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Great reads from around the web on May 16th

Amy Sample Ward

To follow more of the things I find online, you can follow @amysampleward on Twitter (which is just a blog and resource feed), or find me on Delicious (for all kinds of bookmarks). Open Source Zanby Announcement | Zanby.com – I'm so very excited to see this group/community platform go open source!

Web 129
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Google Chrome

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

I can’t test it, because my Mac that has a Windows virtual machine is packed. It is open source, after all. Yes, it is open source, and I applaud Google for releasing open source software. Yes, it is open source, and I applaud Google for releasing open source software.

Google 113
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A Better Way to Produce Nonprofit Annual Reports

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Treesaver is a new open source web platform for publishing that uses the new HTML5 standard to create narrative experiences—with text, pictures and video. Treesaver is significant for nonprofits because it combines important trends – open source software, web standards and mobile applications.

Report 114
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15 Steps to an Awesome Website Launch

Care2

At a minimum, test the site on iphone, ipad, and Android phone. Cross browser compatible tested – Make sure that your site loads well in all major web browsers including Firefox, Google Chrome, Safari, and yes, Internet Explorer. Most open-source CMSs have tools or plugins for setting up daily backups.

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Using a CMS to Make Your Website Social

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Along with updates to the four systems we reviewed in the past, we’ve added seven new open source and proprietary systems to provide nonprofits with a much broader scope of the types of systems available to them. It will give what you need to be a smart consumer. One of the areas we focused on was constituent interaction.

Websites 105
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March Blogtipping

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

Also, a minor technological thing – the RSS feed is a bit wonky sometimes (strange formatting, and it’s not always clear when there are new items.) Comments will be moderated, but at least you won’t have to sign in (or go through one of those lame character-recognition tests) to post something. Be Helpful.

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Integration of CRM and CMS

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

I know that’s one more thing in a long list of considerations (and it’s generally more important to think about for the CRM – the CMS, if it is modern, and especially if it is open source, will provide few barriers to integration.) To some extent it also depends on how open the CMS is with regard to extensibility.