[GiftEconomy] Websites for a Moneyless World

frank bowman greenwomble at googlemail.com
Sat Feb 26 10:52:09 PST 2011


I agree. Simple to use is the one!to do.

Wish our two gift economy land projects were on there. Not net savvy
yet though. I suppose it has to link to a website. Weve been active
since 92. Its so lovely to see things happening!   We have a new yahoo
group and facebook page. And though Weve got the websites but theyve
parked up for 10 years unused. Somehow I need to at least put a page
on them! Trouble is we're totally off any mains. Rely on half a signal
on one mobile network, that works here orange.

We'll get there, if can get free time.

:) frank

On 23/02/2011, Joe Benham <joebenham at yahoo.com> wrote:
> i absolutely LOVE the interface on this website. it scrolls down a visual
> list to show you QUICKLY and VISUALLY where the organizations operate in the
> world, what they offer and how much of it. then it links to their site. the
> only other page is legend, for those who need to translate the icons and who
> are just plain too blown away by the simplicity of the site to understand
> it. it says a LOT in a very short read. really cool invention, in my
> opinion.
>
>
> --- On Tue, 2/22/11, Russell Jelter <noiztank at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> From: Russell Jelter <noiztank at gmail.com>
> Subject: Websites for a Moneyless World
> To: gifteconomy at lists.gifteconomy.org, "Giftcirclenetwork"
> <giftcirclenetwork at googlegroups.com>, ideas at charityfocus.org
> Date: Tuesday, February 22, 2011, 5:21 PM
>
> Hey everybody! I wanted to tell everyone about this website that
> aggregates many of the most influential websites of the sharing
> revolution and maps them out geographically. It helps get an
> idea of how widespread this movement already is! The more we give
> through these websites, the better off we'll all be! :) Hope you find all
> you need, as well as space to give all you can!
>
>
> Here it is:
> http://moneyless-world.info
>
> -Russell
>
>
>
>
>


-- 
  It's a revolution. But it's the sort of revolution that no one will
notice. It might get a little shadier, or brighter. Buildings might
function better. You might have less money to earn because your food
is all around you and you don't have any energy costs.  and more
people will be fed, as more land and resources, kept scarce for the
dollar, for the  abundance called glut,  will be shared.



More information about the GiftEconomy mailing list