Festival2012: Difference between revisions
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* June 13: Board discussion, presentation of festival | * June 13: Board discussion, presentation of festival | ||
* July 15: Top partners & session leads confirmed | * July 15: Top partners & session leads confirmed | ||
* '''August | * '''August 5: Open Registration''' | ||
* August 15: Agenda Fireside | * August 15: Agenda Fireside | ||
* August | * August 22: Launch full website | ||
* September 1: Rolling email campaign to promote content & sign-ups | * September 1: Rolling email campaign to promote content & sign-ups | ||
* '''September 15: Session proposal deadline''' | |||
* September 10: All-hands, Session & Facilitation bootcamp | * September 10: All-hands, Session & Facilitation bootcamp | ||
* September 23: Summer Code Party winds-up. Festival fellows announced. | * September 23: Summer Code Party winds-up. Festival fellows announced. | ||
Revision as of 12:27, 7 August 2012
Mozilla Festival 2012
A yearly festival with hundreds of passionate people
Making, Freedom and the Web
November 9 - 11, 2012 | #mozfest
London, UK | Ravensbourne
Goals
- Make things with the tools Mozilla and others are creating
- Learn who is building what, how we can share and help each other
- Imagine making in 100 years: what future are we building?
- Design the things we want to build next, especially for mobile
- Fuel leaders who want to invent, teach and organize
Themes
- Hackable games
- Making the web physical
- Webmaking for mobile
- Coding for kids
- Web-native cinema
- Source code for journalism
- Acknowledging skills with badges
Who should come?
- Journalists
- Filmmakers
- Educators
- Gamers
- Kids
- Designers
- Web developers
- Makers
- Musicians
All making the web they want.
Draft Schedule
| Thursday, Nov 8 (Prep) | Friday, Nov 9 | Saturday, Nov 10 | Sunday, Nov 11 | Monday, Nov 12 (Debrief) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morning | Mozilla staff arrive in London | Pop-up Setup + Facilitator Huddle + Press Conference | Welcome | Learning Labs and Design Challenges | Facilitator Debrief |
| Afternoon | Facilitators arrive in London | Learning Pop-Up for Youth + Facilitator Huddle | Learning Labs and Design Challenges | Learning Labs and Design Challenges | Festival team departs |
| Evening | Festival team dinner | Opening Science Fair | Keynotes and Party | Closing Science Fair |
Sessions in progress
1. Make things with the tools Mozilla and others are creating
- Popcorn Maker templates that are sexy and will grow interest and participation. Get as much of the hacking as we can to be around templates (Ben Moskowitz, Dave Humphrey)
- Create new prototypes of web documentaries from The Living Docs project (Brett Gaylor)
- Building Thimble projects and aligned badges (Erin Knight + Jess Klein + Chloe Varelidi)
- Explore a next version of Thimble that supports Javascript to teach basic game development, design and system thinking skills to youth (Chloe Varelidi)
- Testing Open Badges by using OpenBadger to create and share new badges developed by MozFest attendees (Chris McAvoy, Brian Brennan, Mike Larsson, Sunny Lee, Carla Casilli)
- Hacking Popcorn Maker templates for the newsroom (Knight-Mozilla Fellows/Newshour(?))
- Thimble hacks to help journalists learn to code (Dan Sinker)
- Transform audio into images, and then play it back - the Web gramophone (Alex Lakatos and Brian King)
- Hacking the browser - using the Add-ons SDK to hack inside and outside the box (Alex Lakatos and Brian King)
- Youth Storytelling with Popcorn:* A learning lab activity station with access to awesome Popcorn templates and lesson materials for anyone (especially youth), to sit down and publish a Popcorn project on the web within minutes. (Jacob Caggiano)
- Science Fair (Michelle Thorne)
- Hive Pop-Up+ > London / NYC / Chicago (Chris Lawrence + Erin Knight + John Bevan)
- Thimble project show and tell, playtesting at MozFest (Erin Knight + Jess Klein + Chloe Varelidi)
- Teach-ins based on from OpenNews hackathons (i.e. timelines from Argentina, Wall Street Journal) (Dan Sinker)
- Open Badges in the wild, a DML joint session (Sunny Lee + Carla Casilli)
- Election Hacking: Comparing notes, thoughts, and code from 2012 elections with newsroom developers. (Dan Sinker, Ben Simon)
3. Imagine making in 100 years: what future do we want?
- Keynotes on the long game
- Futurecasting of Internet threat scenarios over next 100 years
- What does success look like with Webmaker - what will a webmaking generation be able to do, change, etc?
- How might badges change the learning landscape, what types of things do we need to do to get there? (Carla Casilli + Sunny Lee + Chris McAvoy)
4. Design the things we want to build next, especially for mobile
- Universal Level Editor for Hackable Web Games (Mark Surman + Bobby Richter + Alan Kligman + Pomax)
- 3D games (Alan Kligman)
- 2D games (Pomax)
- Making the Web Physical (Mozilla Japan + University of Dundee)
- Webmaking for Mobile
- Hack session for a mobile version of OpenBadger (OBI tech team)
- Hack the Second Screen (Knight-Mozilla Fellow Mark Boas)
- Build a Festival News Dashboard (Knight-Mozilla Fellow Cole Gillespie)
- Designing for Credibility (Knight-Mozilla Fellow Dan Schultz)
- Fabrication Zone
5. Fuel leaders who want to invent, teach and organize
- Session leaders drawn from Hive and other youth networks
- Connecting and empowering grassroots instructors and teachers (Michelle Levesque + John Bevan)
- Traditional curriculum hacking (Chris Lawrence + Erin Knight + Laura Hilliger + Oliver Quinlan)
- Soft skills for supporting and leading the Webmaker Movement (Allen Gunn)
- Knight-Mozilla Fellows (2012 & 13) talk about leadership in the new newsroom (Knight-Mozilla Fellows)
- Working in the Open (Matt Thompson)
- Badge system design hacking + yakking (Carla Casilli)
- Collect best practices for hack events
- Youth Storytelling with Popcorn: A session on "training the trainers" -- how to teach web native storytelling and interactive video to youth. We'll reflect on experiences from Popcorn #StoryCamp and share successes and challenges on getting youth and youth leaders involved. (Jacob Caggiano)
Timeline
- June 10: Initial goals & high-level sessions on wiki
- June 13: Board discussion, presentation of festival
- July 15: Top partners & session leads confirmed
- August 5: Open Registration
- August 15: Agenda Fireside
- August 22: Launch full website
- September 1: Rolling email campaign to promote content & sign-ups
- September 15: Session proposal deadline
- September 10: All-hands, Session & Facilitation bootcamp
- September 23: Summer Code Party winds-up. Festival fellows announced.
- late September - October: Pre-festival events, inc. with instructors.
Essentials
- Save the Date
- Website: mozillafestival.org
- Mailing list: festival - at - mozilla - . - org
- Hashtag: #mozfest
- IRC: irc://irc.mozilla.org#mozfest
Team
- Festival Lead: Michelle Thorne
- Local Producer: Alex Deschamps-Sonsino
- Participation Design: Allen Gunn
- Volunteer Coordinator: Diana Proca
- Mozilla Reps Coordinator: William Duyck
- Partnerships: Geoffrey Macdougall

