How to Celebrate OneWebDay
Gather friends and family or set up a block party., Visit a senior center and share your knowledge about the web., Organize, with your neighbors, to integrate the web into your community., Form a committee in your church or city council to push for...
Step-by-Step Guide
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Step 1: Gather friends and family or set up a block party.
Ask each person to bring a printout of something unique that one could only find online.
Alternatively, have each person share a story about how the web has changed his or her life for the better. -
Step 2: Visit a senior center and share your knowledge about the web.
Teach a grandparent how to start a blog or email a family member for the first time.
Get them interested in the web by showing them various web sites that they would be interested in. , Find out the email addresses of your neighbors and start a neighborhood mailing list.
Create a neighborhood blog.
Add pictures of your community
- local businesses, parks, or events.
Ask each resident to write a few words about themselves, and add their email and photos.
This could give them the opportunity to recognize and communicate with each other, even though they may not have met before in their own neighborhood. , Help make the Internet available to all. , If your city is left out, form your own party! , Inform people about what they can do using the Internet. -
Step 3: Organize
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Step 4: with your neighbors
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Step 5: to integrate the web into your community.
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Step 6: Form a committee in your church or city council to push for free municipal wi fi.
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Step 7: Celebrate in San Francisco
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Step 8: Bulgaria
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Step 9: or even New York - or any of the other cities around the world where OneWebDay celebrations will be held.
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Step 10: Tell friends and family about your favorite websites.
Detailed Guide
Ask each person to bring a printout of something unique that one could only find online.
Alternatively, have each person share a story about how the web has changed his or her life for the better.
Teach a grandparent how to start a blog or email a family member for the first time.
Get them interested in the web by showing them various web sites that they would be interested in. , Find out the email addresses of your neighbors and start a neighborhood mailing list.
Create a neighborhood blog.
Add pictures of your community
- local businesses, parks, or events.
Ask each resident to write a few words about themselves, and add their email and photos.
This could give them the opportunity to recognize and communicate with each other, even though they may not have met before in their own neighborhood. , Help make the Internet available to all. , If your city is left out, form your own party! , Inform people about what they can do using the Internet.
About the Author
Heather Moore
Dedicated to helping readers learn new skills in pet care and beyond.
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