NB – There’s no conclusions drawn at the end of this post – I’m just linking a bunch of vaguely related stuff together.
Daden, the serious games people, have put a list of potential student projects online. Daden’s David Burden explains:
In meetings with Universities the topic would often turn to ideas for student projects. We’d always have our ideas when the students were already committed, and the Universities would always be searching for ideas just when we couldn’t think of any
Which made me think of this from D’Log:
Just an idea. How about a website called WorkGang, which links together unemployed graduates and the growing number of public-sector unemployed, who want to find people near them with the same interests and skills — with a view to forming an autonomous self-managed group to do a short-term “socially useful project”, on their own terms and in their own time?
It also put me in mind of things like Hackitude and Launch48, where people with various sets of skills get together to do stuff together in quite a short period of time.
If you Google ‘ideas bank’ you’ll come up with any number of databases of half-baked ideas – that’s fairly well-trodden ground. Is there room for something a bit more nuanced/locally focussed?
That’s a really interesting post, as is the D’Log one you link to. I’ve been knocking around an idea for a few weeks – crowd sourcing help for charities – and I have blogged about it here:
http://petejamescollins.wordpress.com/2010/07/14/crowd-sourced-consulting-for-charities/
I’m not aware of anything similar, but it sometimes feels like everything has already been thought of!
Thanks,
Pete