Dave, Thanks for a great post, while reading other posts today & agreeing with bits & pieces I am left with questions, after reading this I'm left with questions but the bulk are answered & now think our challenge is to find our identity & forge our goals. Perhaps we need a place for a brain dump & discuss the merits of the ideas placed there.
Cary Dave Hall <dave.h...@skwashd.com> wrote .. > Hi all, > > Rather than try to find the right place in the thread/s to put this post > I thought it easiest to start a new thread. > > As a bit of background, I started using ubuntu back in the days of warty > - when you wouldn't tell your Debian purist friends that had even tried > it. I have been hanging around the Australia loco for quite a while (my > list archive goes back to early 2005, IRC is probably longer). Over the > years I have been involved with a few lost cause projects, but I don't > count the loco in that list - yet. > > I haven't put a lot of resources directly into the loco mainly because > how things are atm I don't see the point. > > Even though I reply to support emails here, I don't think the loco > should be providing support to users, there is the forums for that. > > The loco should be focused on promotion of ubuntu in the broader > community. I don't think promoting Canonical and their services such as > commercial support or ubuntu one is part of our brief. We should be > promoting _ubuntu_ the software which is in the official repos and the > diverse community built around that software. I have become > increasingly frustrated at how shipit is run, but that should probably > go in another thread. > > I also think the idea of promoting one distro over another is > problematic and doesn't help the general image of GNU/Linux in the > community. For example even though I run *buntu almost exclusively on > desktop/laptop/netbook machines, I find OpenWRT and Voyage are far > better for small routers, on complex routers running on x86 kit pfSense > is usually the go, for servers, where an existing appliance doesn't fit > the bill, I decide between Debian and Ubuntu depending on the > requirements, generally my embedded boxes run Debian. > > I have no problems giving people professional ubuntu desktop CDs and > encouraging them to install it and see if they like it. At the same > time I don't think I'd staff a stand promoting ubuntu. I prefer to put > my energy into my LUG and broad FOSS events such as SFD. > > Most of the ubuntu users I know either don't care enough about their OS > to evangelise it or they are already active in the broader FOSS > community and invest their energies there. > > So what is the loco's mission? How does it plan to meet it's goal? What > is the plan? How does the loco fit with the broader FOSS community in > Australia? Why are you involved? What are you willing to put in? What > will Canonical do? Unless you have shared vision and plan there is no > point in having a committee to oversight it. > > So essentially I am saying "is there a point? if so what is it?" :) > > Cheers > > Dave > > > -- > ubuntu-au mailing list > ubuntu-au@lists.ubuntu.com > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-au >
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