Google tool helps find Japan's missing - 0 views
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After seeing the tragedy that has hit Japan, I found this story to be useful as a great example of how tech can really affect people's lives. Google has provided a system where you can search the name of a person in Japan and find out about their status in the country after the earthquake. This tool is so important for government to use during a national disaster because it allows families, no matter where they are across the globe, to better find out what has happened to their loved ones after such a tragedy. Governments or non profits such as the American Red Cross can use this technology in all types of different relief effort circumstances when a number of people somewhere in the world have been the victim of such a disaster.
Wild Apricot Blog : Non-profits Are You Listening? - 0 views
Relationship Management and Fundraising with Technology in the Non-Profit Sec... - 0 views
Impact Of Online Technology On The Nonprofit Sector - 0 views
A New Culture for the Non Profit Sector: The Culture of Impact Brokers | Leadership Lea... - 0 views
Hacktivism: Startup Mentality for the Non-Profit Sector - 0 views
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young hacker is holed up alone in his apartment. His face is lit by a laptop screen, monitor split between a live video stream and a text editor filled with code. Fueled by Ramen Noodles and caffeine, he codes away through the night, monitoring the latest hashtags on Twitter, never a few seconds behind the newest exploding meme, instantly transmitting the latest news to others in his social graph. ((This is a scene that is played out in the rooms of countless hackers and their "lean startups" around the world. Only for the past few weeks, it could have just as easily described an entirely new, organic, philanthropic phenomenon: Hacktivism. Hacktivism is the use of hacking and the startup mentality to tackle and support social good causes.
Four Free Digital Marketing Tools for Non-Profits - 0 views
Blackbaud Launches Program for International NGOs - 0 views
Google Grants - 1 views
How Secure Is Cloud Computing? - 0 views
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Technology pop quiz for business owners: What's more secure? A. Data stored in redundant back-up server installations (or "the cloud"), automatically updated and maintained, in a facility secured from outside threats. Or B. Data stored or backed up to an on-site tape or flash drive, whenever the company's controller or non-IT back-office staffer remembers to do it - then left in the drive? For many, the answer in theory is A, but in practice, it's B. Why is this important? Because studies have shown that 70 percent of companies go out of business after a major data loss and 60 percent of companies that lose their data will shut down within six months. Yet those unfamiliar with cloud computing still believe onsite back-up is a safe, secure solution. Therein lies one of the most compelling reasons to embrace cloud or ERP (enterprise resource planning) computing.
Comp TIA and green IT initiatives - 0 views
High-impact Marketing Strategies for Non-profits and Small Businesses « Marke... - 0 views
Non profit pet adoption - 0 views
Spam! - 0 views
Keys to Better Non Profit Fundraising Results | Raffle Fundraising Tips | Ideas | Strat... - 0 views
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