On Fri, Apr 18, 2008 at 12:36 PM, James G. Sack (jim) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Doug LaRue wrote:
>  > ** Reply to message from "Carl Lowenstein" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on Fri,
>  > 18 Apr 2008 11:06:31 -0700
>  >
>  >> The situation can be rather confusing.  AT the National City site, on
>  >> Saturdays there is an Adult Education class on Linux happening in the
>  >> other half of the room where we do the InstallFest.   The Installfest
>  >> lasts for a couple of hours longer than the class, so sometimes there
>  >> is crossover.
>  >
>  > I really wanted to get to the installfest I just missed but will have to 
> see
>  > what next months schedule turns up. It sounds like a nice setup and
>  > and hearing this I can't help but wonder how the conversation went
>  > on for so long without it coming up.
>  >
>  > There should be no reason to change anything about the existing KPLUG
>  > meetings since anything to do with getting new members or helping new
>  > users seems to be best left for the Nat'l City installfest. Like maybe a
>  > name change to indicate there is training too. ;-)
>  >
>
>  Name change implies it's a coordinated or co-sponsored thing, which
>  isn't quite true.
>
>  Robert Donovan - can you say something (again) about the training and
>  availability. Is it a sign-up thing? Jump-in anytime? Fixed-topic
>  (course outline)? Free?
>

The Saturday Linux class is a weekly class at NCAS that costs $20 to
sign up for and it runs for the whole semester. The Installfests are
separate from it and cost nothing. We have a sign-up sheet for the
Linux class to show the school there is sufficient interest in the
installfests to keep use of the facility. That's why I annoy people
all the time by incessantly asking if everyone has signed in.

The Linux class goes from 8:30 to 12:30. The Installfest goes from
10:00 to 3:00. I signed up for the class because it covers SUSE Linux
and I was really light on SUSE. The course outline is, um, in flux at
the moment because of the change from SUSE 10.2 to 10.3 and the
associated changes in the Novell certification exams. However, the
course is not organized around the Novel cert, it is meant more as a
general Linux clas covering multiple distros.

Juan Garcia and Christian Berctacini are the instructors, and are
knowledgeable about system admin, but not applications on the desktop.
They were aware of my other Linux knowledge and teaching experience in
Linux Desktop applications like OpenOffice, Scribus, and Inkscape. I
offered to do show and tell presentations on some of this during
class, and they liked the idea. I don't see any reason why we couldn't
come up with a schedule of presentations and present them in the last
half of class on Installfest days starting at 10:00. We could also
look into scheduling other presentations later in the Installfest, but
this hasn't really been well-recieved before, partly because it was
thrown together, ad-hoc, with no real organization or impetus behind
it. Also, ther was no real attempt to get the information out about
the fact that we wanted do more at installfests than just
installations or when the other presentations would be. I've been
trying to find ways to extend the Installfest to the other side of the
room, out of the lab area, and this seems like a good way to do it. I
had this kind of thing in mind when I asked earlier for a list of
topics people are willing to teach. There is also no reason we
couldn't throw in some more advanced topics, say, every third or
fourth presentation. If we could get a list of people and topics and
present it to Juan and Christian, I'm sure they would go for it, and
the principal would support it. We could aslo schedule these things in
advance for those who need to plan ahead for something like this, and
post them on the KPLUG site. Since the class starts anew each
semester, I think it would be a good idea to come up with a set of
core presentation topics(not necessarily core presentatons, just core
presentation topics) that we cycle through as the audience changes,
and pepper those with three or four covering more advanced topics that
we can throw in ad-hoc based more on presenter availability and area
of expertise.

The fact that the classroom has computers networked together for the
classes offers the opportunity to do some very interactive
presentations. Although that might take some minor preclass
coordination, it shouldn't be hard to arrange.

Also to consider, Ralph Mora, the current Principal and the one who
initially approved the return of the Installfests to NCAS, is leaving
the school, but Adriana Aldana, the vice Principal and nice lady that
used to open the school for us when there was no weekly Linux class,
is going to be the new Principal. So, we've got friends in the right
places at NCAS. If we can show enough interest and participation, the
very thing outreach is predicated upon, we have the potential to turn
this into a good show piece for KPLUG, SDCS, NCAS and SUHSD.

However, I'm getting a bit ahead of my self. The key to getting this
to work is organization and coordination between the Installfests, the
meetings, the KPLUG website, and the school. Juan and Christian are
our points of contact for the school and Adriana. In order to really
sell this we need to create the product to sell first. I'm already
creating and organizing class presentations, so I can help there. Off
the top of my head, here is a tenetative, very general outline of what
I think we need to do:

* We need to get a list of what we can, or are willing to present,
decide when, or if, it should be presented in this venue, create the
core presentation topics list and populate it with presentations for
each topic. This should be structured loosely enough so that if
someone is not available to do a presentation, we can just plug in
another one that somebody else can do and should depend as little as
possible on the order in which the presentations occur.

* We want to attract people with more advanced interests in Linux so
we also want a list of more advanced presentations. These can be more
advanced topics, like Tracy's Xen presentation, or more in-depth
coverage of basics, along the lines of Gus's X presentation. I expect
there will be some overlap here and that is fine. The point is, we
don't want to limit ourselves to noob or in-class topics at this
stage. Remember, there are 32 networked Intel Core2Duo boxen with 2GB
of RAM, all with KF-72 removable SATA drive bays, and some have the
PATA removable drive bays too. These mobile bays cost $17 at Best Deal
Computers on Broadway in Chula Vista. Want to do a presentation on
setting up a heartbeet cluster? Get three or four hard drives, come to
the installfest prior to your presentation, install your favorite
Linux flavor on the actual machines you'll be working on, take the
hard drives home, come back on the day of your presentation and you're
all set to show how to set up the cluster. Live CDs would also be an
option if you didn't have that kind of time. How about an LTSP demo or
a remote administration of multiple machines, or a firewall and
security presentation on live machines? You can see the possibilities.
We wouldn't want to do this sort of thing all the time, but an
advanced presentation like this every third or fourth installfest or
so would be great. Later on, guest presenters from outside the group
or SDCS might even be an option. Let's get everything we've got on the
table and see if we can fit it in. There's enough know-how running
around in this group to make a very impressive list of presentations.
Impressive enough to get the attention of people well beyond the group
and school district, if we do it right, just the kind of interest SDCS
and her sister SIGs are pining for.

* Once we have the list of presentations, we need to coordinate with
the presenters and schedule them. This schedule could be posted on the
KPLUG site. I would also consider looking at doing a few,
well-choosen, affiliated links with the KPLUG site to drive more
traffic between KPLUG and relevant related organizations that could
help spread the word outside our usual ken.

I am open to other suggestions.

Robert Donovan


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