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My Theory of Practice

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

I think, actually, all technology consultants, whether they do what I do, or hack code, should do this exercise. 2 comments… read them below or add one } 1 Michele Martin 07.11.08 at 6:06 am Michelle, I love this! I’d had bits and pieces of this in varied places, and in my head, but it was a good time to get it all down.

Practice 100
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My wish for Web 2.5

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

Unfortunately, the nptech world hasn’t yet caught on to the “Planet&# phenomenon of the open source world (see Planet Ubuntu Women.) These are sites that are simply aggregators of the blogs of those involved in a particular open source project (like, in this case, women involved in Ubuntu ). 3 Beth 12.01.06

Web 100
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What do web stats mean, anyway?

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

They can be used for a nonprofit’s mission and that is why nonprofits should exercise transparency on web site analytics. And in your case, as the head of a nonprofit open source organization, I think you’re going to find that not publishing site statistics will cause you more grief than you think. 2 admin 09.18.07

Stats 100
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Cake vs. Symfony

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

I went through a similar exercise in January ( [link] ) and noticed a few major benefits of symfony over cake: - the database integration is a huge timesaver - symfony makes it easy to write tests for your app 2 Scott T. at 6:56 pm Top 10 blog posts of 2008 :: Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology 12.26.08 Be Helpful.