According to Techmoran,
Ushahidi, the Kenyan-born tech company that builds open source software for the advocacy, development, and humanitarian response communities, released major design improvements, key features, and updated plans today. The improvements include new map, timeline, and charting tools, making the work of collecting, managing, and responding to data faster and more immersive.
Yesterday was another sun dawning times for them as they won a classy award.
“We are wonderfully surprised, honored and humbled to win the Classy Awards for Social Innovation out of such an incredible group of finalists. It’s truly our users, the organizations using our platform to listen and respond to their communities and the local humanitarians helping each other, who deserve this credit,”
said Manning in his acceptance speech.
The Classy Awards ceremony was the culminating event of Classy.org’s Collaborative, a three-day conference designed to bring together and showcase leaders of innovation held in Boston.
Launched nine years ago, Ushahidi recently revamped its original data collection platform and has been deployed more than 100,000 times in more than 159 countries, has been translated into 50 languages, with 8 million testimonies, reaching nearly 20 million people.
Ushahidi allows human rights activists, humanitarian organizations, and local governments to collect, monitor, and respond to information directly from the crowd, helping to get the whole story — not only the data points. The platform allows users to create their own deployment in minutes through Ushahidi’s hosted version, or install the open source code on their own servers.