Re: [ubuntu-uk] Miro talk in London, March 12th

2008-02-29 Thread David
This is something I'd be interested in seeing, unfortunately London is a 5
hour train trip away.

Do you know if the talk is going to be recorded on video?

Cheers.

David Martin

On 27/02/2008, John Levin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hi all,

 Below, details of an event I'm organising, which should be of interest
 to those of you in the London area. Apologies if the list gets it twice,
 but my email has been playing up.

 John

 HOLMES WILSON TALKS AT GLLUG, March 12th 2008.

 The Greater London Linux User Group (GLLUG) announces a special guest
 appearance from Holmes Wilson of Miro at the University of Westminster,
 Cavendish Street Campus, on Wednesday March 12th 2008, at 7pm.

 Miro is free, non-profit, open-source software for watching video online
 that was downloaded over 2 million times last year.

 Wilson will be talking about why Miro's free, open-source approach is
 essential for fully realizing the socially transforming power of
 internet video, and about why it's important for the desktop linux
 movement.

 There will be time for questions, and drinks afterwards at the King and
 Queen public house round the corner.

 All welcome. No charge.

 Date: 7pm, Wednesday March 12th.

 Venue: University of Westmins School of Infomatics
 115 New Cavendish Street,
 London W1W 6UW
 Nearest underground stations: Great Portland Street, Warren Street,
 Goodge Street.
 http://www.wmin.ac.uk/cscs/page-49

 King and Queen
 1 Foley Street
 London W1P 7LE
 http://www.beerintheevening.com/pubs/s/91/913/King_and_Queen/Fitzrovia

 About Holmes Wilson:
 Holmes Wilson is a co-founder of Participatory Culture Foundation /
 Miro.   Previously, he helped start the Worcester Computer Co-op (an
 organization that uses free software and recycled computers to start
 computer labs in his city) and OpenCongress.org (a government
 transparency project that gathers information on US legislation).

 About Miro:
 Miro is a free open-source desktop video application that is designed to
 make mass media more open and accessible for everyone.
 Television is the most popular medium in our culture. But broadcast and
 cable TV has always been controlled by a small number of big
 corporations. We believe that the internet provides an opportunity to
 open television in ways that have never been possible before.
 Miro is designed to eliminate gatekeepers. Viewers can connect to any
 video provider that they want. This frees creators to use the video
 hosting setup that works best for them-- whether they choose to
 self-publish or use a service. It's the kind of openness that the
 internet allows and that we should all demand.
 http://www.getmiro.com/

 About the Participatory Culture Foundation (PCF):
 Participatory Culture Foundation is a 501c3 non-profit based in
 Worcester, MA. It was founded in 2005 with a mission to build tools and
 services that give people more ways to engage in their culture. Miro is
 its core project.
 http://participatoryculture.org/

 About the Greater London Linux User Group:
 GLLUG is a diverse group of people from all walks of life who just
 happen to share an interest in the GNU/Linux operating system.
 We communicate mostly using a mailing list and discuss all aspects of
 using and promoting Linux and open source software in general. GLLUG
 organises regular meetings for members to get together.
 There is no formal membership, just join the mailing list, come and chat
 on the IRC channel, or turn up at a meeting. Everybody's welcome.
 Although the name says London, we have members situated in many places
 outside London, even outside the UK.
 http://www.gllug.org.uk/


 For further information, contact John Levin, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 --
 John Levin
 http://www.technolalia.org/blog/


 --
 ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
 https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
 https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/

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https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/


Re: [ubuntu-uk] Miro talk in London, March 12th

2008-02-29 Thread John Levin
David wrote:
 This is something I'd be interested in seeing, unfortunately London is a 
 5 hour train trip away.
 
 Do you know if the talk is going to be recorded on video?
 
 Cheers.
 

Good idea.

I'm making enquiries about this, and will get back to you.

So cross your fingers!

John

-- 
John Levin
http://www.technolalia.org/blog/

-- 
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/


Re: [ubuntu-uk] Miro talk in London, March 12th

2008-02-29 Thread Sean Miller
Why does the word Miro always remind me of Mambo and bring back bad
memories?

Sean
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https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/


[ubuntu-uk] Miro talk in London, March 12th

2008-02-27 Thread John Levin
Hi all,

Below, details of an event I'm organising, which should be of interest 
to those of you in the London area. Apologies if the list gets it twice, 
but my email has been playing up.

John

HOLMES WILSON TALKS AT GLLUG, March 12th 2008.

The Greater London Linux User Group (GLLUG) announces a special guest 
appearance from Holmes Wilson of Miro at the University of Westminster, 
Cavendish Street Campus, on Wednesday March 12th 2008, at 7pm.

Miro is free, non-profit, open-source software for watching video online 
that was downloaded over 2 million times last year.

Wilson will be talking about why Miro's free, open-source approach is 
essential for fully realizing the socially transforming power of 
internet video, and about why it's important for the desktop linux movement.

There will be time for questions, and drinks afterwards at the King and 
Queen public house round the corner.

All welcome. No charge.

Date: 7pm, Wednesday March 12th.

Venue: University of Westmins School of Infomatics
115 New Cavendish Street,
London W1W 6UW
Nearest underground stations: Great Portland Street, Warren Street, 
Goodge Street.
http://www.wmin.ac.uk/cscs/page-49

King and Queen
1 Foley Street
London W1P 7LE
http://www.beerintheevening.com/pubs/s/91/913/King_and_Queen/Fitzrovia

About Holmes Wilson:
Holmes Wilson is a co-founder of Participatory Culture Foundation / 
Miro.   Previously, he helped start the Worcester Computer Co-op (an 
organization that uses free software and recycled computers to start 
computer labs in his city) and OpenCongress.org (a government 
transparency project that gathers information on US legislation).

About Miro:
Miro is a free open-source desktop video application that is designed to 
make mass media more open and accessible for everyone.
Television is the most popular medium in our culture. But broadcast and 
cable TV has always been controlled by a small number of big 
corporations. We believe that the internet provides an opportunity to 
open television in ways that have never been possible before.
Miro is designed to eliminate gatekeepers. Viewers can connect to any 
video provider that they want. This frees creators to use the video 
hosting setup that works best for them-- whether they choose to 
self-publish or use a service. It's the kind of openness that the 
internet allows and that we should all demand.
http://www.getmiro.com/

About the Participatory Culture Foundation (PCF):
Participatory Culture Foundation is a 501c3 non-profit based in 
Worcester, MA. It was founded in 2005 with a mission to build tools and 
services that give people more ways to engage in their culture. Miro is 
its core project.
http://participatoryculture.org/

About the Greater London Linux User Group:
GLLUG is a diverse group of people from all walks of life who just 
happen to share an interest in the GNU/Linux operating system.
We communicate mostly using a mailing list and discuss all aspects of 
using and promoting Linux and open source software in general. GLLUG 
organises regular meetings for members to get together.
There is no formal membership, just join the mailing list, come and chat 
on the IRC channel, or turn up at a meeting. Everybody's welcome. 
Although the name says London, we have members situated in many places 
outside London, even outside the UK.
http://www.gllug.org.uk/


For further information, contact John Levin, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-- 
John Levin
http://www.technolalia.org/blog/

-- 
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/