Hello all,

I'm writing to provide a post-SCaLE 12x debriefing-style follow-up.

Here is a picture I posted of the booth setup and some volunteers:
https://plus.google.com/105665929212275882883/posts/BjhbJK8fJpK

Things actually went quite well in spite of the last-minute nature of our
preparations. I was able to get 8 shirts printed for the volunteers (8
offered, but 6 showed including myself and my wife) and 100 of the Gnome
Love fliers to hand out**. Many visitors asked about obtaining shirts, some
even offered to pay. I advised that we only had enough for the volunteers
and that shirts in a similar design and other choices could be purchased on
gnome.org. There are quite a few fliers left which I'd be glad to mail to
the Gnome Foundation or directly to someone who may need them for an
upcoming event.

The hardware I brought performed more than adequately, though there were
some occasional hiccups... I upgraded my on-hardware installation of Ubuntu
13.04 & Gnome 3.8.x to Ubuntu 13.10 & Gnome 3.10.1 about a week before the
expo and I wasn't able to fully smooth out the niggling glitches before the
show. You'd think I learned my lesson, but no, as I also applied an update
to the Fedora 20 VM installation on Saturday morning, the first day of the
show, which resulted in the Settings/Lock/Power buttons and other Top Bar
items becoming huge... However, I suspect it may have been reconfigured by
someone else while I wasn't looking because I can't reproduce the issue on
an earlier snapshot of the same VM. Here's a screenshot:
http://goo.gl/61DiyD

For most of Saturday, the Internet connection wasn't configured properly*
and I was tethering via my Android phone which was interesting, especially
when I grabbed my phone on my way out to get lunch... Fortunately I had
already downloaded the following YouTube video to play locally on repeat
which highlighted some features of Gnome Shell. GNOME 3 Features (With
GNOME Shell) <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SSGfS6K7pI0>

Several visitors took the opportunity to complain about specific and
general functionality of Gnome Shell which has and/or does cause them to
have difficulty using it or, in some cases, not be willing or able to use
it. Many of their complaints were regarding the lack of configurability and
reduction of features vs. Gnome 2.x. Fortunately, many of these same users
were unaware of the Extensions functionality which, once explored, seemed
to abate or even eliminate their complaints. One visitor who is an
administrator for a large deployment of GNOME users had some specific
issues regarding Nautilus choking when users run over their disk quota, and
a couple other similar problems specific to enterprise use. I was able to
help point him in the right direction using some targeted Google Search
queries which he snapped pictures of for later review. However, some users'
complaints were not able to be mitigated immediately or even at all... One
blind user in particular who represented other differently-abled users,
including those with limited vision, explained to me two specific issues
which I promised to follow-up on for him and his associates.

Toward the end of the expo hours on Saturday and again on Sunday I fired up
a couple visually enticing games (mostly Humble
Bundle<http://humblebundle.com/> titles)
to play in a window so that the GNOME livery could still be seen. As I
predicted, this proved to be quite a crowd gatherer, affording more
opportunities to talk about GNOME and show off its features and usability.
At the end of the day on Sunday, a bright kid kept talking my ear off while
I was simultaneously assisting an older gentleman who was writing
instructions on his clipboard for how to access the keyboard shortcut
settings. The boy's mother had to drag him away so we could tear down the
booth after I looked around and realized we were the only ones in the row
who hadn't yet begun to do so! Reminded me of myself at that age... ;-)

I'm willing to lead the effort again next year and hopefully we will be
better prepared... I would like to have had a banner and a couple posters
framing the booth to advise what GNOME is and its feature highlights, as
well as more [knowledgeable] volunteers to share the GNOME Love. Perhaps
next year I'll even be able to attend a talk or two. ;-)


*A fluorescent orange paper with static IPv4 & IPv6 configurations
including allocation of a range of IP addresses was at each booth. I
configured the eth0 accordingly during setup on Friday and initially it
worked fine. On Saturday morning and for most of the day it wasn't working.
Mid-afternoon I spotted a pair of roving conference techs and asked about
it. They said I needed to just use DHCP. When I asked why the papers
indicating to use static configuration were distributed to the booths, they
said it was just for reference. Face-palm!

**Please advise me regarding who to contact for a receipt so I can claim
the expenses as a donation to the Gnome Foundation on my 2014 US taxes.


Cordially,
--
Paul M Edwards <http://about.me/PaulMEdwards>
_______________________________________________
engagement-list mailing list
[email protected]
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/engagement-list

Reply via email to