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Headline, Islam, tech for education »

[28 Jul 2011 | Comments | 670 views]
Nurani: A Walk Through Meedan’s Scriptural Reasoning software

I am proud to announce the first release of Nurani, Meedan’s platform for cross-language scriptural discussion for Muslim and Christian scholars managed by the Cambridge Inter-faith Programme at the University of Cambridge, a programme of the Faculty of Divinity.

The long term goal is a federated system of discussion fora (Nurani, ScripturalReasoning.org and others run by new partners) drawing upon a common textual resource (the library).  The next phase in this vision is to be funded over 18 months by a UK Research Council Digital Economy Grant with two new developer positions to be hired at Cambridge with project management, design and strategy provided by Meedan.

Egypt, Featured, Media, Society »

[15 Apr 2011 | Comments | 1,258 views]
Why did the Mubarak regime turn the internet off?

Why did the Mubarak regime turn the internet off?

That was the question I asked the attendees of a gathering recently at the Oxford Internet Institute looking at the role of the internet in the revolutions sweeping the Middle East.

The question gives us, I suggested, a route into understanding the other side of the equation, ie. How authoritarian regimes maintain their power. It therefore connects us to a long standing debate that has encompassed media studies, cultural anthropology, political science and more.

Featured, tech for education, translation »

[15 Dec 2010 | Comments | 1,280 views]
Translation as Means of Increasing Intellectual Production in the Middle East

What is the relationship between translation and intellectual production? It is not obvious, you might think. Translation, by necessity, does not provide new insights but rather makes existing knowledge available in another language. If everyone spoke English it would not really be an issue.

Featured, Society, tech for education »

[1 Dec 2010 | Comments | 1,093 views]
Lessons of Scriptural Reasoning for cross-cultural collaboration

Earlier this year, I was invited to sit in on a theological gathering at Cambridge University.  Over three intense days, I watched scholars from as far afield as Asia, North America, the Middle East and Russia pour over passages of scripture in small mixed faith groups.  Although the academic surroundings were familiar to me, I was to be exposed to a form of shared study that I had never witnessed before.

Featured, tech for education »

[1 Dec 2010 | Comments | 1,634 views]
Meedan partner meeting at University of Cambridge

As the sole London-based member of Meedan’s far flung team (we have developers in Damascus, Amman, San Francisco and Portland, not to mention our team of editors and translators across the Middle East), I was glad to have some company last week when some of my colleagues dropped in for a visit.

The occasion was a two-day gathering at the University of Cambridge with the academic partners behind our inter-faith project.

Featured, Media, translation »

[18 Mar 2010 | Comments | 1,821 views]
Presenting Meedan at Leeds University Centre for Translation Studies

Yesterday I presented Meedan’s approach to collaborative translation to students at the Centre for Translation Studies at Leeds University, UK.

There was a great turn out, particularly from Arabic students, and I was absolutely amazed be the quality of the feedback.

We discussed Meedan’s approach and how to get started using the tools, and I tried to demonstrate how getting involved would increase translators’ opportunities by boosting their profile, increasing their technology awareness and honing their translation skills with a live audience.

Featured, Media »

[28 Mar 2009 | Comments | 3,296 views]
Google admits ‘real challenge’ in widening Arab access to internet content

Google has admitted it faces major challenges in widening access to the internet in the Arab World.

Limited infrastructure and language problems in the Middle East hinder access to the best of what the web has to offer, the search engine said in launch post of the Google Arabia blog.

With just one percent of all internet content in Arabic, Middle East audiences still have some way to go before they can enjoy the breadth of content other language communities have access to.