View from the front row
One of the best things about being a consultant, freelancer, wanderer or independent (choose whichever title you think best fits) is that I'm not tied to any one cause, NGO, company, community or website. Since I don't actually work for any of them I can openly communicate, engage and contribute to many sites in many different areas and in many different ways. I quite like this. It helps promote my whole ethos of shared, open learning, and means that information and knowledge I pick up from one can often be equally shared with another (non-disclosure agreement permitting). Sometimes not being paid can have its advantages, too (although I do, occasionally, take on temporary consultancy work with some of them).
Right now, in the "mobile for good" space, we're in the middle of very interesting times. We're also, perhaps, at a crossroads. And the role that I've managed to carve out for myself, intentional or not, means that I consistently find myself at the centre of many of the current - and newer - initiatives. Take, for example, mobile communities and mobile portals (call them what you like). In recent months we've seen the launch, and re-launch, of numerous sites. Indeed, one of my FrontlineSMS-related plans involved the creation of one. I've since had a major re-think, although with users in over forty countries there is clearly a perfect opportunity to build a community of some kind. Building a truly vibrant community website around the wider social and environmental use of mobile is never going to be easy, and I would argue that no-one has yet managed to crack it (indeed, building truly active communities around anything can be a real challenge).
Right now I have a little experiment going on through Facebook. The Social Mobile Group is an attempt to bring people together who share an interest in mobile, from developers through to practitioners, bloggers, researchers, academics, writers and the general public. Since the Facebook structure was already present, it took ten minutes to create the group, and it now stands at around 1,150 members from a starting point of about 20 six months ago. I'm not sure where it's going, but it slowly seems to be taking shape and it requires the minimum of effort. I've also tried to involve the members as much as possible, creating "Rotating Group Officer" roles which provides them with the opportunity to help grow and develop the group in their own way.
There are, of course, other sites out there acting as 'mobile information' points. Even the kiwanja.net site has an element of this with the Downloads section, Mobile Database and Mobile Gallery, although this is not its primary purpose. Other sites include a mix of the old and the new, and it will be very interesting to see how they evolve over time, and how many cross over and blend into others. Last year I began to note down the number of sites I've either become involved in, or provided input into, or spoken to people about, in the mobile space. This is what I came up with:
W3C Mobile Web Initiative
MobileActive
ShareIdeas
Mobile Advocacy Toolkit
The Social Mobile Group
Although many of these sites - and others like them not listed here -have different audiences, approaches and objectives, the one thing that binds them together is their shared interest in the social revolution being brought about by mobile technology, particularly in the developing world. In a space becoming increasingly crowded, many communities are dominated by a small number of active members. Facebook groups aside, ShareIdeas seems to be the one to watch, with Tactical Tech and PAMONET soon to join the party.


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