Slashdot Mirror


Where Can One Find Computer Related Charity Work?

LS asks: "For a while now, I've been trying to find work that utilizes my programming skills to do more than just help a company win in the market, make me money, and maybe even provide enjoyment. I'd like to contribute to the well-being of humanity and maybe leave a lasting mark as well. I'm working for a start-up that looks like it's about to fold. Can anyone point me to some resources for finding charitable organizations that need computer work, anywhere in the world?" I think that a quite a few of us who wouldn't mind devoting some hackin' time to a good cause. What's the best way to go looking for organizations who need the help? Updated!

Update: 07/15 05:15 PM by C :Miniluv sent in this helpful tidbit on this issue: "In response to the Ask Slashdot article about Charity Work and Technology, I went digging and came up with TechVolunteer. They don't have any searching or volunteer stuff listed yet, but they say the site is under developement. Maybe some encouragement might help them along?"

6 of 258 comments (clear)

  1. Re:here's one by Claudius · · Score: 4

    And this is where, after reading all the fucking inane bullshit on slashdot for a year, I totally...

    ...contribute to it? Nice spew. Feel better now?

    Have any of you stopped, EVEN ONCE, and considered what goes on outside the windows of your fucking Lexus?

    Why yes, yes indeed. My wife drives it most days so I walk to work instead.

    Many developing nations are opting to build universities and educate their people as a means of addressing poverty. I know of someone (a brother of a good friend) who is in Nigeria right now helping a university there set up its computer networks; he began by helping with the building construction, but since he knows a few things about setting up networks he was able to help out here as well.

    I suppose you believe that these nations should be growing their economies by waiting for handouts from the West instead? I hate to break it to you, but unless the nation is rich in natural resources such as oil the West would just as soon forget what goes on in a developing country. Case in point: How many Tutsis were slaughtered in Rwanda in 1994? 800,000? IIRC, your "goddamned news" gave it scant coverage after the first week or so. The last time I checked this is on par with estimates for some famous Western genocides (such as the million or so who perished in the Armenian genocide), however suprisingly little effort was made on the part of the West to try to pacify the situation. We seem not to care much about people with brown or black skin who have no resources to peddle.

    Opposition to technological investment by developing nations because "people are suffering" is silly and paternalistic. People are starving in the United States too, but we allow the tech industries to thrive--we even prefer "computers in the classroom" over investing in social programs to address these problems.

  2. Not An Organization by Seumas · · Score: 5
    I seriously believe that the best way that you can help is to find a young man or woman who is desperate to learn. I know that when I was a lot younger, I wanted to do a lot of things in computing that I could neither find the resources nor the mentor for. My library didn't have books on writing PERL or C++ or even PASCAL. I wouldn't even have known that you could get the software for free to do it. Further, I wanted to learn Unix, but when I was 12 (this was in the late 1980's), I knew they were machines that only people in college or at big companies had access to.

    More than anything, a lot of teenagers just want to learn. Sure, they can get HTML classes somewhere, but that isn't going to help them become reliably employable.

    I'd encourage people to find a highschool dropout (or one who is bordering on becoming one) or a teenage mother or just about any other kid who doesn't realize they have a future -- and whom others may think the same of -- and, if they have a desire to learn it, you can turn them from a life of being a couch potatoe earning 5 bucks an hour at the mini-mart into an upper-middle-class person with a career and a cool job title.

    I've seen this done. To a degree, I'm that person -- only I had to help myself. But there are some other very talented and intelligent kids out there who have completely given up. I don't see a better way to offer your time and energy, computer-wise.
    ---
    seumas.com

  3. here's one by Frymaster · · Score: 5

    geekcorps is sending a corps of geeks to Africa sometime in the next few months...

    1. Re:here's one by PhiRatE · · Score: 4

      I think you ought to calm down.

      Yes, there is untold suffering across the planet, yes terrorists are killing people and cutting off kids hands, yes people are dying from aids and starvation, but the question is why is this happening less in countries well supplied with schooling, money and information technology? I say less because as anyone who has visited the dark side of major american cities can tell you, it isn't limited to the third world.

      It would seem to me that education is almost viral in effect. Teach one person to teach, and he can teach a dozen others. Attempting to get the median level of earning up by a small amount is counter to this concept. If you manage to raise ten people $10 above the median wage, what are they going to be able to teach the other 120 people? how to raise their wage $10. Get three people to $100, and you're going to have a far more profound effect.

      I think that, (and I emphasise think, since I have no formal training and have done no extensive documented research) that it is in fact possible to pull a culture up to first-world levels of education in a fairly short time, the members of those cultures are not stupid, they simply have tradition, and the older members are often resistant to change. Careful planning, followed by the introduction of, and intensive training in modern technology for a small group would have, IMHO, a far more beneficial effect over the medium term on a large group of people, than attempting to upgrade all of the society a little bit at a time.

      Humanity is competitive, it is quick to learn and to teach, and I believe that attempting to shuffle 3rd world countries slowly into the 21st century at a rate which, in some circumstances, isn't even keeping up with the rate of change in the first world, is counter-productive. It leaves those few self-driven individuals capable of making contact with the first world with complete power, hence terrorists and dictators with heavy weaponry, and a terrified, unknowing, uneducated population with no way of coordinating and little knowledge that there is another way.

      And so I conclude, running cat5 around villages is entirely to the point, get them out there, make them part of the world, yes it'll be hard on them, but the consequnces of falling further and further behind, as many of the 3rd world countries, laden with debt, are doing now, is far worse.

      --
      You can't win a fight.
  4. VolunteerMatch.org (and Vaya.org!) by pcarroll · · Score: 5

    Our foundation-sponsored, nonprofit site matches volunteers with local opportunities for free. We've already matched over 20,000 people with over 4,000 opps listed under "Computers and Technology", and there are over 20,000 others listed just in case you want to work with something else. Of course, if you want to volunteer to help US (Linux/Apache/JSP/MySQL), that would be great, too. ;) patrick(at)vaya.org

  5. Live near a Reservation by chance?? by HamNRye · · Score: 4

    They are sending 6 people to africa in a few months. While I find GeekCorps a fine endeavor, we have enough people here who need help. For those in the SW, why not contact your local Reservation and offer to mentor. With a mean 75% unemployment rate you could be helping a new generation move forward as a society. The Hopi average 85% unemployment, with only 25% of working adults making over $7,000 per year.

    Sorry, I just realized that if you have a job, you probably live nowhere near a reservation...

    (For those of you who do, please help.)

    I have been working with my own reservation for only 2 years, and have watched the unemployment rate drop to 25% with the mean income raised by $15,000 a year for adults. Much of this has come from setting up el cheapo .coms and e-commerce. (Yea Linux...) As an Amerind I can tell you that we'd prefer not to be casino employess and the like. Furthermore, contrary to popular belief, the Casinos generally benefit the money men from outside the Res. and do only harm to the residents. (The Pequots being the noted exception and therefore the ones you'll see on 60 minutes.) They are a wasteland of broken promises and corrupt swindlers. (Not that I would mention Kevin Costner by name.)

    There are people starving next door. Let's stop giving them fish and start teaching them how to fish.