Hello! I’m John Weeks, developing innovative fundraising and communication strategies in Southeast Asia.

I particularly relish the challenge of growing nonprofit infrastructure. I’ve founded Our Books, Our Books Illustration and Design, House32 Web Design, and assisted in getting Open Development Cambodia and the ICT4 Cambodia Development Network off the ground.

I serve on the boards of Open Development Cambodia, Our Books, Nou Hach Literary Journal, and arts ‘think tank’ Sang Salapak.

I frequently teach at varied tech events, and enjoy sharing my interests via blogging, cartooning and varied writing. My opinions on art, culture, and technology are cited in publications ranging from Time and USA Today to Punk Planet.

Please feel free to get in touch.

In The News – Interviews – Linked In – Visual CV – Facebook – Twitter – Instagram – Mastodon – Our Books – Our Books Illustration & Design – House32 Web Design – Open Development Cambodia – QuickDraw – Sang Salapak – Open Comics – Comics Lifestyle – Southeast Asia Notes – ‘The Feed’ – Contact

Exposition (@ intermission)
See It, Film It, Change It – AsiaLife Guide December 2010

Tweets from Cambodia

While most of the Internet users in Cambodia are on networking site Facebook, “Twitter is growing in leaps and bounds,” said a founder of TweetCambodia, which aggregates tweets with hashtag #cambodia.

“Cambodia has a very phone-centric culture and that’s suited well to Twitter use. We are seeing a lot more sophistication in the use of it, including the use of Khmer Unicode which is particularly interesting,” John Weeks added.

With 800 people following his micro-blogging account on Twitter, John Weeks admitted that followers seek out “content and opinion. That’s probably why my follow list is smaller than the @PhnomPenhPost, or entertainers like @MeasSokSophea”.           More:  http://blogs.voanews.com/khmer-english/musings/2011/07/27/

This entry was posted on Wednesday, July 27th, 2011 at 4:34 pm and is filed under in_the_news, interview. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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Exposition (@ intermission)
See It, Film It, Change It – AsiaLife Guide December 2010


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