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bioregional linux support (fwd)
A worthwhile project for the more active among the brainstormers of the
Linux-IL group.
(With apologies to those who already follow the cons-forum mailing list.)
--- Omer
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 11 Jun 1997 08:48:16 -0400 (EDT)
From: Michael Stutz <stutz@dsl.org>
To: cons-forum@redhat.com
Subject: bioregional linux support
Hello--
The following is an idea I had after initially hearing about Red Hat's
research into providing commercial support. It's printed in the _Linux
Gazette_ at http://www.ssc.com/lg/issue18/gnu.html
Toward A Bioregional, Community-based Linux Support Net
I believe there's strong potential now for the growing LUG phenomenon to
intertwingle with both the Linux Documentation Project and the Linux support
network of the c.o.l.* newsgroups and create the next "level" of support for
Linux. The net result of this would be a self-documenting, technical
support, training and social network on an Internet-wide scale (perhaps some
would say that's what it already is -- then I mean it would be the same only
exponentially better). Right now, I see a lot of work (documentation,
debugging, support) being duplicated. If these efforts could be combined
(LUG + LDP + c.o.l.*), it would eliminate a lot of this excess work; the net
result would would be greater than its parts, a synergy.
Many LUGs give demos and post the notes on their web servers. That
information is diffused across many obscure sites, but bringing these
efforts together with the LDP folks, I wonder if a new breed of HOWTOs
(DEMOs?) could be created; a common indexing scheme could have a list of all
demos or tutorials ever given at any LUG, both searchable and listed by
subject or other criteria.
And while the c.o.l.* newsgroups are invaluable for a great many things,
sometimes local help is preferable. With the right organization,
community-based LUGs could be the first stop for a Linux user's questions
and problems, with an easy forwarding mechanism to go up a chain to be
broadcast to the next larger bioregion, then continent-wide and finally, if
the question is still not answered, world-wide.
By not duplicating the work, we'll be freeing up our time to develop even
more things than the current rate, plus the increased support net, replete
with documentation and local support, will allow for a greater user base.
More ideas could be implemented to strengthen this base, such as
"adopt-a-newbie" programs. For instance, there's a guy in town named Rockie
who's in this rock band called Craw; I once saw in a zine he published that
he was starting a volunteer initiative to collect old donated computer
equipment, refurbish them, and make them available to musicians who
otherwise wouldn't be able to use computers. Why not take that a step
further and make them Linux boxes? Not only would you get a non-corporate,
rock-solid OS, but you'd have an instant support network in your own town.
This kind of community-based approach seems the best way to "grow" GNU/Linux
at this stage.
This community-based LUG network would be capable of handling any and all
GNU/Linux support, including the recently-discussed Red Hat Support
Initiative, as well as Debian support, Slackware support, etc. It's above
and beyond any single "distribution" and in the interest of the entire Linux
community.
I think the key to all this is planning. It need not happen all at once.
It's happening already, with local LUGs making SQL databases of LUG user's
special interests and/or problems, and their own bioregional versions of the
Consultants-HOWTO, etc. What is needed most of all is a formal protocol, a
set of outlines and guidelines, that all LUGs, when ready, can initiate --
from technical details such as "What format to develop the database?" to
everything else. It need not be centralized -- like the rest of Linux, it
will probably come together from all points in the network -- but our base
is large enough now that taking a look at the various Linux efforts from a
biological and geographical community-based standpoint, and re-coordinating
from there, is something that only makes sense.
Copyright (C) 1997 Michael Stutz; this information is free; it may be
redistributed and/or modified under the terms of the GNU General Public
License, either Version 2 of the License, or (at your preference) any later
version, and as long as this sentence remains.
Michael Stutz
stutz@dsl.org
http://dsl.org/m/
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