Software Association of Oregon

Your Local Neighborhood Social Network for the Tech Community

The Software Association of Oregon (SAO) created this site to help over 2,000 tech professionals develop stronger local professional ties.

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Northwest Software Employment


 

Software Association of Oregon (SAO) Announces New President

The Software Association of Oregon (SAO) announced that it has selected Matthew Nees as the organization’s new president. With a diverse technology background – both as an entrepreneur and as an executive at several leading technology corporations – Nees brings vital experience to SAO at a time when the organization is taking a leading role as advocates for Oregon’s diverse technology community.

For the full announcement, you can download the PDF here: http://bit.ly/z0FPh

Members

  • Julia Tucker
  • Desmond Murray
  • Nichole Cancilla
  • Jeffrey Sebben
  • Tom Flynn
  • Peggy Lind
  • April Gutierrez
  • Stewart Bartlett
  • Kristi Schultz
  • Ron DeLettera
  • karl wischnofske
  • Dustie Montgomery
  • Dan Zidan
  • Charlie Tomlinson
  • Scott Frangos
  • Tony Birnseth
  • Andrew Karr
  • Clayton Greer
  • Lawrence Siulagi
  • Jeff Phillips
  • John Ritz
  • Bill Winett
  • Adam Abramski
  • Tom Cocklin
  • Susan Robinson
  • James Eisenhauer
  • Blaine Burnett

Latest Activity

Diana Larsen and Rachel Kjack are now friends
1 hour ago
Iver Band, Lisa Weiglin and Ben Muller joined Software Association of Oregon
3 hours ago
Matt Nees updated their profile
3 hours ago
Matt Nees is now friends with Jeffrey Seldon and Jeff Hardison
4 hours ago

SAO HealthCare in 2009


Carrier: Regence BlueCross BlueShield
Broker: Coordinated Resources Group
Kelly Dozier @ sao@crginsurance.com 503 297 8401

Learn more at our Group Insurance Website.

Oregon Software Company Map v.1.2

This is a map of SAO members that is searchable by location. If you would like to update the data or become a member, click here.

 
 

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Blog Posts

Kevin Sullivan

Job opening - Software Quality Assurance

Posted by Kevin Sullivan on July 8, 2009 at 10:42am — 2 Comments

Mark Lawler

Um… Sorry… I have… Open Source…

Posted by Mark Lawler on June 29, 2009 at 2:30pm

Mark Lawler

My SUV gets 500 MPG!

Posted by Mark Lawler on June 26, 2009 at 7:30am — 1 Comment

Today's Software News

Wikipedia Training for US Health Department

wikipedia_health_jul09a.jpgOn July 16, the United States National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland will welcome a handful of Wikimedia Foundation's staff and volunteers. Some of the nation's top health, science, and medical minds will take a one day course on the mechanics and formatting of Wikipedia. Said Sue Gardner, executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation, "With the broad range of experts from the National Institutes of Health, we see a great opportunity for increasing the quality of all health-related information on Wikipedia."

Sponsor

This is a significant event, not only because the Wikipedia Academy training will be the first of its kind in the US, but also because Wikipedia is often at the top of results when the general public searches for online health information.

According to the Wikipedia blog, the 2009 swine flu pandemic page "got about 16,000 page hits on April 23, and this number increased to a dizzying 2.86 million page hits only a week later." The article began as a mere stub and has since expanded to a 21 page article with multiple iterations and discussions.

wikipedia_NIH_jul09.jpgThe NIH is the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' primary agency for conducting and supporting medical research. Contributions from the group will likely help dispel myth from fact and increase awareness for early detection and preventative health.

In the past, a number of media stories from the American Medical News, Reuters Health and Seattle's KOMO TV News have criticized Wikipedia for its lack of credibility. There have also been a number of breakaway efforts to recreate the Wikipedia experience amongst subject experts including Toxipedia, Medpedia and Citizendium. Nevertheless, with Wikipedia's monthly unique traffic of 300 million visitors, it simply makes more sense for medical experts to travel to an information epicenter rather than asking millions to modify their behavior.

While no responsible medical professional would ever suggest Wikipedia as the sole information source for self-diagnosis and treatment, the NIH's recognition of Wikipedia's value might spur on other agencies to consider the site in health outreach strategies.

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