hey guys. I'll address each thing separately here.

Nathan:

meetings: I think having one monthly meeting's good for now since participation has been low like you said and I've noticed it as well. I know for myself it'll be ok since I'm about to start school in September and I'm not really sure how busy I'm going to be but I should still be able to have time for a monthly meeting. Per your statement about having meetings just to have them is understandable. Maybe we should start a new process now where we only have a meeting when there's an absolute need in order to get a live vote or something. Just an idea. Or if something does come up on the agenda from someone to discuss, we can do it via the list or IRC.

I know I've got that tshirt design (with more coming) that I'm looking to sell and take the proceeds and donate it and that's one way to get noticed more. My head's so full of ideas and I want to run with them all and get this Ubuntu machine humming loudly. lol

One of the biggest things I love to do is promote something I love if I've got enough to do so. What I mean is this. If I'm educated enough about something where I can talk about it and explain it well enough to get some interest going, then I'm very stoked. If I've got merchandise and materials to either sell, give away, hand out, then that's a good thing as well and I think that's where we need to focus; the promotional work. Just a simple sticker could even get some interest going. I know we've got Ubuntu Hours we can do and I'm trying to get back to that.

Promotion's big to me because I've been in the world of music for a long time and I know what it takes to get the word out about something (be it a band, concert, festival, album, whatever) even if it means having a free concert. But, in the world of software and Ubuntu specifically, there should be an interest in doing Ubuntu Hours, Installfests and even conventions of our own. Perhaps not as big as SCALE but something like that because I see and read about Comic Cons nearly every week and I think that might be a great way to promote Ubuntu. Like the San Diego Comic Con which seems to be the largest of them all and if we can get a booth there for our team, WOW!

I'm going to go call the Apple Valley city hall and inquire about the convention center here and ask how much it'd be to rent it out for a day or two for a mini-convention. I know that's going to be a task as big as the universe but I'm really wanting to do something like. Maybe even have an old-school LAN party there.

Phil:

slack: I'm not a user of that service and I'd be willing to check it out but I'm more 'old school' and prefer IRC since I've used it since the '90s.


But let me ask this: do we have social media accounts for the team? If not, I'd be happy handling that since I'm on the computer and my phone a lot during the day anyway. I'd love to see us on Instagram, twitter, google+, and (i hate to say it), facebook. maybe even MySpace.

what do you guys think of my ideas?

On 08/22/2018 07:24 PM, Philip Ballew wrote:
What about a slack channel? Many people are logged in to slack for work and can then keep the channel open to hang out there.

Thanks,
Phil

On Wed, Aug 22, 2018, 19:10 Nathan Haines <nhai...@ubuntu.com <mailto:nhai...@ubuntu.com>> wrote:

    Hi team,

    We've always operated the California LoCo with the idea that most
    things
    are discussed via the mailing list and online IRC meetings were
    held in
    real-time to sort of summarize and verify any consensus that had
    formed
    when it came to making important decisions.

    In the past few years, participation both on-list and on IRC has
    dropped
    precipitously.

    I'd like to bring this up for discussion.  There are really two
    issues
    at hand.

    The first, is that meetings do take time and interfere with other
    plans.
      Meetings haven't been well-attended for some time now, and I don't
    think having meetings just to have them are very helpful. Would it
    be a
    good idea to reduce meetings to monthly?

    Second, of course, is that participation and activity are very low.
    This is a global problem across the Ubuntu Local Community Team
    landscape.  But we shouldn't take it for granted, either.  If
    there are
    issues that need to be addressed, or improvements to be made, it's
    important that I hear from you so that we can all work together to
    make
    things better.

    Let me know if there's anything that you think we could do to help
    make
    the California team a more interesting thing to be involved in.

-- Nathan Haines
    Ubuntu - https://www.ubuntu.com/

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--
Charlie Luna

Ubuntu California Loco Team member
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