Hello Rahul, good-morning.
This indeed is an idea we would like to delve into. Giving away non-installable cdroms may not be the best way to push people into knowing more about gnu-linux.
But setting up Kiosks/Gnu-linux terminals at various points of visibility would definitely provide exposure to the audience in general.
So...come forward and have the same chalked out. We would love to see this plan in action at any of the Educational institutions who would like to have the same implemented.
Bye for now and have a great day.
Trevor
On Sat, 2003-01-04 at 21:09, Rahul Saxena wrote:
- LUG meet on 12 Jan. 2003 @ VJTI
hello,
On Saturday 04 January 2003 14:08, you wrote:
- LUG meet on 12 Jan. 2003 @ VJTI
On 04 Jan 2003 10:23:55 +0530
Trevor Warren trevor.w@media.mit.edu wrote:
Hello luggers, good-morning.
Greetings of the season and wishes of a prosperous new year ahead to all of you.
I write this mail so as to invite suggestions on the events for the coming year....We ended last year with a bang and drowned in the gnu-linux waters at a linu lunacy trip. But this year we need to have a concrete plan on the following.....
--> Workshops
How about a monthly workshop, in some school or college. It would be a 1 day one. The school/college provide the hardware, room etc. & few luggers can do an install/demo & give short talks.
As most of the people who have been involved with workshops have noticed, doing LINUX in 3 days in a college workshop, helps to the extent of only providing a look at linux for the curious student. The plan does not work because people cannot practise or try it out on their own.. AFTER they have been to the workshop. As you can imagine installing it is task, few are willing to take.
We need a distro which can run off the cdrom. That is how people can play with it and maximum benefit is derived from the whole process.
another suggestion is to setup a demo in college of just X running on a comupter an internet conenction would be a plus. It could be setup in the canteen or anywhere people can walk up and have a look at how it works and what apps are there. show them that they could probably run ANYTHING which they wanted. Show them that Quake runs on linux too. Show them that they could use latex to print like they havnt before and then probably they will realise that they could do a hundred things here, which they didnt even know about on windows.
But really, this view maybe biased as its based on the engg students.
Regards, Karunakar
-rahul
Change your thoughts and you change your world.
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