How did the installfest go in this location?
On 02/08/2018 02:45 PM, Jerry Feldman wrote:
Boston Linux Installfest LXVI When: Saturday February 10, 2018, from 10:00 am to 4:30 pm Where: Morse Institute Library Innovation Studio second floor 14 E. Central Street Natick, MA 01760 Plenty of free parking in the city parking lot on South Ave behind the library Map: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Morse+Institute+Library/@42.28436,-71.345798,17z /data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x89e387ad9d0241a9:0x42dacd80cae8a42d https://morseinstitute.org/studio/ Also, the library staff requests that you register for the event. This helps their head count. Please go to the Morse Library event page: http://www.eventkeeper.com/mars/xpages/m/morse/ek.cfm Scroll down to the Feb 10th event, and click on Register. The Innovation Studio is on the second floor of the library. The library is a couple blocks' walk from the Natick Center MBTA commuter rail station. From the station, head south down Washington Street, crossing over South Avenue. You'll pass Dolphin Seafood on the right and Agostinos on the left, then you'll pass Court Street on the right. The library is the building to the left at the end of the road where Washington meets East Central. What you need to bring: Your computer, monitor, power strips and your Linux distributions. We do have copies of some distributions. In general we have expertise with most distros, but if you need special expertise, please email the BLU discussion list in advance. Today, most distros are using Live images that you can try out and then install. This can be copied to DVDs or USB sticks.There are a number of USB creators, such as UNetbootin (https://unetbootin.github.io/). Both Fedora and Ubuntu have a USB creator built in. COST: It's free! However, we DO have expenses, and contributions are welcome. Please consider contributing $25 per machine. Our volunteers will help you to install Linux on your own system. While Linux runs on most systems, some systems do have configurations and hardware that may not be supported. Please consult the following web pages for hardware compatibility. While we prefer you to bring your own distros, our volunteers will normally have Linux Howto Pages: http://tldp.org/HOWTO/HOWTO-INDEX/howtos.html Linux Frequently Asked Questions: http://tldp.org/docs.html#faq Additionally, there are forums and listservs for most distros. Generally our volunteers have sets of the latest Fedora, SuSE and Ubuntu distributions: * Fedora - https://getfedora.org/ (Fedora 27 Live DVD/USB) * Ubuntu - http://www.ubuntu.com ( 16.04.3 LTS DVD/USB or 17.10) * other distros can be downloaded at the Installfest We generally have them on local drives and can burn CDs/DVDs and USBs.Since there are many variants of these distros, we advise you to bring an empty USB stick with sufficient memory to hold one of the distros. Live images require about 1.5GB. I usually have some USBs prepared or can easily burn a USB. We usually have both a Wired and Wireless network available. In addition, you can run Linux on your Windows PC through a virtual machine manager, such as Virtualbox. You can install this in your Windows machine and run Linux as a guest OS, or install it in your Linux machine and run Windows as a guest. VirtualBox 5.1.18 (http://www.virtualbox.org.) is free and is available for Linux, Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows XP and Windows Vista. Additionally, there are also some VMWare clients that are also free for Windows. Lunch is generously sponsored by Bluefin Technical Services, John Ross and Ron Thibeau Please refer to the BLU website (http://www.blu.org) for further information and directions.
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