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Firefox Flicks Campaign

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Mozilla's FirefoxFlicks Video competition came to an end a couple of weeks ago and the winners were annonced on 17th May 2012.

This is a global video contest that invites Firefox fans and filmmakers from all over the world to create short videos (or "flicks") to help tell the Firefox story. Mozilla wants the world to know more about what makes Firefox different: that we’re a non-profit organization aimed at keeping the power of the Web in people’s hands. Our hope is that through high-quality videos, we can help mainstream Internet users know more about the issues that affect their online lives and, more importantly, how Firefox addresses these issues. Winning videos will be used in worldwide marketing campaigns and public service announcements.

During the last month of the competition, we set plans to carry out outreach talks in several film and animation schools in Kenya to get participants for FirefoxFlicks. This was quite last minute, however, we managed to meetup with Shangtao's administration, informed Film Aid Eastafrica and Kibera Film School regarding the competition as well as spoke to some students from Kenyatta University's Theater Arts and Film Technology Department. The various administrations and students we spoke to were quite interested in participating but were unable to due to the limited amount of time available before the competition came to an end.

Local Mozilla Reps met up though to shoot an ameture video for the same and managed to gather some fans from the park where the video was shot while at it :) . You can check it out here: Never Alone.

There was only one video submitted form Kenya, actually Africa though with the contacts we've had so far with local film and animation schools/associates we hope to have a mutually beneficial relationship with them.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 22 May 2012 02:04

Latest Firefox Beta Available for Download

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The latest Firefox Beta is now available for download and testing on Windows, Mac, Linux.
What’s New in this update:
  • Redesigned Home Page
  • Redesigned New Tab page
  • Inline URL Auto-Complete
  • Tabs on Demand
  • SPDY Support
  • Developer Tool Updates
To see the full list and more details of the new features, please see the Future of Firefox Blog or technical release notes for Firefox Beta for Windows Mac, Linux.
Share the news and invite your friends to download and start testing.
1. Share the blog post: http://mzl.la/If3A3r
2. Invite friends to download and start testing now!
3. You can also now share Firefox Beta by hosting a Firefox Beta Download button via the Affiliates Program.

Last Updated on Friday, 27 April 2012 12:02

Mozilla Reps Meetup

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DSC_0102

DSC_0105We are a meeting at steers webera street upstairs talking about how 2011 went and the roadmap for  2012, its great to see guys from last year well and good and energetic about this year. Watch out mozillans 2012 is going to be better than 2011.

Last Updated on Saturday, 21 January 2012 18:19

Hackjam Nairobi @Nairobits

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Hi All, Once again,

It is my pleasure to blog about the Hackjam session we had at the Nairobits Design School here in Nairobi.

We had a couple of Mozkenya Team members on board namely; Victor Karanja, Alex Wafula, Benji Otieno, Frankline May and myself (Cliff).  Also, a new face, Rafiq Copeland from Filmaid International joined us just to learn about our 'hacking' mission following the tremendous announcements made on our mailing list. Mr. Rafiq also attended the 2011 Mozilla Festival held in London and he learned about the existence of the local community from Jessica Klein.

We had to have the session out of the scheduled hactivity designed by Jess Klein, seeing that we lacked a lot of materials involved. But all the same we were keen not to leave out the very important steps involved. 

The session kicked off with a brilliant presentation from Alex Wafula (once again, good job Alex). In his presentation, Alex highlighted key points to the current Nairobits class: about Mozilla, Our Mission, getting involved etc... You name them!

We also had snippets presentations from Victor Karanja (a local remo - member). He really did a nice job in clarifying code stuff and also helped in highlighting the current market trends as far as development is concerned. Kudos Vicky!

We then moved to the moment of the day, " The Hackjam Session "! Alex kicked us off again with a quick intro to what Hackasaurus is about, the tools and yes, it was a job well done by him.

It was my turn to take it up from Vic and Alex and my session was to take the class through the X-ray goggles. With the help of all team members present, we did a good demo of the wonderful x-ray goggles and the students did marvel at what wonder works the tool  could do.

Then came the moment of truth, we had to test if the kids grasped how the X-ray goggles worked and also test their html and css skills seeing that they had already interacted with the same. To achieve this, we quickly introduced a hacking challenge for all the students and seeing that we had very little left over swag from previous local Mozilla events, we decided that the best 'hacker' gets a T-shirt! This went down well, with the four T - shirts we had, two were for two girls and two for the boys.

The hacking session took roughly an hour and we quickly had all participants post their 'hacks' on an etherpad including the original site they hacked and their names as well.

The Mozkenya members than picked it from there once again, reviewing all the 'hacked websites' one after another. Quite a hectic job but we finally managed to pick the best even  so! Two girls and two boys walked away with the branded Mozilla Kenya Community t-shirts and a bunch of stickers (though  stickers were for everyone who took part in the session).

With all that, we had to call it a day. I gave the closing remarks and we all waved goodbye to the wonderful Nairobits students and trainers!

Last Updated on Wednesday, 23 November 2011 15:18

WordCamp Kenya 2011

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word_campWordCamp Kenya went down over the weekend at CrayFish camp in Naivasha, 80 km from Nairobi city center. At hand to represent Mozilla were Carolyne Mbulwa, Winnie Situ, Stephen Wanjau, Oscar Limoke and myself. Thumbs up to Stephen and Limoke who made it all the way from Juja / Murang'a to Nairobi and finally to Naivasha.

Carol and Situ were the first to arrive (Saturday morning), early birds if you may and from what I heard, they rocked the place! I linked up with Stephen and Limoke later on that afternoon in Nairobi, caught a bus and made our way to CrayFish getting there just in time for some bird watching bylake Naivasha! David Mugo, the event organizer was at hand to welcome us along with John Karanja from Whive – a local social media platform. Well not forgetting Carol and Situ, these two were everywhere!

WordPress being a popular CMS for blogging sites, a bunch of local bloggers were here and you can't imagine how much these guys tweet and blog, you can check out the WordCamp tweets using these hash tags #wcke , #WordCampke plus I'll put up a list of some great blogs that were done on the event at the end of this post. We caught up with some old and new acquaintances over dinner, discussed a bunch of stuff among them WebFWD (Web forward) the the new Innovation Accelerator from Mozilla and a need to make its presence felt in Kenya.

Last activity of the day on the schedule was a Lyrical Artistry and Poetry session by Wamathai and Njeri wangari which was supposed to happen by a bonfire but we had to move under shelter when it started raining :( I'm not an avid poetry fun though I found this session quite entertaining and yah, so I had some fun with it! Time to call it a day came, we had a mishap with our sleeping tents so long story short, we spent most of the night browsing the web and “shuffling”. We also discovered that some hippos ran wild at the CrayFish camp area...

We managed to catch some few zzz's before resuming for the second day of the WordCamp. David Mugo, the event organizer gave a talk about Africa plus WordPress with a demo on Mobile themes and WordPress mobile apps topped up with interesting stats on mobile coverage in Africa. A bunch of talks this day were aimed at pushing for more local content on the web in Africa by showcasing how far we've gone. Some included:

You can checkout the entire schedule here: http://2011.kenya.wordcamp.org/schedule/

WordCamp Kenya came to an end at around 4:20 pm EAT . We caught the buses made available by the WordCamp kenya team back to Nairobi. The back bench was dominated by Mozillians, along with one new recruit Bett Kipsang (Beliot), Isaac Kosgei (Wikimedian) and Martin Gicheru (web developer; tech reviewer). We had a great discussion about local web enterprises, their successes and failures along with what they are doing wrong, right and what it takes to make it and survive as a web entrepreneur in Africa.

Some insight by Carolyne Mbulwa on what she picked up about blogging:

"Blog your passion

Yeah, the easiest way to blog is to blog your passion. It does give the blogger leverage in that ideas flow, not much energy is spent on research as opposed to a topic you are not versed in. Passion makes you understand your area in order to tell your audience.

Engage your target audience

Talk to them, let them feel like its a one on one with them. When you get an attachment to a few of them, they will feel good sharing your work with others, and that’s like recommending you. You know how recommendations work, word of mouth, word of tweet.

Plan your blogging just like you would do a business

Two of the speakers, Moses Kemibaro and Njeri Rionge articulated this very well, Njeri told us that we need to plan our blogging just like one would do a marketing plan, who are your audience, how will you reach them, is it the numbers versus conversion. By conversion I mean, say you are selling a solution to your audience, you would better have targeted audience 2000 people access your content and 500 of them actually purchase your product, as opposed to an untargeted audience of a million and you don't get a hundred of them .You should know the people you want to reach and research how best to do this. Taking time to plan gets you right on track, early and saves you time roaming in the desert of unplanned work for 40 years like the Israelites of those times.

Be the professional

Take things seriously. Let you be known in your niche, let it flow from your blog to your tweets, own it. You will find even paid consultations going your way just because you are the person who talks with authority in that niche. Moses Kemibaro does that all the time, and you say blogging doesn't pay!? "

In summary, this was a great event for Mozillians to attend and with the new acquaintances made, we'll now be on the know of any blogger related events happening as well as look into the future of blogging in Africa (local content). We've also made strives in getting guys interested in WebFWD.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 22 November 2011 17:24