[consulting] Fwd: Tides Foundation Pizzigati Prize - $10, 000 for Open Source software developer (Nominations Due: 15-Dec-2010)
Tom Geller
tom at tomgeller.com
Thu Nov 11 21:06:23 UTC 2010
Forwarded from the Stanford Drupallers mailing list. I'm sure we have a favorite core/contrib developer we think deserving of a nomination....
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Date: Wed, 10 Nov 2010 17:04:19 -0800
From: Karen Sue Rolph <karenrolph at hotmail.com>
Subject: Tides Foundation Pizzigati Prize - $10,000 for Open Source software developer (Nominations Due: 15-Dec-2010)
Dear Open Source Community Colleagues - FYI
Nominations Now Open for Nation?s Top Honor in Public Interest Computing
The Tides Foundation Pizzigati Prize will award $10,000 to an open source software developer whose work is helping nonprofits succeed
View full details about the Pizzigati Prize at www.pizzigatiprize.org
San Francisco, Calif.: October 15, 2010? Nominations will open this month for the fifth annual awarding of the $10,000 Antonio Pizzigati Prize for Software in the Public Interest, the nation's top honor for software developers working with nonprofits to help forge innovative social change.
The Tides Foundation will be accepting nominations for this year's competition through December 15. The 2011 prize winner will be announced this March at the Nonprofit Technology Network annual conference in Washington, D.C.
Tides has hosted the Pizzigati Prize ever since its inception in 2006. Each year's competition welcomes the nominations of individuals who have developed an open source software product that has demonstrated impressive value to the nonprofit sector.
This past year's Pizzigati Prize winner, University of Washington doctoral student Yaw Anokwa, has been the lead developer on Open Data Kit, a modular set of tools that's helping nonprofits the world over collect data, via mobile phones, on everything from deforestation to human rights violations.
The winner of the 2009 Pizzigati Prize, Darius Jazayeri, blazed the programming path for OpenMRS, an open source software application that health clinics and hospitals in poor communities world-wide are now using to keep, share, and track medical record data.
"Software developers like these fill an indispensable role," explains Joseph Mouzon, a Pizzigati Prize judge and the Principal of JAM Consulting. "The Pizzigati Prize aims to honor that contribution ? and encourage programmers to engage their talents in the ongoing struggle for social change success."
The Pizzigati Prize honors the brief life of Tony Pizzigati, an early advocate of open source computing. Born in 1971, Tony spent his college years at MIT, where he worked at the world-famous MIT Media Lab. Tony died in 1995, in an auto accident on his way to work in Silicon Valley.
"We accept nominations from both developers and the nonprofits working with them," notes Nicole Puller, the Tides philanthropic associate who coordinates the annual Pizzigati Prize competition. "Developers are doing wonderfully creative work. They deserve the widest possible recognition."
Full details on the Pizzigati Prize, the largest annual award in public interest computing, appear online at www.pizzigatiprize.org.
About Tides
A nonprofit founded in 1976, Tides partners with philanthropists, foundations, activists, and organizations across the country and around the globe to promote economic justice, robust democratic processes, and the opportunity to live in a healthy and sustainable environment where human rights are preserved and protected. Tides offers an array of services that amplify the efforts of forward-thinking individuals and organizations working to make the world a better place. With offices in San Francisco and New York City, Tides provides nonprofit management for 230 groups across the country; creates green nonprofit centers; and has granted more than one billion dollars to nonprofits working for positive social change. For more information, visit www.tides.org.
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