NTEN Award
Doesn't it figure that this would arrive after this morning's post?
I’m just back from NTEN‘s wonderful annual conference, which was in DC this year. This is my third year attending,.
I’m back and moderately recovered from the 2015 NTC in Austin, Texas, where, along with plenty of good Texas food.
I’m back from the 2014 Nonprofit Technology Conference. This one had some real high points for me, and a few.
Last week I attended two events sponsored by my new employer, Legal Services Corporation (LSC). The first was a two day Technology Summit, where a group of 50 thought leaders gathered to develop a plan for addressing the demand for legal aid more dramatically by making strategic use of technology. That was followed by the three day Technology Initiative Grants (TIG) conference.
NTEN hosted a record breaking 2000 people looking to be more effective in their use of technology to support good causes in D.C. last week. I wasn't one of them. So, why the wrap-up? Because the NTC (Nonprofit Technology Conference) is such a big event in my life that, even if I skip it, it doesn't necessarily skip me. :)
An award-winning friend of mine at NTEN referred me to this article, by Jeremy Reimer, suggesting that Word, the ubiquitous Microsoft text manipulation application, has gone the way of the dinosaur. The "boil it down" quote:
"Word was designed in a different era, for a very specific purpose. We don't work that way anymore."
At the NTEN awards on Friday, Marnie Webb took the Person of the Year award, and rightly so! In honor.
This article was originally published at Idealware in October of 2007. Let’s say you have two different software packages, and.
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