After the 9th Tunisian Blogger Meetup

Last night we had the 9th Tunisian blogger meetup, which was a lot of fun, as usual.

We had 4 new faces with us last night, one blogger, two bloggers-to-be and a TV presenter who has a show about the uses of the internet on national TV.

So, who were the bloggers there last night?
Toon-C, Adib, Mouse Hunter, Infinity, Evil Drako, Blogeuse, Tom, Troubadour, Mraihi and Subzero Blue.

The meetup started at 4PM at Caf

Results of Tunisian Blog Awards 2005

The results for the Tunisian Blog Awards are finally out. It was really a pleasure to be one of the jury in these awards.

The results are as follows:

Best Blog:
Choice of the jury: La Rebelle
Choice of the public: Adib

Best Post:
Choice of the jury: World Summit on Desinformation Society
Choice of the public: Dasdous et la religion, World Summit on Desinformation Society

Best General Blog
Choice of the jury: No Flying Monkeys Zone
Choice of the public: Adib

Best Intimate Blog
Choice of the jury: La Rebelle
Choice of the public: La Rebelle

Best Humour Blog
Choice of the jury: Chikipi
Choice of the public: Oueld Sidi Bou Said

Best Theme Blog
Choice of the jury: TuniZika
Choice of the public: TuniZika

Best Promising Blog
Choice of the jury: No Flying Monkeys Zone
Choice of the public: Tarek Cheniti

Best Heart-throb Blog
The Emy Attitude
Rue de la paix

Congratulations to all the winners ๐Ÿ™‚
And for all those who didn’t win this time, it was a really close competition, and we all love your blogs too, so keep up the great work.
In my eyes, you’re all winners. Bravo to every single one of you.

Organizing Tunisian Blogger Meetup 9

So, a bit over a month has passed since our last Tunisian blogger meetup, and it’s time for us to have another one.

Marouen has launched the idea to have the meetup on Sunday, December 25th. That would be just in time to announce the results of the Tunisian Blog Awards. That’s one day before the official results date for you curious people ๐Ÿ˜‰

So the details for the meetup are as follows:
Date: Sunday, December 25th 2005
Time: 4pm Tunis Time
Venue: Caf

Tunisian Blog Awards 2005

Tunisie Blog Awards 2005The first Tunisian blog awards Tunisie Blog Awards 2005 started today to promote the Tunisian blogosphere even more, encourage bloggers to work more on their blogs and give credit to the bloggers who are doing a great job.

The process will be going through 3 phases:

Phase 1: Blog submissions for each category (12 – 18 December)
Phase 2: Jury votes for top 5 submitted blogs in each category (19 – 25 December)
Results: Results are announced (26 December)

I’m one of the members of the jury in these awards, so for reasons of fairness my blog won’t be running for any of the awards.
Anyway, I will be accepting bribes. (just kidding of course, unless it’s something really worth it :P)

So everyone get over to the Tunisie Blog Awards 2005 site and start submitting your favourite blogs.

After the 8th Tunisian Blogger Meetup

Last night we had the 8th Tunisian blogger meetup at Biwa in Les Berges du Lac, and as usual it was a lot of fun.

What made this meetup even more special is that we had some international guests with us, which was really great and such a pleasure for us all.
Our international guests were: Rebecca MacKinnon, Jeff Ooi from Malaysia, Mite Nishio from the Dominican Republic and Isam Bayazidi from Jordan.

The other blogs represented in this meetup were: Adib, Mouse Hunter, Infinity, Evil Drako, Blogeuse, Jaz in the city, Tom, AquaCool and Subzero Blue.
We also had some non-bloggers with us who we’re working on pushing into blogging ๐Ÿ˜‰

I would like to send a special and big thanks, in behalf of myself and all the bloggers, to my new good friend from the Dominican Republic Mite Nishio for the very nice gifts he brought with him to the meetup.

The meetup started at 8PM and went on until 1AM. We had a nice dinner together and talked about so many things; from blogging and stories surrounding blogging, to ideas for Arab blog-related projects, to Merengue and music from the Dominican republic, to the Tunisian and Arab blogosphere, to places to visit in Tunisia, to capital punishment, to so so much more.

As usual it’s always great to meet bloggers offline and to connect with them on a personal level and just enjoy some quality time together, forget about blogs a bit, have a good laugh, discuss different issues…etc.
I personally extremely enjoy these meetups which are getting better one by one.

Last night, we also talked about the next blogger meetup that will be held next month, and that will be a really cool one. We’ll be posting the details about it soon.

WSIS Reflections

So, as my previous post already told you all, I was at the Kram Palexpo, as it’s now being called, for the World Summit on the Information Society; One of the greatest events that have ever been held in my dear country Tunisia.

I’d like to talk about the organization a bit before I move on. I think Tunisia has done a really good job organizing this event. The badging process was really smooth and practical even though there were a lot of people. Security is really high. The Kram palexpo has been extended to cover the space needed for the summit, the ICT4ALL expo and all the parallel events. In short, I’m really proud of Tunisia’s organization of the summit.

Now back to the summit itself…
One of the main points everyone was talking about and wondering about going into the summit was Internet Governance; Will it remain in the hands of the US or will a world governing body take it over.
As expected, things will remain as they are with the US holding on to full control of the internet.

News reports chose to put it this way: “the delegates reached to an accord that leaves the supervision of domain names and other technical resources unchanged. They agreed instead to an evolutionary approach to Internet management.”
Which is a nice way to say that the US told everyone to buzz off and keep their hands off the internet.

As I said earlier, I took a quick tour of the ICT4ALL expo, which I will certainly have to go back to in these coming days.
I met a number of old friends (offline ones as well as online ones), as well as some new great and interesting people.

Now, some of you might be asking what I was doing there and how I got in.
Well, today was mainly part of my participation in a really exciting project called ReachOut which is organized by the British Council and CholertonShand, in partnership with the WSIS Youth Caucus.

The project’s idea is to encourage and enable open discussion between young people from Arab countries and the United Kingdom about issues raised by the United Nation’s World Summit on the Information Society.

So a group of really interesting people came together today from different Arab countries (Libya, Jordan, Palestine, Kuwait, Syria, Morocco, Egypt, Tunisia), and we got to know each other, visited the Kram palexpo together, and then went back to the British Council where we had a live video conference with another group of equally interesting people at Oxford University in England.

The topics discussed revolved around the different uses of ICT as a tool for development and its role in globalization, culture, dialogue, e-learning, …etc.
It was a very rich discussion that we all hope to build upon and create projects out of the ideas we’ve been brainstorming about.
The event was and will continue to be blogged live here.

I’ll be going back to the Kram palexpo tomorrow, and will hopefully meet some more interesting people that I’ve gotten to know online and get to talk more to the people I met today.
I will also be taking a lot more pictures and trying to get some good quality ones, as the ones I took today were rushed and ended up not so good.
Anyway, I put some online on my flickr here.

Quick Blog From WSIS

This is a live post from the Kram palexpo, where the World Summit on the Information Society is being held. I’m currently on a tour in the ICT4ALL section where countries and companies from all over the world have put up their shiny stands and presentations, scattered leaflets right and left…etc.

It’s been great meeting a number of old friends from other countries, as well as some new interesting people from all over the world.

There’s certainly a lot of interesting stuff and ideas floating around.

I’ll be taking some photos and writing more about this later, as I still have a lot to see and more people to meet.

Internet Connection Problems…

The WSIS starts in a few days, and Tunisia has been preparing to show how successful it can and will be at hosting such big and important events.

But, unfortunately, big events like this come with a downside for the internet users of Tunisia.

2 years ago when Tunisia hosted the ICANN meetings; A big share of the national bandwidth was allocated to the hotel the meetings were being held at, as well as the hotels the guests were staying at. This at a time when those places weren’t even covered by broadband connections yet.

That left the rest of Tunisia with really bad internet connections. People at home found it impossible to surf the net, and companies who had leased lines or adsl felt like they were connected through a 56K modem.

It’s a shame that with the WSIS this year, the same problem is happening all over again.
For this past week, connecting through dialup has been near to impossible, and the supposedly higher speed connections have become a lot slower.

I know it’s important that we have high speed internet in the Kram Palexpo and in the hotels the guests are staying at, but we need the internet too, and those connections shouldn’t be provided at our expense.

In the end, this highlights one of the big problems poorer countries face, which is high bandwidth prices, limiting how much they can buy, and making them unable to provide wide-spread higher speed connections at good prices for their citizens.
I hope a solution will be found for this in the summit, for it is one of the main reasons behind the digital divide between countries.

[More (in French): Infinity]

Organizing Tunisian Blogger Meetup 8

In the last blogger meetup, we talked about having the next Tunisian blogger meetup on November 18th, and well that’s next week already ๐Ÿ™‚

The suggested place and time were Biwa in Les Berges du Lac at 8PM, anyway now after the announced traffic plans for the days of the summit, do you think it’ll still be possible to have it there?

If not, where do you suggest we have it?

Please leave a comment with your ideas.