• Teesside-based LUG (North East England)

    From TeesCDF@2:250/1 to All on Friday, July 12, 2024 13:44:57
    Hello everyone,

    I'm exploring the possibility of starting a Linux User Group for the
    Teesside area (North East England). There is a significant Linux user
    base at my place of work (Teesside University) so I believe we probably
    have the resources and there would be interest to get one off the
    ground, so to speak.

    So...being mindful of the wider (local) community, is there anyone in
    this newsgroup who is in the Teesside area, and if so, would you be
    interested in being involved in a LUG based at the University campus in Middlesbrough (or perhaps at our Darlington campus)?

    Thanks in advance!

    --
    Ben

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.8 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: Air Applewood, The Linux Gateway to the UK & Eire (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Anton Shepelev@2:250/1 to All on Friday, July 12, 2024 17:29:36
    TeesCDF:

    I'm exploring the possibility of starting a Linux User
    Group for the Teesside area (North East England). There is
    a significant Linux user base at my place of work
    (Teesside University) so I believe we probably have the
    resources and there would be interest to get one off the
    ground, so to speak.

    The value of a local user group is in proporation to the
    frequency and attendance of real-worldly, humane, off-line
    meetings that its members can and will afford.

    Global internet-based communities seem superrior in all
    other aspects. For example, I can read and even post in
    this uk.* group from Russia. Is it good or bad? Do I
    compromise this group by diluting its British atmosphere?

    P.S.: If you plan on crearing a mailing list, I know but
    one free service -- https://freelists.org/ .

    --
    () ascii ribbon campaign -- against html e-mail
    /\ www.asciiribbon.org -- against proprietary attachments

    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.8.8 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (2:250/1@fidonet)
  • From Jim Lesurf@2:250/1 to All on Saturday, July 13, 2024 12:30:03
    In article <20240712192936.90fca5cb69d59b41b7df9bf7@g{oogle}mail.com>,
    Anton Shepelev <anton.txt@g{oogle}mail.com> wrote:

    The value of a local user group is in proporation to the frequency and attendance of real-worldly, humane, off-line meetings that its members
    can and will afford.

    The advantage is that conversations that involved a series of QandA + suggestions and demos can be done adaptively real-time to do what may take
    days by some other means. Particularly when a 'learner' is puzzled by each
    step and its initial 'explanation'. The 'teacher' can also spot what the 'learner' has done wrong as they do it - without the learner saying what
    they *actually* did.

    Doing that via a video-call of some kind may avoid people moving their bum
    off their usual seat, but may still miss things that 'being there' shows immediately.

    So it depends on the nature of what is being dealt with, and how those
    involved proceed. And, indeed, their personal preferences wrt how best to communicate or work with others.

    Global internet-based communities seem superrior in all other aspects.

    In many respects, yes. But this need not be an "either/or" situation. Face-to-face meetings can be used by the same people who use usenet, etc.

    For example, I can read and even post in this uk.* group from Russia.
    Is it good or bad? Do I compromise this group by diluting its British atmosphere?

    No idea why you assume that question is relevant. If your point is that long-distance comm is often more convenient than travel, I'd agree. But discussing something over a cup of tea can sometimes get a lot done quickly
    and easily. Circumstances alter cases.

    Personally, I'd also add from experience in the 'ed biz' that when trying
    to help someone to learn some things, being able to stand beside them as
    they try makes it much quicker and easier to see mistakes and why they happened. Thus helps with explaining things. Amongst other things I used to
    run teaching labs for undergrads. Also built webpages of explanations of similar content, used usenet, etc.

    YMMV. :-)

    Jim

    --
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    * Origin: Usenet.Farm (2:250/1@fidonet)