[governance] Jo-Anne Scott remembered
Salanieta T. Tamanikaiwaimaro" (via governance Mailing List
governance at lists.riseup.net
Fri Aug 16 14:20:55 EDT 2019
Our sincere condolences on Jo-Anne's passing and trusting she is in a
better place. Condolences to her family and friends and the wider internet
community who knew her. Appreciate the introduction and Eulogy on her life
and how you met.
Praying for peace for her family and you.
Best Wishes,
Sala
On Fri, 16 Aug 2019, 7:05 pm Imran Ahmed Shah, <governance at lists.riseup.net>
wrote:
> Dear George,
>
> Very sad news. Please accept my condolence, and if can pass to her family.
>
> Thanks and Best Regards
>
> Imran Ahmed Shah
>
> On Friday, 16 August 2019, 22:54:08 GMT+5, George Sadowsky <
> governance at lists.riseup.net> wrote:
>
>
> I'm very sad to hear of Jo-Anne Scott's passing. She was a good colleague
> and a good friend.
>
> I first met Jo-Anne at a meeting in Palo Alto in September 1992, hosted by
> Steve From and Scott Weikert. A few months before that, I had discussed
> with Larry Landweber at INET'92 in Kobe the possibility of setting up a
> training program in Internet technology and use for people from developing
> countries. In the 1970s and 1980s, I worked for the United Nations and was
> involved in many technology transfer programs in the area of computing, and
> I had seen to my dismay the state of technical knowledge, education, and
> resources in most of the countries in which I had worked. Larry suggested
> giving it a try. Steve Fram was one of the early collaborators, and we were
> meeting in his office in Palo Alto to do the initial planning.
>
> Jo-Anne attended the meeting, I had not known her before, but her
> enthusiasm for the project and solving logistical aspects of making it
> happen were contagious, so we became the initial band of co-conspirators
> for what became ISOC's network technologies training program for people
> from developing countries. Since INET'93 was planned for San Francisco
> in August 1993, we decided to hold the training workshop in the Silicon
> Valley just before the INET meeting, and then have the trainees participate
> also in that meeting. We believe that the latter step was important in
> introducing them to the people we hoped would be their future Internet
> colleagues and would assist them in the developments in their own countries.
>
> At the time I was working at New York University and was not situated to
> assist in local preparation for the workshop. Joanne lived in Palo Alto,
> and she believed that she could work with Stanford University to provide
> lodging, classroom space, and meals for the trainees and trainers during
> August 1993. She set about to do it with a vigor, enthusiasm, and
> initiative that characterized her contributions to the workshop for the
> next five years.. She convinced the University to provide dormitory space,
> meal arrangements,and suitable classroom space for the entire process, and
> she coordinated all of the preparatory work, including the procurement,
> delivery, and set up for a large number of personal computers to be used
> by the three training tracks. She also arranged for several social events
> in the evenings to foster a sense of professional community among the
> attendees, as well as to meet local people who lived in the Palo Alto area.
> I remember her setting up a fireside chat with Vint Cerf one evening, which
> resulted in a spirited discussion of the potential of the Internet and the
> importance of what it could provide for development.
>
> At the end of INET' 93, Jo-Anne and I had dinner with the INET'94
> conference chair, and after reviewing the success of our workshop, we
> decided to do it again, a decision that was repeated for several years
> after that. Although it may not have been clear to the workshop
> participants, the amount of logistical preparation required to set up the
> Prague workshop in 1994 was immense. Only a few years had elapsed since the
> erosion of the iron curtain and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, and
> Czechoslovakia was in a rapid state of change. Joanne cooperated with the
> Czech Technical University to find space for housing in the Hotel Krystal,
> a tram ride away from the University buildings in which staff would be
> teaching the four tracks. The Hotel Krystal even had a computer lab with
> 24 computers, connected to the Internet via a low-bandwidth permanent
> connection. During the workshop, Jo-Anne learned that our Hotel Krystal
> had only been a hotel for a few years and before that it had been the
> training institute for the Czech secret police. We wondered how many
> microphones were still installed in various parts of the building,
> including the sleeping rooms. Jo-Anne also discovered the "Chicago Pizza
> House" (not a typo!) in an underground warren near the hotel, where we
> went for relief several times to escape the rich Czech food offerings.
>
> Jo-Anne continued to participate actively in and support the workshop
> activities in 1995 in Honolulu, in 1996 in Montréal and in 1997 in Kuala
> Lumpur. In 1994 she discovered the local travel agent in Palo Alto, Maria
> Orvell, who worked with Joanne and together they became accomplished in
> bringing people from all parts of the world to wherever the next INET
> meeting was going to be held.
>
> The process of choosing and assisting participants to attend the workshops
> was extensive. Applications were solicited through a number of channels,
> including disseminating information by participants in formal workshops.
> These all came to Jo-Anne and she prepared them for evaluation by a
> committee consisting of the teaching staff for the next workshop. After
> that, the complex process of distributing the financial resources that we
> were able to obtain, ascertaining the possibility of visas and helping
> participants to obtain them (including making intercessions with the host
> country), and making flight arrangements, and this generally had to be
> performed individually for each participant. The logistics process took a
> lot of time andinitiative, and Joanne was able to do it, always in time to
> meet our deadlines.
>
> Jo-Anne was a true partner. She embodied the spirit of the Internet,
> helping, sharing, supporting, and giving of herself so that others might
> learn and in turn share with a new with others in their country. She
> believed strongly in the Internet's ability to help people in earlier
> stages of development, and she gave herself fully to the task. Many
> workshop participants saw her correctly as fundamental to the success of
> their experience. I'm glad that she lived long enough to observe the
> benefits of her contribution to global Internet development, but very sad
> that she was not able to continue to do so. She will be missed.
>
> George
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> George Sadowsky Residence tel:
> +1.301.968.4325
> 8300 Burdette Road, Apt B-472 Mobile:
> +1.202.415.1933
> Bethesda MD 20817-2831 USA Skype:
> sadowsky
> george.sadowsky at gmail.com http://www.georgesadowsky.org/
>
>
>
> ---
> To unsubscribe: <mailto:igc-unsubscribe at lists.riseup.net>
> List help: <https://riseup.net/lists>
> ---
> To unsubscribe: <mailto:igc-unsubscribe at lists.riseup.net>
> List help: <https://riseup.net/lists>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.igcaucus.org/pipermail/governance/attachments/20190816/ea274a24/attachment.htm>
More information about the Governance
mailing list