Since we became an organization last year we've only brought on one person to the Ushahidi staff to help with the increasing amount of work (Henry Addo in Ghana), making 5 of us total. Of course, this has only been possible due to the outstanding community of programmers, testers, grad students, translators, bloggers and designers who openly volunteer their time to the project.
Last month Ory announced a grant that Ushahidi received from the Knight Foundation. This grant was specifically aimed at Kenya, where the organization was born last year, and where we are most at home. It's also where we choose to "eat our own dogfood", applying the platform we built into the real world so that we're users of the same tool that we create and can better improve it for other users. To do that we need more dedicated Ushahidi team members, people who could pour their time and energy into our deployments and partners in Kenya.
[caption id="attachment_719" align="alignright" width="150" caption="Ken Kasina"]
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[/caption]Rebecca Wanjiku (@wanjiku on Twitter) is an active Kenyan technology journalist and blogger. Importantly for us, she's well-known locally and is also well-versed in technology and can therefor be the dedicated person that we need for doing Ushahidi demos and focus groups, and someone who can competently assist those deploying Ushahidi on how to best market it to their end-users.
Rebecca will be responsible for reaching out to end-users, gathering feedback, and reporting on the use of the Ushahidi platform in Kenya. She will work closely with assigned researchers and help us document any issues and areas where users require technical assistance.
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Ken Kasina
In Kenyan programming circles Ken Kasina (@kasina on Twitter) needs little, to no, introduction. However, to the rest of the world it should be noted that Ken won the Global Achievement Award for Open Source in Kenya this year. He is also heavily involved in the Ubuntu GNU/Linux project, working on translations and Linux-based utilities. Ken will have a couple roles: to assist on deployments in Kenya, to work on core architecture and finally to be the go-to guy for the Ushahidi community of programmers in Nairobi.Rebecca Wanjiku
[caption id="attachment_721" align="alignright" width="240" caption="Rebecca Wanjiku and Juliana Rotich"]