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Vote and Comment for ALL these Awesome Nonprofit Panels at SXSW!

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Its true impact has yet to be measured, but Twitter, Facebook, Foursquare, and every other social media platform have already caused a revelation in how people want to communicate. There are over 200,000 professional artists in the US — and a bunch of them have problems the techies could help solve. They want to connect.

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First Reflections on Jumo

Amy Sample Ward

For comparison’s sake — Apple’s Ping had 2,000 artists two months out of the gate.)&# I’ve been playing around with the new social platform this morning and wanted to share some of my early reactions. (So Not just to broadcast, but to have a conversation, share ideas, and provide context. Beyond a Platform.

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An Open Letter to Museums on Twitter

Museum 2.0

Twitter is like a big radio party--everyone can broadcast and everyone can listen. If radio was a brand new media format and you had the opportunity to host a show or run a station, you'd probably listen to some other stations before deciding whether and what to broadcast. It's okay if you start by just following. Respond to people.

Museum 46
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30 Virtual and Hybrid Event Fundraising Ideas for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

As an added benefit these types of classes are often easy to broadcast live. We’ve recently seen a slew of music award shows and individual musicians performing in hybrid concerts: the artist performs on a stage like normal, but to an empty venue, while that performance is streamed live to spectators at home. 10) Hybrid concerts.

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Interview with Brooklyn Museum's Shelley Bernstein

Museum 2.0

Did you find that people who had been to the exhibition were commenting on the Flickr page? They would comment on the photos we'd taken and add notes with links to their own profiles. We saw that these artists were using the wall, then telling us about it on Flickr. Were they really using it as a post-visit resource? It depends.

Museum 27
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Where Do We Put It? Fitting the Web Into Museums

Museum 2.0

And while there's lots of good stuff in these sections (including an introduction for me to some wild net artists ), it's the last chunk that interests me most, where Karen explores the question of how and where Internet art should be exhibited. Fear is never a good reason to put things (like ratings or visitor comments) on the website only.

Museum 20
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Great reads from around the web on March 21st

Amy Sample Ward

You can join the conversations in the comments, or click through to the original posts to find what others are saying. Some of my best friends are graphic artists who design infographics that are eye catching, smart and tell stories better than my words ever could. I've done both. I'm not bashing infographics.

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