On Thu, Jul 06, 2006 at 01:14:08AM +0930, Rohan M. wrote: > Hope this isnt a stupid question - but how does one start somehing like this? In the case of the Gove rollout, it started with a request from a community organisation that had a computer lab they hadn't used in ages. The computers were Windows-infested and lying around in neglected heaps. We then collected a group of volunteers via email, and arranged to fly up there for a week. Pia bought lots of spare hardware. We cleaned out and straightened up the machines, and did fresh Ubuntu installs on most of them. We did a little training and had an opening day to raise awareness. When I say "we", it was literally a random group of volunteers turning up to hack together a computer lab because it seemed like a good idea. While individuals turned up with LA support (such as Pia), and we claimed it for Software Freedom Day, the effort was not organised by LA. > Do you basically organise it yourself, source hardware, speak to the local > community to meet needs etc? Basically, yes. It helped immensely that one of the local LUG people had already done a visit to scout the situation, and also that Sokar had good contacts already in place with the community there. > So how does one become an 'offical LA backed community FOSS rollout-er' so > to speak? To the best of my knowledge, there aren't any. That may change in the future, especially if a critical mass of us manage to be in the same room at LCA2007, but for now random groups of volunteers seem to be the custom, and they source resources for each effort on an ad-hoc basis. Cheers, Horatio
Attachment:
pgpUNBTtZiUmG.pgp
Description: PGP signature