Happy Halloween! Hopefully, you've had your candy fill for the day. In the weekly report, we've got a Hurricane Sandy map update as well as a new code from the community: WMS Layers Plugin.
Into the Code:
Congratulations and thanks go out to Community members - Seth Kigen and Robert Buckley. Seth has released a WMS Layers plugin. It supports Ushahidi versions 2.5/2.6. (Currently, this plugin is not available on Crowdmap.) This functionality has long been a community need. Already folks are chatting on our Ushahidi community developer chat room about testing and future deployments. Our Next Community Developer call is Monday, November 26th. Details on the wiki: Community Meetings. If you want to get involved in our developer community, please contact us.From the Community:
Translations /Localization: From Bosnian to Kiswahili
First off, A huge thanks to the Bosnia localization community with our partner, Al Jazeera, for localizing Ushahidi in Bosnian Language in a week: we went from 5% to 85%. Inspired, we are going to adopt a LANGUAGE a WEEK campaign to increase our localization globally. We are very proud of all the amazing participants. Your work will hep local civil society mappers. More on this soon! Now, this week's language goal: Help Translate Ushahidi into KiSwahili. We're at 55% complete. Sample Tweet to help make it happen:Kiswahili & Ushahidi - you can help translate. Instructions: http://bit.ly/SxEW0f Languages: http://bit.ly/TUFJW2
Deployment of the Week
Deployments of the Week (Shared): Hurricane Sandy Mappers - All of you. From the groups and individuals with a full plan to those of you who tinkered with a deployment and to those who also contacted us but chose not to deploy. Each map is a learning moment which can build on itself. Most of all, you have focused on citizens helping citizens for the low-hanging fruit to support your communities and neighbours. We know that recovery is a long task. Our thoughts are with the citizens and responders. We hope that maps of all varieties can aid you in a few key learnings that we have observed:- The Crisismapping community has created a directory of maps/datasets. I've updated it with all the active Crowdmaps as of today. You can see the wide variety of initiatives and locations. At ICCM RHOK, we created a map of Ushahidi maps. There really is a need for a collective map data plan to share resources, data and plans for emergencies.
- The Hurricane Hacking community created resources and ideas for folks to collaborate.
- Many of you changed categories, collaborated and moved from response to recovery maps.
- The types of maps and various uses show a potential preparedness model. What should communities plan for maps in case of emergency?