Ever wondered how “official” events like National Poetry Month or National Corndog Day or International Talk Like a Pirate Day get started? We did too. Turns out all you have to do is get some people together and make a declaration. So that’s what we’re doing. In recognition of the fact that there’s an unusually large and rich variety of mobile industry events on the calendar around Boston next month, Xconomy—in collaboration with a long list of supporting organizations—is declaring March 2010 to be Mass Mobile Month.
That’s mass as in Massachusetts, but it’s also mass as in huge, because it’s going to be gigantic month of mobile-related activity around town and around the world. The list of events is too long to include here—which is exactly why we’ve created the Mass Mobile Month website, a clearinghouse for information related to the all of the mobile conferences, camps, seminars, showcases, and networking events going on in New England between now and early April. (We’re not being sticklers about our definition of “March.”) We urge you to check out the site and sign up for some (or why not all) of the events.
The Mass Mobile Month site is a community resource that aims to be as inclusive as possible. So if you want to add your event to the list, submit news for the blog section of the site, or join the distinguished group of supporting organizations, please feel free to contact me at [email protected].
We’re very excited to have a welcome statement on the Mass Mobile Month site from Gregory Bialecki, Secretary of the Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development in the Patrick Administration. Bialecki heads the state government’s efforts to improve the climate for entrepreneurship and business growth, and his statement underscores the importance of the mobile sector to the state’s economy.
The idea for Mass Mobile Month hit us when we were in the midst of planning Xconomy’s March 9 mobile event, Mobile Madness: The New Future of Computing. We’d heard that other organizations around town, like Mobile Monday Boston and MassTLC and MITX, were planning their own get-togethers around various aspects of the mobile business in New England. And we remembered the example of previous projects to highlight high-tech activities around Boston, such as last year’s June Innovation Month. So we thought it would benefit everyone if we coordinated an informal campaign to promote all of the March events together.
What’s so special about March? We’re not sure what explains the convergence, but I suspect that the excitement in Boston represents, in part, the additive effect of