what a great video in Ethan's latest post:
fighting the evil forces of apathy
The end result of the space:
connectivity and the membership policy is that  many of Kenya’s best and brightest young geeks can be found at the iHub on any  given day. This helps explain why there’s also a crowd of expats – the iHub has  become a pilgrimage stop for people hoping to understand the future of  information technology in Kenya, and in the developing world as a whole.
They’re separated physically, but Facebook – which most Kenyans access through  their phones, allows them to stay in close touch. Daudi tells me about Ghetto Radio, a station that’s built a  youth audience around the idea of being an “underground” station… though it’s  probably the most popular station for its target demographic. “They run polls on  Facebook and get thousands of responses. Lots of the folks responding can’t  actually hear the station.”
Given the richness of the conversation at the iHub, it’s not always the easiest  place to get work done. Erik tells me he spends two days a week working from  home in the hopes of getting grantwriting and other focused activity done. Limo  Taboi is based in the quietest corner of iHub and exudes a sense of calm amd  focus that creates a cone of silence around him and his laptop.
it’s exciting to think that there’s a movement in different corners of the  continent to mobilize youth around the idea that they can and should have a  voice in politics.
iHub makes sense because it’s the physical manifestation of the creative  collaboration that took Ushahidi from idea to project to platform within months.  I had to go to Nairobi before I really got it.
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