Hi,

Thanks for your positive and critical comments, as usual Ben.

Richard I think that is important to listen to a community when reaching
to it (I remember a talk we had where I suggested an approach closer to
anthropology instead of marketing). Many of us value your contributions,
despite of approaching them in a critical way. For example, I think that
promotion is important, but popularity is not, and the later is not a
proper measure of the effectivity of the former. As a Latin American
(that means people born and rise Latino America, not Latinos living in
United States) for me is really alien the North American people (that
means people living in the North region of the American continent that
goes from Alaska to Patagonia and beyond) is kind of obsessed with
popularity, competition, winning and losing, at least for what popular
media depicts (even seems that loser is kind of a big insult over
there). I don't think that winning a competition is the best way of
making a younger become part of collaborative open community. Also, in
an interconnected world, I feel more inclined to volunteer my time
helping a young person from the Global South to become part of the
Pharo/Smalltalk community that to volunteer my time for a pretty
localized competence in a particular place of the Global North.

That being said, I think that little money can help a lot (specially in
the Global South) and I like the idea of making young people interested
in the offerings that Smalltalk has. The average FLOSS project has a
media of one developer [1], so even winning one more after the
competition is a big win. But I would try to volunteer my time in
something that brings the gap between Pharo communities and young people
and between the Global North and the Global South, specifically in my
Pharo powered project, Grafoscopio.

[1] https://mako.cc/writing/hill-when_free_software_isnt_better.html

So I'm glad that you are open to suggestions. Here come mine about how
this could be done, but this may also become something totally different
of your actual proposal, but, hopefully, also more global, interesting,
long lasting and a middle point between your promotional efforts and the
activities of this community.

# The Smalltalk Global Campfire

Is an immersive inclusive global experience where new people (regardless
of age, ethnicity or gender) can participate in a Smalltalk powered
project and get mentorship from community members and start a long
lasting relationship with a powerful technology, Smalltalk, and the
friendly communities around it.

## How it will work

Seasoned global Smalltalkers will propose a "tent", which is a set of
related campfire projects (one or many) directed towards newbies,
related with programming and coding, but also connected them with other
activities which recognize that people comes from different backgrounds,
have different interests and that an inclusive tech community is more
than code[2]. The projects will allow newbies to learn coding, but also
to express and connect it with wider concerns (documentation, civic
tech, entrepreneurship, gaming, learning, etc).

[2] https://morethancode.cc/about/

Interested campers will find the different tents where they can join and
the tent leader will prepare a set of (increasingly complex?) activities
for the members of the tent. Campers will work in the activities on a
weekly basis and setup and open source code repository for working together.

Coordination language for the Global Campfire will be English for tent
leaders, but campers can use native language for communication between
them and for some activities (local documentation, translations) as we
don't want to impose a unique language to become part of a community and
we recognize active Smalltalkers from around the world that can help
local communities, made them stronger and better connected.

## Tent medals

Becoming part of a open collaborative community is mostly about being
able to help each other and how you and the community create value for
each other. So while this is not a competition, we recognize that small
money can be an important incentive to keep communities dynamic.

At the end of the Campfire the community will provide with Member Badges
and Tent Medals which recognize the work done by all the participants
and also will give a small money incentive for the tent that made the
best work, so the tent can decide how to spend it better. The evaluation
will be done for each Tent leader, and also two external judges.

The Tent Medals will be:

  * 1 Gold Medal: XXX Dollars.
  * 1 Silver Medal: XYZ Dollars.
  * 1 Bronze Medal: ABC Dollars.

## Closing

I really don't know about the details here: How do we assign the prices?
There is any better place that the one referred at [2] to showcase the
important of going beyond code in tech communities? What is the proper
duration for the Campfire? This is just a draft, but I think that this
is something I would like to volunteer for and serves better the need
for new people in our community, and can be also addressed from our
local context and particular projects while connecting more the global
community.

On 21/11/18 10:23, Ben Coman via Pharo-users wrote:

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