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Keeping Your 2016 Resolutions with NetSquared's Free Workshops

Tech Soup

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Your Nonprofit Website: Tiptoe Through the WordPress Templates. Victoria, British Columbia: Resolving the Design and Content Challenge: Automated and Curated Newsletters. IMAGE ATTRIBUTION GUIDELINES Image Name: Author / License. Tuesday, January 5, 2016. Wednesday, January 6, 2016.

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Start 2017 by Building Your Tech Skills and Community

Tech Soup

The top three technology challenges for respondents are building websites, managing data, and fundraising. Los Angeles, CA: WordPress for Nonprofits — Tech Surgery. IMAGE ATTRIBUTION GUIDELINES Image Name: Author / License. They come to us looking for practical tips and a supportive community. Wednesday, February 8, 2017.

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Thoughts on the Future of Open Source and Nonprofits

NTEN

Some segments are already well-established, including content management systems (Drupal, Joomla, WordPress), javascript libraries (Dojo, jQuery), and reporting engines (Jasper, BIRT). and licensing models. More recently, open source development has moved into the application layer.

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Get Help in Telling the Story of Your Nonprofit's Impact

Tech Soup

Atrisco, New Mexico: Working Group and Help Desk: Bring Your Projects and Tech Challenges. Baltimore, Maryland: WordPress 101 and Tech Help Consultations. IMAGE ATTRIBUTION GUIDELINES Image Name: Author / License. Nashville, Tennessee: Apps4Change Demo Breakfast — Nashville — September 2017. Friday, October 6, 2017.

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The Participatory Museum Process Part 4: Adventures in Self-Publishing

Museum 2.0

I decided to self-publish The Participatory Museum for four reasons: OPENNESS: I wanted the flexibility to license and distribute the book using an open structure to promote sharing. Few publishers was open to Creative Commons licensing and to giving away the content for free online. I chose the Attribution Noncommercial license.

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Integration of CRM and CMS

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

Depending on the CRM, some require additional license fees for forms or APIs. The challenge is to design a template that travels well and can be easily and consistently updated (when our organization moved, I had 5 different footers to update). Some take internal staff resources (especially the Manual strategy.)

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How do we do make change if we keep doing things the same way?

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

It’s peer reviewed (good), but it’s got a rather restrictive license, and the content is not freely available. The licenses are as follows: Personal License: If you have purchased a copy/subscription to the Journal with a personal license, this means that it is for your personal use.

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