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Daniel Pádua

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Daniel Pádua
File:Dpadua pirata.jpgDpadua_pirata.jpg Dpadua_pirata.jpg
Pirate Dpadua
Born(1980-01-22)22 January 1980
Espirito Santo, Brazil
💀Died20 November 2009(2009-11-20) (aged 29)
Brasilia, Brazil20 November 2009(2009-11-20) (aged 29)
💼 Occupation
Known forDeveloped the BlogChalking
👩 Spouse(s)Yasodara Cordova
👶 Children1

Daniel Pádua, also known as dpadua (Vila Velha, 22 January 1980 – Brasilia, 20 November 2009), was a Brazilian hacker, internet activist, musician, software developer, designer and metarecicleiro. He was internationally known[1][2] for creating in 2002 the BlogChalking.[3]

MetaReciclagem

He was one of the creators[4] and organizers[5] of the MetaReciclagem Network, a self-organized open network with hundreds of members in all regions of Brazil that worked with critical appropriation of ICTs and was awarded several times.[6][7] The network proposes research of the intersections of technology and society, aiming social transformation. The creation of the Network started with one email message to the mailing list of the Metá:fora project in 2002.[8]

The Nartisan Awakening

in 2003, still at the Metá:fora project, Daniel Pádua wrote the "Nartisan Manifest".[9] The manifest is a starting point for a philosophy of social action, it cites the awakening as the time to act on one's own, realizing that the instruments to weave the networks are conquered ages ago, but now they are offered also as a form of control. The urgency, boosted by nonconformity, "ignites the spark of creativity, and the nartisan can see alternative instruments scattered throughout space, ignored by authority/control, and through her improvised techniques, she make what she needs to make change happen."

BlogChalking

Motivated by the willingness to discover who was blogging like him at his neighborhood, Daniel Pádua created the concept of social aggregation for small neirborhood in Brazil. The hack allowed geographic classification of blogs. His tool was at the top of the Daypop ranking,[10] highlighted by the Blogdex[11] and indicated to the Third Annual Weblog Awards in 2003.[12] Daniel Pádua was the only brazilian at this competition.

Work at the Brazilian government

File:EquipeBlog.jpg
Daniel Pádua with the team that developed the Blog of The President Lula

In 2004, Dpadua started working at the Ministry of Culture,[13] where he co-developed the concept of wat was called Xemelê[14] with the intern team of the institution.

In May 2008, he started working with the Multimedia team of the Brazilian Communication Enterprise. There, he implemented tools to explore multimedia coverage. Also, he led the development of a tool to integrate with the TV, the results of the elections at the web. He managed to implement a tool that replaced the character generation at the TV, allowing interaction with the public using standards like xml and the web as a platform.

In 2009, he integrated the team that built the Blog do Planalto, or the Blog of the President, the 1st blog of a president in Brazil,.[15][16]

Music

Padua explored Brazilian rhythms and instruments, specially regarding the Goias musical culture, with great references to the Cerrado. He was, in Brasília, part and one of the founders of the samba group called Seu Estrelo e o Fuá do Terreiro,[17] that won the prize Prêmio Culturas Populares 2007[18] promoted by the Ministry of Culture.

Death

File:Camiseta dpadua.jpg
Daniel Duende, wearing Dpadua's Keffiyeh, at the final tribute to dpadua after his death on 20 November 2009

He died on 20 November 2009, from osteosarcoma. His funeral was held at Minas Gerais.

References

  1. Wired – In Brazil, Blog Is Beautiful, retrieved 24 November 2009
  2. The Morning Call – What's on their minds? ** From Web diaries to cyber soapboxes, bloggers lay it all out online, archived from the original on 14 July 2012, retrieved 24 November 2009
  3. BlogChalking – Collaboratively mapping weblogs, retrieved 23 November 2009
  4. Projeto Mutirão da Gambiarra – DesCentro, archived from the original on 12 April 2009, retrieved 24 November 2009
  5. Revista Espiral – ECA/USP, retrieved 24 November 2009
  6. Prix Ars – Honorary Mention, archived from the original on 3 March 2016, retrieved 24 November 2009
  7. Prêmio Ponto de Mídia Livre – Ministério da Cultura, retrieved 24 November 2009
  8. Livro Mutirão Gambiarra – Rede MetaReciclagem – página 31, archived from the original on 24 September 2009, retrieved 25 November 2009
  9. The Nartisan Manifest (PDF), retrieved 15 November 2016
  10. PLAY : PLAYERS : The Number one, Archived from the original on 10 February 2003, retrieved 15 December 2009CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  11. Blogchalking is dead, archived from the original on 24 November 2004, retrieved 24 November 2009
  12. Third Annual Weblog Awards, Archived from the original on 3 June 2003, retrieved 24 November 2009CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  13. Cultura's Digital team – year 2005, retrieved 26 November 2009[permanent dead link]
  14. Xemelê's origin – Ministry of Culture, archived from the original on 31 August 2009, retrieved 24 November 2009
  15. A quem servirá o blog – o Twitter, o YouTube, o Orkut – do Planalto? – Estadão, retrieved 24 November 2009
  16. Blog do Planalto estreia com acessos além do previsto – Meio & Mensagem, retrieved 24 November 2009
  17. Official Website of Seu Estrelo, archived from the original on 14 March 2018, retrieved 15 November 2016
  18. Prêmio Culturas Populares 2007 – Ministério da Cultura, retrieved 25 November 2009

External links


This article "Daniel Padua" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.