I'm currently working on a new design and organization, the site will be split into two sections for greater clarity and ease of use these will be a 'Guide To Helping Open Source Save The World' (or more likely a better title) which will be a book styled introduction to forwarding the open source movement by getting involved and donating or earning money.  The second section will be an appendix like list of useful open resources and projects with information and links.  
  
The plan will be that people read the guide first, either as a whole document or by simply skim reading relevant sections - then then use the resources to discover more projects and book mark the page as a useful page to return to.  
  
The third section of the site will then be implemented, a community driven portal with news and info about freedom related projects and their needs; if GNU have a donation drive it'll be posted here, if Wikipedia have a call out for more translators it'll be posted here, etc, - this will hopefully attract people to use the site regularly and in turn allow for the organization of community events, maybe running projects to publicise something or make group-effort posters which can be added to the various resource libraries (linked in 'the appendix') 
  
The final aim of the community portal will be to run competitions and events which promote or help the open source and creative commons movements.
  

 
As you can see i've set up a blog page, thought it might help communicate what's going on with the site and what plans are being made.  Comments are open and you're very welcome to join in the debate, or start a new one.
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I've been a bit busy with work recently so not much done to the site, i have had a bit of time to enjoy the Gutenberg proofreading tasks and am well on my way to progressing into the higher stages.  The graph on the left is from their site, if you enjoy graphs then you'll love PGDP.net :)

I think my favourite thing about the distributed proofreading project is the random insights the books give; I've learnt some fascinating things about late Victorian dinner parties, a few funny facts about masonic ring lore and gathered a few interesting perspectives on events of the past.  Dipping into a random book for a few pages has turned out to be surprisingly amusing at times.  Plus of course the work itself has a few interesting aspects about it, haha I think if I keep at this I'll probably end up being able to date a page of literature simply by the way they use em-dashes (--) and ellipses. . . . 

Upcoming plans,

very busy with a dozen things but i'm slowly working through the masses of info I've collected and trying to get a good understanding of it all.  I will create a much more sensible layout for the site soon, add even more projects people can get involved in and start working through and finding more open-source posters.