Dan,

Let me just say that I found the tone of your E-mail insulting, and in part a needless case of "my Dad's bigger than your Dad" and somewhat pompous. And as such a terrible attempt at moving things forward. Was this really the intention? Or was it a wind-up/trolling? I'm really not sure. It's not April 1st is it?

On Mon, 14 Apr 2008, Dan Shearer wrote:


On Sat, Apr 12, 2008 at 11:33:38PM +0100, Willie Fleming wrote:

I'd be very interested to hear what plans Dan Shearer has for the domain.

Three domains actually: scotlug.{com,org,net}

When I arrived in Scotland I wanted to find out who did FLOSS here. Like
many others, I found the most obvious thing online was Scotlug. It also
seemed to me the Linux community in this country was still working out
what it wanted to be. I thought it was likely that the most obvious
tag/name/brand for FLOSS in Scotland, Scotlug, would end up becoming
more important over time. So I got the domains before some other
sector[1] did.

Very thoughtful of you. Was this done in concert with any Scotlug folks or as purely a stealth action? Just curious.

In the last three years the Scottish FLOSS community has started to
define itself. Small (<40 people) events happen quite often in various
cities now; two mid-sized development conferences have been hosted
(Akademy in Glasgow and Debconf in Edinburgh); the launch speech for
GPLv3 was given in Scotland by its author; there is now an OSS category
in the annual Scottish Software Awards; MSPs are being directly involved
in FLOSS issues. I could go on. All very encouraging.

I'd say Scotlug meeting attendance is pretty damn healthy and has been whenever I've attended over the last 7 (with admittedly big gaps) or so years. I spoke with someone at the UKUUG Spring Conference who is involved with the Birmingham LUG, and sounds like they get a turn-out a 1/3 to 1/2 the size of what we tend to, and I don't think this is uncommon for many other English LUGs. And this is surprising for Birmingham given it's the UK's 2nd largest city. So, maybe England has more to gain from your open source community advice.

And you really can't measure Scotland's FLOSS community by LUG attendance. There are many other initiatives both community and commercial. For example there is a sizeable artist community working with FLOSS, as visibly demonstrated by Glasgow's Machinista festival some 3+ years ago. Or for commercial interests how about The Linux Centre in Ness (Isle of Lewis).

I appreciate that this might not all add up to the figures you get in Australia. But let us not forget that Scotland is somewhat smaller in terms of population.

These days I think the happenstance Scotlug brand is stronger than it
was. The website has regular activity and is more clearly a jumping-off
place for finding your local LUG. So I think Willie is exactly right,
now's a good time to think about what's next for free software
representation in Scotland. I've written up some specific thoughts for
Scotlug including what we can do with the domains at
http://www.scotlug.org.uk/wiki/Improving_the_Scottish_Linux_Users_Group.
Then I discovered the wiki is locked and I can't remember what I do to
unock it. Please can someone do the necessary again, thanks :-)

It must be rewarding to see the fruit of your labour and how the community here has benefited from Australia's open source wisdom.

In the meantime, since people have been talking about the idea of an
umbrella organisation, here's a case study I think is relevant:
Australia.  A decade ago the Australian FLOSS community was in an
analogous position to what we have in Scotland today. How has it turned
out?

In Australia there are many LUGs with wildly different structures and
styles. There is also a peripatetic conference, linux.conf.au, which has
gradually become a central brand[2] and is looked after by a very
light-touch central group called Linux Australia[3] which is constituted
so that pretty much everything happens electronically. It is Linux
Australia that awards the conference to a bid team from a city/LUG each
year, and who looks legit and long-term enough that large companies feel
comfortable handing over sponsorship cash year after year. It is Linux
Australia that is the notional official badge behind involvement in
national discussions about IP legislation, no matter who the particular
bods are who turn up to explain the world to MPs. It is Linux Australia
that decided to expand the community by defining New Zealand (4 hours
flying time away) as "Australia" so linux.conf.au could be held there,
and BSD as a kind of Linux with respect to linux.con.au..  But the
LUGs[4] are where the life is, and Linux Australia is dedicated to them.

Australia really does sound like the FLOSS promised land. With a utopia of the commons so close to hand I'm surprised RMS et al haven't taken up residence there themselves. And do wonder why you chose to take residence here yourself, in what is by your account a FLOSS-retarded nation that can only dream of becoming like your mighty homeland.

Regards,

Andrew

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