Zack Rosen is a brilliant
young man who represents everything that's right about the Dean campaign.
He's
a student in the Computer Science
Department at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, one of the world's finest CS
programs. The last UIUC CS student who made a major difference was Mark
Andreessen when he
wrote Mosaic, the little web browser that grew into Netscape. The UIUC's
Computer Science program is trolling for some reflected glory from Zack. The
CS Department's home page has a link to the Wired
article describing Zack's vision.
On July
19 & 20, Zack and his friend Evan DiBiase met with Zephyr Teachout
at our apartment in New York. Zephyr is Howard Dean's Director for Internet
outreach. Wouldn't you love to be able to tell your grandkids you
held that job the year politics got re-invented? The thumbnail images
on the right link to Evan's photos from
that weekend. Mouse over them for a description.
In early July, I had asked Zephyr if she'd like to use
our apartment to meet with Zack to plan Dean Internet v. 2.0. The
mini-summit was set up and Zack and Evan drove over from Pittsburgh
and Zephyr flew down from Burlington.
Zack
told us that weekend that if he went back to school in the fall,
he'd just flunk out since he'd be working full time on the project.
So, wouldn't it
make sense for the campaign to hire him and save a brilliant
career from premature ruin? When he put it that
way, it was impossible for the campaign to resist.
The results of our work excited
us all and now Zack's
in Burlington working on several important projects, supported by a
small army of volunteers around the country.
As
I've said before, his major project involves the best imaginable
toolkit for
grassroots campaign management. Joe Trippi, Dean's campaign manager,
told
Larry Lessig last week that this is an open source campaign,
that the important and truly effective stuff originates and is championed
by
the people and then spreads to campaign management. Everything
that
we've seen so far is the result of lashing together existing
tools
and web services, ad hoc, into the most effective Internet-based
campaign ever.
We ain't seen nothin' yet
Rev 2.0 of the Dean Internet involves the RSS-based DeanSpace
toolkit that I've described before. The system uses interacting
RSS feeds to facilitate viral interaction among purpose-built
local campaign sites, with blogs, mutual help, email lists and every
other goodie you can imagine. Probably some we can't imagine.
Our next Dean event at the apartment will be a get-together
here prior to the big Dean
rally in Bryant Park on Tuesday and I've asked Zack to spread
the
word
among the Dean interns who are thinking of a road trip. Every month
or so, it's exciting to host a dormitory for committed, clear-eyed
young people with a high purpose.
It's amazing how much fun you can have by
offering the right people a place to sleep in Midtown Manhattan with
no check-out time. Oh yeah, with free pizza. Part of the deal.
I've
depicted the DeanSpace concept before, when it was called Americans
for Dean, but here it is again:
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