The first Africa Source was in Namibia in early 2004.  The second was in early 2006.  Both experiences really got me excited about open source all over again, and introduced me to people I remain in contact with today.

I guess the regular fix has created an expectation.  After becoming a bit jaded about the state of progress in open source (with a few exceptions, of course) in the country, it seems I need a pick-me-up of the sort of Africa Source.  (The only primarily-open source related event on my calendar in 2007 was UWC's Digital Freedom Exposition, which didn't evoke much excitement from me.  But there was also the iCommons Bring and Braai, which did.)

GeekDinner has been filling some of the gap, and StarCamp helped a little more.  One thing the Source events did was teach me that the surest way to make something happen is to make it happen - do something about it.  So, after StarCamp, I've been thinking of a few events for the coming two years.  Some are probably more likely than others, of course.

Most likely is StarCamp in July-or-so 2008 in Cape Town.  The group that attended StarCamp in December seemed to really enjoy it, and just coming together again for a day or two again will be worth it.  But I think it'll be bigger and better next time round, and I'll be starting preparations for it soon.

Next up is a South African web technology conference.  I want to get the guys who make IOL, Mail and Guardian (including Amatomu), CareerJunction, KnowledgeTree, SynthaSite, Tank, Afrigator, and more together in a room for one to three days (they can leave the room for a few hours to sleep, if they're good).  I want to see them sharing lessons learned and ideas and generally improving the state of the art in the country.  Oh, and there's obviousy the chance and hope that we'll have people from outside SA coming down to attend.

And then there's the possibility of getting international speakers on technologies to come for the conference,  give some public talks in collaboration with GeekDinner, and hopefully to give training before or after the conference.

Although I might not be there, I'm very interested in helping anyone wanting to try replicate the GeekDinner and StarCamp formula to other regions in Africa.  I'll probably be speaking about how to replicate the success we've had with these and transmit some lessons we've learned at a conference in Dakar next month, so there may actually be a good chance... 

The farthest out there is another national, regional, or continent-wide Source event like Africa Source.  Certainly the geographically larger the scope, the larger the requirement for experience with both event organisation and navigating the world of international non-profit funding.

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Kwindla Hultman Kramer has written up a summary of the first day of AfricaSource. At the same time, slashdot's caught on to the bridges.org article based on Africa Source, Straight from the Source.
In collaboration with the Tactical Technology Collective, bridges.org has released an article on the African open source developer experience entitled Straight from the Source: Perspectives from the African Free and Open Source Software Movement, based on interaction that occurred at the AfricaSource African developers meeting in Namibia.
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There was a mention of AfricaSource in the latest edition of Linux Magazine. You can download just the pertinent section. It mentions my web site, and even has a comment attributed to me by name.
I've set up a quick Zope/Plone site with photos from Africa Source. Thanks to Sunil Abraham, I've been looking at Zope and Plone again - it's looking really great. Just use WebDAV to upload pictures into a Photo Album - works a dream!

Africa Hacks

On the last official day of Africa Source Andy Wingo, an American teaching in Namibia, has set up blogs.fossfa.org for the delegates of Africa Source to start their own web logs. In the closing circle, it was nice to hear that a few delegates found blogging one of the best things they learned in the past week.
The final official session was the closing circle, where we received an NGO-in-a-box, a set of CDs that aims to be of use for people trying to get Open Source used by NGOs. It's an exciting project, but technical issues (bandwidth, hardware) prevented us from improving it as intended. The closing circle closed with each person expressing the best thing about the past week. I'm very excited that people found learning about blogging and Zope amongst the best, and rewarding that some people were inspired by my Python and Twisted sessions. After supper (of braai food), we had an African dance troupe to entertain us. Now, at 1am, there're a group of 12 of us hacking on translation, blogs, and CD burning drinking quality Namibian alcohol and snacks.
The final official day of Africa Source focussed on how to take what we've learned, the connections we've made, and our renewed spirit and continue to do excellent stuff with Open Source in Africa's development. We identified who wasn't at Africa Source that we may invite to Africa Source II, what more end-user-oriented knowledge we could impart, and possible goals for the conference. Tactical Tech are keen on organising Africa Source II in about six months, and I wish them the best of luck!
The morning session I attended was entitled Complex web development led by Kwindla Hultman Kramer from AllAfrica (and behind BlogAfrica). Kwindla explained the software stack involved at AllAfrica (Apache, mod_perl, mod_proxy, HTML::Mason, and their own Open Source project, XML::Comma). I shared our experiences at Independent Online, both in software and architecture choices. It was a great session, with the participants guiding the discussion and getting advice from years of experience.
Can honestly say Africa Source has not been a talk shop. If anything, localisation and translation has been a well-covered and well-received topic, and Dwayne Bailey from Translate.org.za has been working overtime. Inspired by Dwayne's talks, Jason Githeko approached Dwayne, and they have produced a Kiswahili dictionary during the conference. Nice quote from Jason: ``I have been working on this project for more than five years. And in the end creating the spellchecker took only a day''. Just by bringing people like Dwayne and Jason together for a few days has produced something that may have never happened otherwise. Great stuff.