[open-data-day] The Open Knowledge Foundation's events on Open Data Day 2013 – wrapped-up!
David Eaves
david at eaves.ca
Mon Mar 4 02:10:05 GMT 2013
Eric, you were asking on the open gov lost about open data in Japan. There were at least six open data day events in Japan this year so it might be worth asking this list?
Dave
--
www.eaves.ca
@daeaves
Sent from my iPhone
On 2013-03-03, at 5:43 PM, Eric Mill <eric at sunlightfoundation.com> wrote:
> I just put up a little something myself about Open Data Day, talking a bit about criticisms of hackathons:
> http://konklone.com/post/open-data-day-dc-2013
>
> I was really happy with the day!
>
> -- Eric
>
>
> On Sun, Mar 3, 2013 at 6:22 PM, Mary Beth Baker <maribethbaker at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Josh,
>>
>> I don't know anything about posting on Hacker News either. I think just having had this discussion and knowing I'm not alone in my critique of the original anti-hackfest article is enough for me. I'm going to keep planning events like International Open Data day and #Learnhackyow because I can understand the value to the wider community. Opne data Ottawa has even taken a similar approach and refined each event based on the last.
>>
>> Thanks for thinking out loud with me.
>>
>> Mary Beth
>>
>>
>> On 2 March 2013 17:04, Josh Tauberer <tauberer at govtrack.us> wrote:
>>>> Have you seen the Hacker news article going around saying hackathons are bad?
>>>
>>> Yeah. There's been a lot of that, and questions like "does open gov do any good?", lately.
>>>
>>> When Eric and I started planning the event last year, we started with low-level, concrete goals like: welcome non-techies, expand the community, time-bound the event to a single day. We drew from the successes of the previous year, and I think we were also informed by the skepticism around hackathons. (The way I phrased the write-up was definitely in response to it.) And if solving a real world problem in 8 hours was impossible, why should that be a goal at all? So we nixed that. We didn't care much about meeting the unreasonably high expectations of bloggers and journalists.
>>>
>>> Anyway... I don't know how Hacker News works. :) Feel free to repost.
>>>
>>> - Josh Tauberer (@JoshData)
>>>
>>> http://razor.occams.info
>>> On 03/02/2013 08:59 AM, Mary Beth Baker wrote:
>>>> Josh - thanks for the detailed summary. I'm really impressed with everyone's continued energy and follow up summaries.
>>>>
>>>> Have you seen the Hacker news article going around saying hackathons are bad? I think the points you made below are the perfect antidote to that article's author's perspective. Also your wide audience and video project show and tell are the perfect evidence to contradict the article's perspective. Any chance you might share this summary or a version of it on hacker news?
>>>>
>>>> Mary Beth
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 2013-03-02, at 8:34 AM, Josh Tauberer <tauberer at govtrack.us> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Here's what happened in DC:
>>>>>
>>>>> http://razor.occams.info/blog/2013/03/02/open-data-day-2013-hackathon-recap/
>>>>>
>>>>> Over 150 developers, data scientists, social entrepreneurs, government employees, and other open data enthusiasts participated in our event, first at a kickoff Friday night at Google’s DC headquarters and then at the Saturday session at The World Bank. Participants worked on local DC issues, global open source mapping, world poverty, and open government. Here are some quick links:
>>>>>
>>>>> Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_LcBQuaM1s
>>>>>
>>>>> Photos: One | Two
>>>>>
>>>>> Tumblr highlights: http://www.tumblr.com/blog/opendatadaydc
>>>>>
>>>>> Storified tweets: http://storify.com/worldbank/opendataday
>>>>>
>>>>> Our approach to the hackathon was a little different than many others. Our goals were to strengthen the open data community, to foster connections between people and between projects, and to emphasizes problem statements over prototypes and solutions. There was no beer or pizza at our hackathon, no competitions, and no pressure to produce outputs. Participants came motivated and stayed focused without needing to be treated like brogrammers. This created a positive, welcoming, and highly productive environment.
>>>>>
>>>>> In the morning Eric Mill (Sunlight Foundation/@konklone) ran a several-hours-long tutorial on open data for about 40 participants. Some were new to coding. Others were project managers (inside and outside of government) who wanted to learn more about what open data is all about from the ground up. Eric walked the participants through exploring APIs through the web browser, using command-line tools, and basic scripting — a very concrete way to explain the benefits of adding structure to data.
>>>>>
>>>>> Several projects focused on local DC issues: mapping zoning restrictions (more), graphing public and charter school enrollment and other education data, mapping trees by species, and building adatabase of social service providers.
>>>>>
>>>>> A large team of map hackers worked on mapping Kathmandu in Open Street Map to aid disaster response, and with their collaborators around the world mapped over 7,000 building footprints.
>>>>>
>>>>> Global poverty and international development was the focus of several other projects, from building APIs for international development project performance data to measuring poverty in real time using Twitter.
>>>>>
>>>>> The open government projects worked on adding semantic informationto legislative documents, comparing legislative documents for similarity,extracting legal citations, cataloging our government representativesat the local level, and building “devops” tools for rapid deployment of VMs that might be useful in government or for open data researchers.
>>>>>
>>>>> And there were other projects that don’t fit into any of those categories, like building Python tools for creating education curricula,
>>>>>
>>>>> The event was organized by me (Josh Tauberer/GovTrack/@JoshData), Eric Mill (Sunlight Foundation/@konklone), Katherine Townsend (USAID/@DiploKat), Dmitry Kachaev (Presidential Innovation Fellow/Millennium Challenge Corporation/@kachok), Sam Lee (The World Bank/@OpenNotion), and Julia Bezgacheva (@ulkins/The World Bank).
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks go to The World Bank especially, and to Google, the participants that helped out with registration in the morning, and to everyone who came!
>>>>>
>>>>> This was DC’s second open data day. Our first was on Dec. 3, 2011 and was co-hosted by POPVOX (Josh Tauberer) and Wikimedia DC (Katie Filbert). See what we did on the post-event recap at https://www.popvox.com/features/opendataday2011. Participants then worked on improving access to U.S. law, scanning federal spending for anomalies following Benford’s Law, understanding farm subsidy grants, building local transit apps, and keeping Congress accountable. Only about half of the participants were programmers, but everyone found a way to be involved.
>>>>>
>>>>> It was also DC’s second international development data day. The last one was held on December 9, 2012 in the lead-up to the Development DataJam hosted by White House’s Office of Science & Technology. Those events primarily served as ideation jams to bring together issue area experts and data experts to develop new ideas and partner for new solutions. Experts were sought out to inform the discussions, but anyone with an interest in open data in development were welcomed and participated.
>>>>>
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