First (what is Ali's new idea???), Secondly, are we thinking small for mobile, eventually. >> As an alternative perhaps we should be looking at free tools such as >> Jitsi.meet for example after. > I second the idea that we use free tools for meeting if possible. Of the > non-FLOSS tools, Google Meet is nice because it has closed captioning > (good for hearing impaired). Jitsi has come a long way! >> I does seem we need to figure out a new road map, work out our Base OS >> and see if we can come up with a few job / task descriptions and try and >> recruit more people on to the project. > That would be helpful. If we could get some tasks up, people could start > working towards common goals. Would also be useful if there's some > documentation on how best to share the results. How do you share a cool > program you wrote or found or built? How do you add your input to the > documentation?
My main question is going to be, what architectures? Mobile is the newest low-spec ubiquitous computer everyone uses. How do we support cheap computing easiest? Mobile, is pretty much the only answer to that. And most mobile OS are not focused on low-spec. > By the way, I've been sitting in on some of the NatickFOSS users group's > meetings via Jitsi. They're working on a nice beginners manual for Ubuntu > ( http://runeman.org/intro20-04/ ). > > Did we want to try to contact projects like AntiX or Puppy spins that use > Debian and see if they want to collaborate on anything? Are we interested > in any of the distributions using musl instead of glibc? What about compiling a mobile OS using musl (postmarketOS for example), or perhaps figuring out a way to get a really low-spec WM that works with Weston working as a good phone/tablet/laptop/desktop UI? > > Sincerely, > Laura > > -- Regards, Israel -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~torios Post to : torios@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~torios More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp