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A head start

After Portland, the common wisdom dictates that any events in November and December would get lost in the holiday shuffle. So as mentioned in an earlier post, we’re focusing on 2009 now, with preparations being made to organize events early in the year and

I’m also submitting a paper to SCaLE around Lindependence — outlining how it works and why it’s important — and if the folks in Southern California go for it, I’ll present something there. It will be great if they accept, and I have my fingers crossed.

Also, I’m wide open to ideas and suggestions. So while we’re in the starting blocks for 2009, let’s hear what you’re thinking.

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Post-Portland Probabilities

You might have found it odd that I did not blog leading up to Lindependence Portland.

Or not.

The fact is that I had to give two presentations at Oregon State University on the Thursday before the event, and that took a significant deal of preparation. No one recognizes more than I do the complete irony of yours truly — a first-year computer science student — giving a lecture on Open Source to graduate students in a software engineering class. Also, the presentations for Fedora in both the class and at the OSU Linux Users Group, compounded by a 19-hour train ride (sans Internet) up the coast, left me a tad beat up and not raring to blog.

However, the Portland Lindependence event arrived on Saturday, Oct. 25, at the new offices of TouchStone Technologies in Beaverton. Ken Starks, also known as the blogger known as Helios, wrote a pretty detailed blog about the event here. And, no, I didn’t really step on Ken’s foot. There’s not much I can add to this blog item, so I won’t.

But what I did want to talk about, here and in upcoming blogs, is the future of Lindependence and where we’re going from here.

First things first: As the likelihood that Portland is the last event for 2008, Lindependence’s future looks very bright as we head into 2009. We have a couple of towns already locked on the radar and it appears that we’re going to start the year in California and New Mexico, and hopefully we can balance the locations to somewhere cooler in the summer and warmer in the winter. Though ideal, that’s not really a parameter for having Lindependence events.

What’s most promising about this is that people are picking up the ball and taking responsibility for hosting their own events. Just as David Kaplan did in Portland, others are writing and saying, “So, how do I do this?” Unfortunately, David didn’t have the benefit of a manual, but those in the future will.

Someone earlier this year outlined how the Lindependence events spurs a sort of a LUG renaissance, and for the most part this person is right. I would give this person a name, except it was penned by an alias on a forum somewhere (if he or she wants to contact me, I’d be glad to give you full credit). Long gone are the secret handshakes and the special language (although the language still exists, but it’s not as mysterious as it once was), and now LUG meetings are less the geekfests they once were and more all-inclusive and more comfortable for a computer-using public that seeks digital alternatives but are not obsessed by their technology.

The bus is traveling now, picking up passengers at every stop. If you’re not on it already, get on at the next stop.

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Success at Mappano

As we wrote a few months ago in this blog, Ercole Carpanetto planned to hold Mappano Open Days in his town in Italy.

Mappano Open Days took place this weekend.

In correspondence with Ercole, he says that the event was a success, where they gave away 200 Live CDs and DVDs of GNU/Linux and Free/Open Source Software programs to some businessmen and a lot of students and home users.

Like Lindependence in Felton, people came from far and wide: Three women came from Milano, which is more than 150 kilometers away, and a teacher came from Bologna, which is about 200 kilometers away. That beats us: The farthest distance people came to Felton was from Oakland and Berkeley, about 80 miles tops.

I think pictures will be up soon enough either on Ercole’s blog or on the Mappano Open Days site.

Good one, Ercole! Grazie!

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