Hi, I'm running a similar case and I'm going to do a workshop in my former high school. They have been pretty cool, but I am a former student from that institution and I know many people there, so I get some credibility.
Last year I've also contacted the City Hall of Aveiro and the City Hall of Estarreja, in which I've spoken with the Council for Culture and Vice Presidents and they asked no identification. I've made a small presentation about the Fedora Project and why I was asking support. They were willing to make available free of charge the local Theater (controlled by the city hall) with 1400 seats for an event. It didn't happened (the event), but they were friendly all the way. I don't know how things work in other places, but a smile and a bold attitude usually does the thing.This is mainly my experience in Portugal, dunno abroad. nelson On Sat, 2010-09-25 at 20:09 +0300, Kostas Boukouvalas wrote: > Hi, > > *In case of need* because - as Stathis mentioned - many times we' ll > probably have the opportunity to present openSUSE in schools and other > organizations that may be somewhat suspicious about "the 'hacker' in > front", what is the official bureau of the openSUSE community, > recognized by law in the European Union by which we could have a > signature over a piece of paper? > > In case there is not one, at who do we go for this? Novell? > > Thank you -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+unsubscr...@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+h...@opensuse.org