On the subject of annoying evangelism, I'd also suggest that hanging
around the bookstore trying to dissuade people from buying MS software
might not be a good idea- people might not appreciate strangers coming up
and bothering them about their software purchases.  Perhaps it would be
better to talk to the bookstore about setting up some kind of kiosk or
table with CDs and a sign, and have someone available to answer any
questions people might have.

-Derek

> At the risk of sounding too PC, could we find another word besides
> "evangelism"? I personally don't care at all (it's true, after all), but
> it rubs certain people the wrong way, because they don't like Christian
> evangelicals much at all.
>
> I suggest "advocacy" instead.
>
> If there are any specific funding needs, please send those out when you
> figure them out. I'd be happy to donate a few bucks to get more Linux on
> campus. Also, let use know about any really specific bits of work, I
> wouldn't mind helping out. Maybe you should toss up an issue tracker on
> the UMLUG site...
>
> -DMZ
>
> On Fri, 2006-02-10 at 11:43 -0500, John Demme wrote:
>> Last night was the discussion meeting on future evangelism.  I'd like
>> to thank the very few people who showed up despite the cold.
>>
>> Here's what we've decided to do:
>>
>> We'll be forming two committees- an Evangelism committee and an
>> Education Committee.
>>
>> The Evangelism committee will be in charge of F/OSS and Linux
>> evangelism.  The initial committee will be active for this semester,
>> all summer, and part of the beginning of the fall 2006 semester.  One
>> of their first acts will be deciding on one or two CDs to be
>> distributing.  We want one to be a CD of F/OSS software for Windows
>> and another to be a Linux boot CD.  The obvious choice for the latter
>> is Knoppix, but they'll be evaluating multiple options.  If both
>> Windows stuff and the Linux boot CD are available on the same CD, so
>> be it- easier for us.  I'm told (by Anthony) that Ubunutu makes a CD
>> like this.  It was also suggested that this committee coordinate with
>> the University Helpdesk to distribute F/OSS software- putting links to
>> applications like Open Office on the applicable Helpdesk pages.  It
>> would also be desirable to get OIT to distribute our official CD en
>> masse to all of the incoming freshmen in the fall.  Lastly, I would
>> like this committee to, in the early fall (when people are buying
>> their books and such), arrange to have some one to be at the campus
>> book store whenever they're open to dissuade people from buying
>> products like MS Office and instead offer them our F/OSS CD.  These
>> are just some ideas to start with, and the committee will be
>> responsible for generating more ideas and implementing them.
>>
>> Next is the Education committee.  They'll be responsible for educating
>> people about F/OSS and Linux.  Although this overlaps a bit with the
>> Evangelism committee's mission, I feel that it's different enough to
>> warrant a separate committee.  One of my biggest pet peeves is when
>> Professors distribute assignments and necessary material in MS doc
>> format, considering that anything slightly past text doesn't work in
>> OO half the time.  One of the things the education committee would be
>> responsible for is educating the entire University faculty/staff (or
>> whoever will listen) on topics such as this, and alternatives to using
>> the doc format (such as HTML or PDF).  A lecture on closed vs open
>> standards might be in order.
>>
>> I am (as of now) looking for people to head each committee and staff
>> them.  If you're interested, please send me an email telling me such.
>>
>> We also spent some time generating ideas for meetings.  The
>> "Evangelism Trifecta" that we used last semester (Revolution OS, then
>> Intro to Linux talk the next week, then the Installfest the week
>> after) will fall under the domain of the Evangelism Committee and
>> we'll probably do it again this semester.  We also thought about
>> running a series of "howto" tutorials on various topics- Samba intro,
>> Linux gaming, Xorg, apache, VPN, AFS, iptables, ect...  These meetings
>> would probably fall under the domain of the Education Committee.  Ajay
>> also suggested that we have sort of a "book swap" meeting and/or
>> website section.  He'd like people to post IT/CS books (on to the
>> website) that they have and are willing to loan out.  Also a meeting
>> where various people talk about what books they've read and would
>> suggest (especially if they're on Orielly Safari- free for University
>> people) is a possible meeting.
>>
>> I have also felt that we haven't had as many presentations at a more
>> abstract and complex level as of late.  I'd like to have more
>> presentations like Rob's security research talk last semester.  For
>> instance, I'd love to have a talk about how the Linux kernel is
>> structured and how it works.  (Is there anyone here qualified to give
>> that talk?)  Linux as an RTOS and an example of a Linux embedded
>> device might also be a cool talk. (Anybody for that one?)
>>
>> I'll be scheduling the next meeting soon with Peter as he'll be giving
>> a talk on the Campus VPN, and I'll probably add on to his talk with
>> something on OpenVPN, since it's applicable and I just finished doing
>> an OpenVPN roll-out.
>>
>> That's all for now- don't forget to let me know if you're interested
>> in heading or staffing a committee.  I apologize for using the term
>> "committee" so many times.  I cringed every time I typed it.
>>
>> ~John Demme
>> UMLUG President
>

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