDF)

Harvard chalkboard by Patrick Haney.

At Home Tagged: Columbia College, Sharon Crost, webdancers

Pining for Gold – a quick digital thinking exercise

November 3, 2009 By Greg Falken 2 Comments

Open for business

Guest post by Sharon Crost, cross-posted on the Network Sierra blog.

Let’s do a quick thinking exercise: think for a few seconds about the Central Sierra.  Do you think of history and the Gold Rush and panning for gold? Or do you think of Yosemite National Park, Bear Valley or Dodge Ridge, tasting wine, jumping frogs, or enjoying the outdoors?  Well some of us who have come to the Central Sierra post-Gold Rush think that the Central Sierra is a gorgeous place to work and live and play.  It’s so livable in a way, but in a way not at all.  Because about 40% of the people who reside in the Central Sierra don’t have access to high speed internet, called “broadband”.

So now let’s think for a few seconds about dial-up internet connection.  Do you know, or remember what it’s like to dial up to the internet via modem?  Similar to the Gold Rush, you may think of this as ancient history? The internet is now celebrating its 40th birthday, but a significant portion of our Central Sierra community is STILL connecting to the internet in it’s adolescent connection form, via dial-up.

Now think about what it means to peddle on dial-up while your neighbors are racing on the super highway.   You can’t participate in everyday applications such as watching videos, downloading files, takes classes via distance learning, manage your health, transact business online or communicate with your family.    Surprisingly, while you are peddling on dial-up, your mates in many third world economies are connecting and thriving.   Broadband access means economic and job development, telehealth, communication, education, environmental sustainability and a future for youth that want to stay and thrive in rural communities.

Clearly we need ubiquitous access to broadband, and the Central Sierra and many other rural communities are on the losing side of the digital equality access game.    So I’m part of a group of crusaders working to reduce the digital divide in rural communities.  You can help too.  You can help create a new history for rural communities.  You’ve already been thinking about the issue for the last few precious seconds and one of the great advantages of ubiquitous broadband is that it gives everyone an equal voice.   In fact, Network Sierra’s Community Access project is an excellent example of project planning to assist a community to create and engage in local issues and news and information and entertainment and art, enabled by broadband.  Stay tuned to this blog and check out the Central Sierra Connect project or the California Emerging Technologies Fund for more information and to take action.

Oh, and there’s one final thing to think about in this exercise… think about the reality of high-speed connection throughout the Central Sierra, in rural communities as in big cities, everywhere.  Communities prospecting for gold on an equal playing field, engaging and thriving.  It’s a thought as good as gold.

Sharon Crost is an educator and a consultant mentoring leaders to develop thriving communities.    She tweets as mktwow and can be contacted at [email protected]

At Home Tagged: broadband, Central Sierra, Network Sierra, Sharon Crost

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As a web developer since 1995, I find my attention increasingly drawn to the intersection of computers, the Internet, communication and education. On this blog, I indulge my interest in these and several other topics. I hope you find them interesting too. Read More…

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