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Al Boss
Al Boss is vital to the origin and development
of this web site. Let me tell you about it.
When I began the Community Management
Programme (CMP) in Uganda, mid 1994 for a Danida funded UN-Habitat programme,
I saw that what was needed was training material to guide the mobilisers
already in the field. It had to be written in simple English, aimed
at middle school level. At that time Uganda had no commercial server
for internet access. Instead, Makarere University had a computer
that dialled Green Net in London, UK, and uploaded all its collected email
messages, and downloaded those waiting for Uganda. We were about
800 users in Uganda, mostly in Kampala. Sometimes messages took up
to six days to get delivered, and often we got each others’ mail, and
some mail disappeared. We had no Internet, and no WWW and all that,
but I could send an email to a university in Ireland with instructions
to get a web page off the net for me (when I knew its URL) and it would
send the page to me as an email attachment. Slow and cumbersome, it was
like living in the age of steam.
A friend alerted me to a listserv programme
called cd4urban (urban community development) and so I subscribed.
Al Boss was the moderator, and members could send in messages, and they
were distributed to all the members. A bit of spam and wiseacres
got through, but they were generally useful, although I was not so interested
in all the American concerns and those of the city planners. I also
met several professionals through the listserv, and it was a good service
for me all round.
I was busy writing training documents,
some based on my decades of experience elsewhere, some specific to the
problems and issues of the Uganda programme. Somewhere in our project document
was the idea of making our material available to the world, and those of
us (in the four countries implementing this programme) who could, wrote
documents to publish. Al suggested that I put some of the material
onto the Internet, and said he knew a free service for non profit organisations.
I was happy about that and wrote a couple text files, and he put them onto
the Seattle Community Net in his capacity of Web Master for the (international)
Community Development Society. I went to Nairobi every few months,
and at UN Headquarters, Gigiri, I was able to view my web site on the computer
of friends in their computer department. We got more coverage and
it was cheaper and easier on forests to use the internet.
By 1996, we had commercial Internet
access in Uganda, and so I wanted to expand the site and have more control.
Al did not teach me; he directed me to use the internet to find web pages
that could teach me (good community development methodology, “teach a
man to fish . . .”). Since my family were living in Canada, and
I did not want to play “Rwandese Roulette” (haunting the bars), I had
many free evenings to teach myself how to write web pages (in those days,
manually).
He has always been ready to help me
whenever I have run into trouble, I consider him my IT guru, and an important
contributor to this site.

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