Saturday was a great day for us since we were meeting for
our first MozCafe this year. We have had a number of events throughout the year but meeting for this MozCafe was a great opportunity for us to meet
informally our Community members and get to know each other better as well as
get to hear from them about what they feel about the Community. And what we can
do to make our Community better.
This happens to be my first event I have organized since
joining the Reps program this year in March. However, it didn't come easy. I had postponed the event twice and I was
getting concerned that it may never happen.
For some reasons, my event happened to be at time where most
of the leads were very busy both in the community and Mozilla at large. So with
some of the Reps and council members who traveled for the ReMo Camp, there were challenges in communication.
So getting hold some of them wasn't that easy. Infact I was beginning to think
of canceling the event. But thank God for the encouragement of one particular
community member who encouraged me that we needed to meet since this would give
us the opportunity to meet our community members.
In an effort to make our meetup informal and interactive, we
gave members enough time to interact and get to know one another. People
interacted that they didn't want to stop. It's at this point that we decided to
get down to business.
We decided to have people get into small groups and discuss
on different topics. But before we got into
small group discussions, we had San James the community Lead address the
members.
In his address he thanked all members who make personal efforts and
time to turn up for all of our events each time we call upon them. He also gave a
brief history of how the community got started in 2011 with the translation of
Firefox browser in Luganda (one of the local languages spoken in Uganda). However, he
stressed the fact that all our events and
activities will now be engineered at creating impact and improving the quality our contributors as now is the focus of Mozilla and the community at large. So encouraged the community to make efforts to be good at whatever they commit themselves to so that they can become better contributors.
During our group discussions the following are some of the small summaries of the things that members discussed about.
From Community building;
- some people want to be trained on how to organize events/hackathons so that they can start holding events at their respective universities.
- others want more information about Firefox Student Ambassador program so that they can spread Mozilla at their institutions.
- some what more knowledge about Marketing so that they can market Mozilla to even rural communities.
- some want webmakers tools that would work offline in the presence where the Internet is off or inaccessible.
- some suggest the need to create offline tutorials they can use to teach.
- some suggested the need to create slides that they can use during presentation
Ideas and suggestions from Appmaker
- create a chat application using Chat brick
- want to introduce Appmaker to friends and students.
- Host Maker parties where they can develop apps with Appmaker
- Online surveying App. (Questions, answer and also processes data)
- Alarm clock app.
These are some of the few things people discussed. At this
moment people where called to present there ideas and suggestions. This was one
of the delightful moments. Doing presentations over our Pizzas!:)
Our meetup come to a close with final wrap from Lawerence
the Community Manager who brought to speed everyone about the all events the
community has held from the time it started to date as well as sharing
community updates.
With efforts to help organize the community, Lawrence
presented the community committee of 5 people to the members. The Committee is
headed by Moses Echodu – The Chairman, Michael Abaho – Legal affairs, Emily Namugaanyi–
Head of Mozilla and Women, JB Ochieng – Head of Technical and lastly Me – Asa
Lugada – The secretary. These serve for period of 5 month and then another team
is elected. Committee was put in place to help in the smooth running of the community.
This has been a great learning ev for me. I have been
part of a number of planning activities within our community. But being in charge of
an event where it's success or demerits rests entirely on you, is a different
thing altogether even for a MozCafe where we had close to 40 members who turned up.
I am now more grateful to Mozilla and all my community
Leaders who have been at hem of organizing most of our community events.
Link to additional photos: on.fb.me/1mq3aeI