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Plugged In Enterprises: Good Deeds, Good Business
12/21/98
by Edward Piou
If you mention Stanford University or Palo Alto to most web workers,
they'll know what you're talking about, and have a pretty positive vision
of the place you're describing. Stanford alumni have founded some of the
most successful Internet businesses around (Yahoo! and Excite, to name
two), as well as more-established high technology companies (including
Hewlett-Packard). Palo Alto is the pretty little city next to the
university, flush with high-tech start-ups and their highly paid
employees.
Mention their lesser-known neighbor, East Palo Alto, and chances are
you'll either get a blank stare or a question about the homicide rate in
the low-income, predominantly black city. ("Isn't
that the per capita murder capital of the U.S.?") East Palo Alto isn't
known as a hotbed of high-technology activity. But University Avenue, the
road along which database programmers and venture capitalists walk in Palo
Alto on their way to business meetings and power lunches, is the same road
along which teenagers from East Palo Alto and other poor areas in the San
Francisco Bay Area travel to get to Plugged In, a community center in East
Palo Alto which offers them, and the residents of EPA, the use of computer
workstations and Internet access.
Plugged In is not unique. It is one of many community centers across the nation
that provide free or low-cost computer training and access to those who
can't afford them. What is unique about Plugged In is the high-tech
company which has developed alongside it. Plugged In Enterprises (PIE) is a
combination of a web design company and a social services organization.
For the past several years, while Plugged In and other community centers
have been providing resources to the country's technology have-nots,
Plugged In Enterprises has been teaching low-income kids how to create
high-tech content themselves, and allowing them to use their newfound
skills in a professional setting.
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