Yearly Archives: 2007

Messages going viral on FPF

Posted on Wednesday, September 19, 2007 by No comments yet

It’s fascinating to watch messages “go viral” on Front Porch Forum. Recently, a member posted her note about some returned Peace Corps volunteers and their effort to collect used bicycles for people in poor countries… just these few sentences…

Clean out your garage, help others, and get an IRS tax deduction! The Green Mountain Returned Peace Corps Volunteers are collecting used bikes in working condition for PEDALS FOR PROGRESS.

Pedals for Progress will ship your bike(s) to an international partner organization, where it will be reconditioned as transportation to people who desperately need affordable, non-polluting transportation! (A $10 donation toward shipping is requested. Also accepting portable sewing machines in working condition.)

PLEASE BRING YOUR BIKES TO: Lake Champlain Chocolates Warehouse (444 Pine St, Burlington) between 9am-1pm on Saturday, September 22

In the past ten days I’ve seen the message repeated in about 24 30 FPF neighborhood forums reaching thousands of households! That’s a great outreach effort by the folks working on this project. They sent their announcement to their list of local contacts and ask each of them to post on their own neighborhood forum. Also, someone along the line posted it on the FPF Neighborhood Volunteer Forum and that reached 250 local community organizer types, and many of them are passing on the message.

I’m eager to see what kind of turn out they get!

UPDATE: The Burlington Free Press reports today (9/23/07) that this event broke the previous record by hauling in 276 bikes with dozens as of yet processed and counted.  Great news.  The Free Press article does a good job of describing the whole story, although it failed to mention how the volunteer group succeeded so fabulously in getting the word out.  Congratulations to the organizers!

Neighborhood Volunteers breathe life into FPF

Posted on Monday, September 17, 2007 by No comments yet

Alan Sousie of Burlington’s New North End posted this message today on his neighborhood’s forum…

I am sending out my encouragement to everyone for use and promotion of Front Porch Forum.   In my mind, the more we demonstrate the Forum’s usefulness by example, the more likely we are to get others to join us.   I consider the Forum to be a community voice.  With it we can encourage, serve, inform, debate, recognize, and protect our community.  With it we can buy, sell, barter, give away and recycle items that are appropriate to respectful and neighborly exchanges.   I believe that all computer literate persons would want to use this neighborhood network, if only they knew of its existence.   I believe it is up to us, who are already informed, to spread the word.  I urge everyone to recruit other Neighborhood Volunteers and other neighbors who will grow our Forum network.

Alan is on his ward’s Neighborhood Planning Assembly, the City’s Board of Health, and he’s an FPF Neighborhood Volunteer.  Thanks for all you do for your community Alan!

Neighborhood organizers put FPF to work

Posted on Sunday, September 16, 2007 by 1 comment

The Neighborhood Planning Assembly in Burlington’s New North End is recognizing neighbors who make a special contribution to community. Here are two they singled out…

CARMEN GEORGE: After the murder of two women in Burlington, Carmen didn’t feel as safe walking at night. She wanted to get some exercise but was a little too fearful to go out by herself. She wondered if there were others who might be interested in getting out at night.She sent out an email on the Front Porch Forum. It was a simple invitation to go for a walk. The response was good, mostly mothers who were up for getting out of the house for a bit and having some good adult conversation. It’s a nice way to connect.

Carmen does a lot of other things in the neighborhood. She plans block parties, progressive dinners, playdates. She likes knowing her neighbors. She lived in a neighborhood growing up that was close knit and she wants that for her daughter. “We don’t want to walk down the street and see strangers, we want to be among friends.” Thanks to Carmen, this is becoming a reality for many people in her neighborhood. We salute you, Carmen.

I love Carmen’s quote… “We don’t want to walk down the street and see strangers, we want to be among friends.”

BOB DINAN organized a neighborhood sporting event using Front Porch Forum.

  • Softball, Soccer, Frisbee (Ultimate) Is anyone in the “Neighborhood” interested in putting together a neighborhood game of some sort? Nothing ultra-competitive, keeping it fun, maybe even playing against another neighborhood. Any ideas?
  • Neighborhood softball Friday August 3rd at 6:45 I was communicating with Jim Flint and we decided to try for next Friday. It will be at the Flynn school. I have a few bats I can bring, one is a smaller one for kids. If anyone else has a favorite bat bring it along.
  • Just a reminder and a note to the new people we are having a softball game this Friday at the Flynn School field on Starr Farm Rd. Time 6:45pm, meet & make teams, hopefully start playing by 7:00pm. All are welcome.

This is the awakening neighborhood spirit that Front Porch Forum has brought to us via the internet.

On real friends, tools, networks and communities

Posted on Saturday, September 15, 2007 by 1 comment

MediaVidea offers an interesting take on social networking sites today…

Recent research done in England suggests that the number of close friends you have is mostly a result of your face-to-face interactions in the real world.

Researchers at the Sheffield Hallam University say that your online friendships on social networking sites such as Orkut, Facebook, Myspace, Hi5 and others are ‘shallow’ in nature.

Researchers got more than 200 people to fill in questionnaires and found that most of respondents had around 5 close friends and many (90%) said their close friends were results of face-to-face meetings.

So, it seems that soliciting and clicking friend request on social sites is nothing but an ego trip.

He also writes about the difference between online tools, networks and communities.

There has a been a lot of debate online about communities and networks and many, including startups riding the web 2.0 wave have run into the habit of claiming that their startup is a community. VCs are also prone to this community fever.

So, it is important to note what Joshua Schachter of del.icio.us said about the pioneering social bookmarking site, a site that I think has more value than social news sites such as Digg, for great archival and research uses.

Joshua has said, Del.icio.us is a tool, not a community.’

This is very important. Most online services are first tools and the community of people who got together while using the service, comes later on.

Joshua Porter of Bokardo advocates a focus on ‘personal value over anything else’.

Differencing between communities and networks, Chloe Stromberg from Forrester Research says that ‘while communities are bound by emotion and passion, networks are simply communication links between people who have something in common.’

Interesting to mull over. I think Front Porch Forum is used as a tool by some (receive and spread information), a network for others (e.g., need 20 people to sign a petition to get a stop sign installed), and a community of neighbors for most. Many report that their FPF neighborhood forum has helped created a neighborhood environment where they can more easily establish and maintain genuine friendships.

Glasses found, Neighborhood the better for it

Posted on Saturday, September 15, 2007 by No comments yet

This kind of thing happens so frequently in neighborhoods that embrace Front Porch Forum, that it slips my mind to share.  So, here are two postings from the Five Sisters Neighborhood Forum.  First from Lanny last night…

pair of women’s glasses found near Catherine Street. seem to be prescription. brown and blue narrow plastic frame. call Beth.

And then from Sara this morning…

These were mine! and while I’d finally given in and replaced them this week, I don’t like the new glasses as much and was feeling bereft. Just thought you might like another success story!

(1) Immediate problem solved.  (2) Two more neighbors become acquainted in a way that they’ll likely remember next time they bump into each other.  (3) The sense of community within the neighborhood — of neighbors watching out for each other — grows just a tiny bit.  Day after day, neighborhood after neighborhood.

Online social networking for people old enough to remember Bill Clinton

Posted on Thursday, September 13, 2007 by No comments yet

Matt Richtel wrote yesterday for the New York Times  about the growth of websites aimed at older audiences.

Older people are sticky. That is the latest view from Silicon Valley. Technology investors and entrepreneurs, long obsessed with connecting to teenagers and 20-somethings, are starting a host of new social networking sites aimed at baby boomers and graying computer users.

The sites have names like Eons, Rezoom, Multiply, Maya’s Mom, Boomj, and Boomertown. They look like Facebook — with wrinkles.

And they are seeking to capitalize on what investors say may be a profitable characteristic of older Internet users: they are less likely than youngsters to flit from one trendy site to the next.

And the money is flowing…

Last week, VantagePoint Ventures, an early investor in MySpace, announced that it had led a $16.5 million round of financing for Multiply, a social networking site aimed at people who are settled.

In August, Shasta Ventures led a $4.8 million financing round for TeeBeeDee, a site coming out of its test stage this month. The name is short for “To Be Determined” (as in: just because you’re not trolling for a mate on MySpace doesn’t mean your life is over.)

Also in August, Johnson & Johnson spent $10 million to $20 million to acquire Maya’s Mom, a social networking site for parents, according to a person briefed on the deal. The site has been in existence about a year.

Thanks Damien for the heads up.

LocalSearch.com URL Sold for how much?

Posted on Wednesday, September 12, 2007 by No comments yet

How much would you pay for the rights to the web address localsearch.com? Really… take a guess.

Well if your bid is anywhere south of $3.3M then you would have lost out to today’s winner who paid just that much. From New England Tech Wire today…

Fairfield, Conn. — AmericanTowns.com, a Fairfield-based network of local community-oriented websites, has received a strategic investment of undisclosed amount from Idearc Media, the Dallas-based publisher of Verizon Yellow Pages. In connection with the deal, Idearc has acquired the LocalSearch.com URL for $3.3 million. AmericanTowns.com was founded in 2000. The company plans to use the investment proceeds from Idearc to continue growing its database, which is projected to feature over 10 million local events this year. AmericanTowns.com will expand its hyper-local offering to more than 22,000 U.S. towns this year, Idearc announced.

Thanks Lee.

Geese Going North

Posted on Tuesday, September 11, 2007 by No comments yet

Posted by Wendy in one of the FPF Winooski neighborhood forums this evening…

Hello neighbors. Its hard to believe that the night is slipping in on us sooner than later and the temperatures have grown cooler. I fight to keep the windows open as long as possible. One- because I appreciate the fresh air. Two- because winter isn’t far off and we’ll be holed up indoors. Unless you’re a snow sportsman. I meant to bring in my houseplants on Sunday but it rained. Decided it would do them good to stay out another week.

My parents moved to Essex Center in August. A year ago my dad was diagnosed with ALS. My sister bought a home and built an apartment unto it. She and I take turns putting my father to bed at night. There just aren’t enough LNAs in the VNA Hospice program to work evening shifts. Dad can no longer talk or walk or even support his own head. It makes you wake up and take notice of simple things you take for granted. Like being able to scratch an itch on your nose or say thank you or eat ice cream. We don’t know how long he’ll be with us. But each day on this earth, I consider a gift. Because each day he is alive, I can show him how much I love him.

I’ve got daffodil bulbs we salvaged from the old home. Need to put them out soon. Dad was the one who loved gardening. He misses working the soil. Weeding. Sharing the harvest. I’m the only one out of five kids who makes the effort to garden. Such as it is.

Days grow shorter and the geese are headed north. Sometimes it good just be able to acknowledge that.

Thank you, Wendy.

Himmelstein on Google and Local Search

Posted on Monday, September 10, 2007 by No comments yet

Marty Himmelstein writes today in Screenwerk about Google and local search. I recommend reading the whole piece. Himmelstein appears to be thinking systemically… holistically. Impressive… even if his state is upside down.

And given Front Porch Forum‘s initial local success, his recognition of neighborhood’s role is noteworthy…

The importance of community and neighborhood to local search: The fundamental role of a community in local search is to establish an environment of trust so that users can rely on the information they obtain from the system. Businesses exist in a network of customers, suppliers, municipal agencies, local media, hobbyists, and others with either a professional or avocational interest in establishing the trustworthiness of local information. These community members can contribute unique perspectives to create a rich and accurate depiction of the businesses with which they are involved.

Neighbors watching out for each other

Posted on Monday, September 10, 2007 by No comments yet

Earlier today we saw on the ONE Central Neighborhood Forum in Burlington’s Old North End…

My bike with kids tag-a-long and kids helmet were stolen yesterday from in front of the Multi-Generational Center on N. Winooski yesterday at 4:40. It was a dark green trek “ladies” knobby tired bike and a dark green alley cat shadow tag-a-long. The helmet was red with cars on it. A guy was seen riding south on it. If you know anything call. Thank.

And now this evening the beginning of a happy ending…

I found a guy with my bike today. I left the guy but took the bike. He gave it back very easily and said he was “borrowing” it from someone else. Unfortunately the tag along was no longer tagging along with it. (Hey “John” If you are reading this please ask the guy you borrowed my bike from to let you borrow the bike that was attached to it and get it back to me…) Thanks to the Front Porch Forum posting, a friend was able to recognize the helmet by her dumpster as the one that was stolen with the bikes, and so we got that back too! I suppose there is a moral in here somewhere. 1 bike and helmet back in my possession. 1 dark green alley cat shadow tag-a-long still out there in the dark somewhere.

This whole incident stinks! But I love to see neighbors helping neighbors.

UPDATE: Unfortunately, Melissa just weighed in too, from a few blocks away…

On Saturday Sept. 8th mine and my neighbors bikes were stolen right out of the back yard right in the middle of the afternoon in broad daylight.
-Mine is a purple & silver Road master women’s bike. Also has (Designed for women) printed on the side of the seat. Another clue that it is mine is that the brakes do not work.
-My neighbors bike is a maroon mountain bike.
These bikes may have been abandoned together. If you see them please call me. Thank you very much.

UPDATE 2: More success on the first theft, from Meghan…

So, because of the posting about the stolen bikes on Front Porch Forum everything got returned.  The tag-along bike was found in a dumpster on Grant st.   when J read the post she knew to call me and tell me she had found it. I’m just glad the joy-riding bike thief lives in my neighborhood and discarded the parts he didn’t need within my FPF reading area!