I have tentatively put my name forward to help organise the London
party. Not sure if Canonical have plans, so I sent a couple of emails
this morning. I have a few ideas, but any thoughts on a good venue would
be great. I would prefer something with a bar, but not something that
excludes under
Dave Walker wrote:
Alan Bell wrote:
I have tentatively put my name forward to help organise the London
party. Not sure if Canonical have plans, so I sent a couple of emails
this morning. I have a few ideas, but any thoughts on a good venue would
be great. I would prefer something
ged byrom wrote:
Is there any special reason for naming this release after a mythical beastie
rather than a real beastie ?
Are we likely to see the haggis release or the even rarer mirk in the future ?
Ged
are you trying to say that the haggis is not a real animal?
--
BBC sounds like a great location. For a local repo I would suggest
installing apt-cacher on something and pointing to it as a proxy server
in synaptic. Works a treat. Caches stuff and collects new packages on
demand. You can then remove the proxy settings to be pointing back at
the main repos.
Fantastic to see any entry to the market with a non-windows PC. At the
moment if we want to buy a desktop PC there are only a couple of places
in the UK we can get one without Windows. The commodity desktop PC
market is not a particularly nice place to be right now. The big boys
appear to be
Eddie Bernard wrote:
Tim Powys-Lybbe wrote:
Surely for the average user a LTS version would be better, such as 8.04?
Development versions and upgrades could raise severe antagonisms to you.
Fair cop, glad you pointed that out. I need to curb my enthusiasm for
always wanting to be
I think from the description the squid thing is actually a red herring.
(to mix a fishy metaphore). It sounds like your proxy server is not
reliably resolving DNS when using IPV6. You will probably see this
problem if you run firefox on the server.
LeeGroups wrote:
Alan,
I'm actually using OpenDNS's servers (after using the ISP's), what I
really don't understand is how Apt is working perfectly, but Squid and
Wget don't...
I saw that post before, it's what I used to supposedly turn off IPv6.
I can't run FF on the server, no gui
Stephen Garton wrote:
I have used gitso (http://code.google.com/p/gitso/) with a reasonable
amount of success, for connecting linux and windows machines in all
configurations (i.e. L-L, L-W, W-L and W-W).
I say reasonable amount of success purely because I don't use it very
often, but
so was this using a fully updated Intrepid or a different version of
Ubuntu? what version of virtualbox did you try to install?
Alan.
David King wrote:
I got the normal graphics settings back by reselecting the nvidia driver
through the system settings, only for it to then remove about half
don't buy hardware, look at renting a virtual private server. You will
get stacks more bandwidth than you could otherwise afford and you get
full root access and the ability to do a hard reboot. The processor will
be very fast but the memory will be a bit limited, perfectly fine for
PHP apps,
/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/
Alan Bell
The Open Learning Centre
Check out our Libertus servers at
http://www.theopenlearningcentre.com/libertus.html
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I found that very strange. They did mention the Free software movement
at about 7:30
But the open source concept is not just about Mozilla, it started much
earlier with the so called Free Software Movement in the 1980s. And it
was a Finnish student in his early 20s who created the original
http://nakedcomputers.org/category/europe/uk/ is also a good friend, do
let me know if you find a supplier I don't already have on the list.
Alan.
alan c wrote:
I know that google is a good friend, however it is also nice to talk
about such things.
I have a friend of a friend who wants
Gordon wrote:
Alan Bell wrote:
http://nakedcomputers.org/category/europe/uk/ is also a good friend, do
let me know if you find a supplier I don't already have on the list.
here's one: (Can't vouch for it...)
EfficientPC
http://www.efficientpc.co.uk/
already got them http
LeeGroups wrote:
Dell will refund the cost of Windows without you having to send
anything off. But I guess the OP was looking for an Ubuntu
pre-installed machine in order to send a message to the manufacture
showing that there is a demand for such a thing.
Cheers,
Andrew
Let's be
LeeGroups wrote:
hmm, maybe I should start collecting photos of such anti-competitive
practices in a hall of shame on the nakedcomputers.org site.
I don't suppose you have the box still do you?
Still, have the box, yes. But I was so angry at the time, I got my phone
out and took a
alan c wrote:
It is a situation in the shallow end of a probably a much deeper
populist swing away from Windows. The customer is a friend of an
elderly non technical friend of mine. My friend found that their
existing old laptop was grinding to a halt with XP, was happy to try
Ubuntu in
you can bypass the queue by getting someone to share something with you
. . . you have mail . . .
alan c wrote:
I recently decided to try the proposed Ubuntu One facility, and got
myself on a waiting list.
Any ideas of timescales please, anyone?
--
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the only remaining question is who will sue them first? Microsoft for
multiple trademark issues, Canonical for the horrible bastardisation of
the Ubuntu logo or the FSF for failing to release source code and
wrapping it up behind a 16 boot crippleware wrapper.
My bet is on Microsoft to take
://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
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alan c wrote:
JONATHAN TAYLOR wrote:
Hi all,
as a newbie I'm in the process of switching over to Ubuntu,
and as I run a small business I use MS Visio for my site plans . My
question is what is the equivalent in Ubuntu?
I have never used visio, however in addition to other
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/KarmicRATParty
The Real Ale Train
The Watercress Line http://www.watercressonline.co.uk/ is a small
steam powered railway line in Hampshire. It runs from Alton Station to
Alresford
Hi John,
ssh is a secure way of communicating with a remote server. At the most
basic level it is like having a terminal session on the remote computer,
you can use commands such as cd to change directory, ls to view the
contents of your current directory (same as dir in dos) pwd to print
your
Greg Herdman wrote:
Hi Everyone,
Have just initialised our new batch of Toshiba laptops for our village
IT Group. These come with Microsoft Vista 'preinstalled' which has now
been completed. When I tried to use our Ubuntu 8.04 disc in Live User
mode, the laptop seemed to launch Ubuntu in
who?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linus_Pauling
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linus_Torvalds#Linux_trademark
Rowan Berkeley wrote:
Some of you may recall my white elephant 'Linux Certified' machine. I
can't call LC its manufacturers, since they aren't: they just bought a
batch of Compal JHL90
Rowan - this may be the organisation you wish to complain to - was
also partly referenced to by *Alan Pope* earlier:
one of the Alans http://thealans.com, but not the Popey
Alan.
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There is a campaign underway and gathering momentum to show IE6 the door
http://www.ie6nomore.com
this site gives you a banner that displays to IE6 users encouraging them
to upgrade to a modern browser. If you have any websites you can add
this to then that would be a service to the world.
alan c wrote:
Any thoughts about why the problem and how to resolve it?
tia
it is either an evil conspiracy, or there is some kind of image or
something on the login page that comes from a site blocked by the
virgin. When you pull out the dongle it stops waiting and just shows you
what
London NW4 4BT
UK
Tel: +44 (0)20 8 411 5235
Mob: 07765 237 570
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Alan Bell
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Check out our Libertus servers at
http://www.theopenlearningcentre.com
John Matthews wrote:
This time I think it might have been from an update that I had today for
the netbook. Plus amongst all that there wa a box asking for keyring? to
be allowed. With all the boxes open, I clicked on it, and I think I
might have clicked never, so there are no wireless
John Matthews wrote:
I wonder if somebody can hep. I dont have any firewall or virus
protection on my ubuntu partitions. I am a little bit concerned about
this. I did install one Called Firestarter, which messed up everything,
and I had to uninstall it. I just couldnt get around the
, if I have missed any.
Thank you again,
John.
Alan Bell wrote:
John Matthews wrote:
I wonder if somebody can hep. I dont have any firewall or virus
protection on my ubuntu partitions. I am a little bit concerned about
this. I did install one Called Firestarter, which messed
Rob Beard wrote:
Matt Jones wrote:
If he is only going to use it a small amount, then Vodafone offer the
best deal, top up £15 for 1GB. Then use it until it runs out. With
everyone else, your 1GB of data only lasts 30days, even if you haven't
used it all.
Most of the dongles are plug
well there have been any number of reviews of Linux desktops by
journalists who know about Windows and compare it at every step to
Windows. This just happens to be one coming from the other direction,
which he acknowledges from the start.
I don't think anyone sensible would draw any conclusions
Michael G Fletcher wrote:
Hi Guys,
This is more of a philosophical question... I'm looking for a new mp3
player, about 4 - 10GB, but not over the top when it comes to
features, I have a smart phone (HTC-Magic running Andriod) .
If I were to buy an Apple iPod Nano, would I be going against
mac wrote:
Alan Bell wrote:
I have been working with Lotus Notes and Domino for 10+ years...
snip
Wow! I could hardly have wished for a more comprehensive and
authoritative single reply, Alan. Thanks for taking the time and
trouble to give such a detailed and informed response
=mqu7
-END PGP SIGNATURE-
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Web: www.theopenlearningcentre.com
Mob: +44 (0)7736 778908
Tel: +44 (0)8444 3576000
The Open Learning Centre is a trading name of Bell Lord Ltd,
a company registered in England and Wales #05868943.
VAT Registration
Sean Miller wrote:
Why do none of these programmes ever mention Wine?
It's simply not true that you can't run Microsoft programs on Ubuntu
-- is the BBC sponsored by Apple and Microsoft or what???
Sean
Well I don't think you can blame the BBC for that one. Chris Kenyon is
Canonical's
John Matthews wrote:
Just wondered when Koala was due out. Have tried a forced upgrade using
altf2 it is still showing a beta version. Is that correct or will it be
changed today.
Kojm
it will be announced today, which could mean any time, including times
which are tomorrow in some
do you get anything on screen as it boots? Does it get as far as the
login screen when you have it installed?
you could report a bug in xserver-xorg-video-intel
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel
there are probably clues in /var/log/Xorg.0.log as to what is going on.
I don't think I can take much credit for this one! you looked in the
right place and solved it yourself I think
Alan.
ian pettitt wrote:
Thanks Alan - I think you have solved it!
Looking through the bugs I found this:
Neil Perry wrote:
I agree with you Ed. They expect out of the box complete working.
Neil Perry
this is a perfectly reasonable expectation. When this expectation is not
met the correct response is to file a bug and work with others on fixing it.
--
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an upgrade advisor is an excellent idea, in fact a hardware testing tool
that scans PCI and USB bus and summarises the level of support for each
item by looking it up on the web would be an excellent tool. Thinking
about it there is no reason why such a tool shouldn't be available on
other
Ian Pascoe wrote:
Evening all
I have the pleasant task over the Winter months to start to scan in a few
thousand 35mm colour negatives.
However, before I start I wonder if anyone knows of anything that will turn
a digitised colour negative into a colour positive. I've wandered through
the
Sean Miller wrote:
Anyone else think £390 for a base unit is somewhat expensive???
Sure, they build them to order or whatever but they must be raking it in!!
And the site doesn't say how much memory the things have - let's hope
it's enough for them to use it as a standard Linux install
Alan Pope wrote:
Liam (the guy in the video) is on this mailing list.
I wonder if there is a video with Valerie Singleton explaining what
community developed open source software is.
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Looks like they have thought about things better and spent more time
preparing than certain Linux powered netbook projects did.
It would appear that they control their own sales process and the full
company is on board with the project, they shouldn't have their own
sales reps selling against it.
I am with the desktop crowd (small as it is)
GDM doesn't consume many resources, if left logged out on the GDM screen
it won't chew memory, processor or open any external ports (neither does
X/Gnome itself by default). When the full desktop is running it will use
extra resources but that is fine.
Last Tuesday I was accepted by the EMEA regional membership board as an
Ubuntu Member, which is pretty cool. The reason I finally got round to
putting myself forward is because I wanted to understand the process a
bit better. This is some background and my current understanding of the
process, and
you are being a little obscure about the context for this and type of
person and organisations involved, but Mahara might be what you are
looking for, it is for managing an individual's learning portfolio and
it integrates with Moodle. You might also want to look at Shibboleth
We are pleased to announce the first annual Ubuntu UK sherry and mince
pies evening!
We will sort out the booze, but we would like everyone to bring some
mince pies or Christmas themed nibbles - extra points if you cook them
yourself.
Cost: it will be an integer number of pounds between £0 and
Isabell Long wrote:
On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 10:24:26PM +, Alan Bell wrote:
snip
Will do. Oh and no sherry (or any other alcohol) for me: 1. I'm not of legal
drinking age (yet!) and 2. it's horrible stuff!
All the more for the rest of us then! Seriously though, the venue
To add to the sherry I have just ordered a case of Ubuntu Cola
http://www.ubuntu-trading.com/
Alan.
Alan Bell wrote:
We are pleased to announce the first annual Ubuntu UK sherry and mince
pies evening!
We will sort out the booze, but we would like everyone to bring some
mince pies
One of my actions from the recent Ubuntu UK team meeting was to organise
a evening out on the Real Ale Train.
The Watercress Line is a small steam powered railway line in Hampshire.
It runs from Alton Station to Alresford. Alton is the end of the line
for scheduled services from Waterloo. Every
Overall this is a great idea. I think we need to clarify who this is
aimed at. Off the top of my head I can think of three broad categories:
Individuals wanting to run a proper operating system at home
People wanting to introduce Ubuntu into their workplace
Students wanting to use it in their
just to remind you all that we have an Ubuntu-uk meeting on IRC channel
#ubuntu-uk on the freenode network one hour from now at 7:30 this
evening. You can normally join in a browser at
http://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=ubuntu-uk or using Empathy, Pidgin
or another IRC client.
The agenda is at
alan c wrote:
Alan thanks for the heads up, I was able to look in - very interesting.
that is one way of putting it.
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Hi All,
Minutes of last nights meeting are now available at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/LastMeeting thanks to all who attended
and thanks to Mez for chairing.
One of the action items from the meeting was for me to come up with an
improved format for the agenda, in particular so that action
Alistair McKinlay wrote:
Did we not decide to trial using #ubuntu-uk-meeting for the next
meeting? Maybe I got that wrong...
YaManicKill
sorry, my mistake, will fix shortly . . .
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red wrote:
Hi all
Is there any add ins for thunderbirds that I can collect my twitters
like I can rss feeds?
Shalom
Hi red,
yes, there are quite a few twitter related things in the addon directory
well that sounds like a cracking idea to me :-) Looks like the Easter
holiday dates are from the 1st to the 18th of April. Maybe a doodle poll
would reveal a good date for everyone.
Alan.
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Isabell Long wrote:
Hi,
I haven't forgotten about this, I just haven't yet had a response from the
Science Museum! I rang them on Tuesday afternoon and I had to inform them
that their website did in fact say that they did organised *group* tours,
then they gave me another number to ring
The Watercress Line is a small steam powered railway line in Hampshire.
It runs from Alton Station to Alresford. Alton is the end of the line
for scheduled services from Waterloo. Every few weeks or so they run an
evening special, the Real Ale Train, or RAT.
Basically the train turns into a very
javadayaz wrote:
The only problem is i dont think the hard drive is mounted, even
though fdisk -l does show it as /dev/sda.!!
you might find IRC is a better way to discuss this and get it sorted out
more interactively than on a mailing list
on a different computer, or on a live CD on the dead
Paul Sutton wrote:
Are canonical still giving away free cds in multiples for use at
events etc:
Paul
Put in a request and explain why the event needs them. It may depend a
bit on the timing of the event in the cycle, if it is close to the Lucid
launch then they may be running out of Karmic
The minutes from the meeting today are now available at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/LastMeeting
The agenda for the next meeting is now open at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeamMeetingAgenda
Next meeting is at 20:00 on Wednesday March 3rd in #ubuntu-uk-meeting
Alan.
--
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Hi all,
The minutes from the meeting held on 03/03/2010 are available at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/MeetingNotes/20100303 and you can always
find the minutes of the most recent meeting at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/LastMeeting.
On the 17th of April we have the visit to the Science Museum
With the budget out of the way it is only a matter of a few days until
the next UK General Election will be called.
So which way should you vote? Who are your candidates? What do they
think about the issues on the the geek agenda?
I knocked together a little website to help you vote geekily, I
that is a great idea and I would love to help with it, however that is
the oggcamp weekend so I think a lot of the willing volunteers will be
up north in Liverpool.
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Jon Reynolds wrote:
Well as it turns out, April 17 is my Mum's birthday so not likely I
could come anyway.
bring her along as a special birthday treat!
Its funny tho, as just this week I have been wanting to go only to see
the IMAX Hubble 3D showing in there that's on at the mo. Really
Gordon Burgess-Parker wrote:
Is there a global way of doing this?
What's the best way?
why?
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It is this Saturday, looks like 20 people so far
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/ScienceMuseumVisit
Weather forecast is Sunny so a nice day to be up and about in London.
Alan.
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With all the best events, if you can remember it then you weren't really
there.
If you do happen to have attended any of the Ubuntu-UK events of the
past few years it would be great if you could take a few seconds to edit
the wiki page at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/czajkowski/locostats and fill
in
I am going on a little adventure to Broadcasting house in London on
Friday to be interviewed for the Click ON programme in relation to the
general election and in particular the http://votegeek.org.uk website.
At the moment it is suffering a bit of voter apathy and I don't have as
many interesting
Thanks to all those who attended the meeting this evening and Matt
Daubney for chairing.
Minutes are now available https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/LastMeeting
The next meeting will be on 19th May to discuss the support guidelines
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/Support_Guidelines that we agreed
Colin McCarthy wrote:
Smart Technologys the makers of 'SmartBoards' one of the two popular
interactive whiteboards already do a linux client. Its almost exactly the
same as the windows version and works perfectly. I have used to many times at
our LUG meeting which occasionally meets in a
Jonathon Fernyhough wrote:
snip - other sensible sounding stuff
I think what I'm saying is that schools are just like any other SME
and should be treated the same, not as their own special, idealised,
case.
yeah, they have the same issues as any SME, and we have solutions for
them. We
Matthew Daubney wrote:
Hello,
First of all a brief apology for not sorting this out sooner, moving
house has taken somewhat longer than I originally intended. I'm hoping
to start getting things back on track now.
Secondly, thanks to the people who turned up to my (frankly awful) talk
at
Here are the minutes of this evening's meeting.
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/LastMeeting
Highlights included:
A call for volunteers for ISO testing
Exhibiting at non-tech events, such as car boot sales and goat festivals
(there is a link to that but you will have to read the minutes to find
Alan Bell wrote:
The next meeting will be chaired by issyl0 and will take place at
20:00UTC (which is 9PM BST) in #ubuntu-uk-meeting. Please shout if you
need any help getting set up on IRC.
that would be on Wednesday 7th July!
Alan.
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https
Roy Jamison wrote:
What about good a good old English fry-up or fish and chips? Ok, I admit
it's lunchtime :)
Mockup #1 is the best, but I also feel the same, that it is a little too
commercial. What about going with the new official purple colour? Just a
thought.
Great work!! :)
pmgazz wrote:
On 05/06/10 14:32, Alan Bell wrote:
where? and do join #ubuntu-uk.
#fossbox - but it's not really used
nope, it isn't!
Yes, if one has a bot/time to build, agree and deploy a bot - I used to
run channels on Dalnet using chan bots - but 'newbie' IRC users
John Stevenson wrote:
On 7 June 2010 20:10, Will Bickerstaff w...@thebickerstaffs.net
mailto:w...@thebickerstaffs.net wrote:
James,
bringing launchpad to the desktop is a really cool idea. When I think
about what would motivate me more to help, finding things I can help
James Tait wrote:
Alan Bell wrote:
[snip!]
well you will be pleased to know there is such a page!
here http://ubuntu-uk.org/
here http://www.ubuntu.com/support
here https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SupportSolutionsGuidelines
here https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SupportTeam
here https
John Stevenson wrote:
I believe I suggested a page on a site where users could find out how
to ask support questions, so which site would you direct a new Ubuntu
user towards ??
Having browsed through a few with a newbie hat on I would have given
up or just asked a for help without
Untick work offline in the file menu of firefox
Alan Bell
The Open Learning Centre
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Hi all,
One of the LoCo events that we have been talking about and planning for
a while is a event with a more businesslike feel to it, something where
I should be getting up in the morning and not wondering should I wear a
Tshirt from ThinkGeek or one from shop.ubuntu.com?, but should I wear
a
Alan Pope wrote:
When someone organises one?
We had an event in Liverpool last month which - last time I checked -
is outside London :)
Cheers,
Al.
yup, lets make this one a huge success and then do another one somewhere
else. OggCamp in Liverpool and OggCamp in Wolverhampton were
John Matthews wrote:
I have actually asked if I could get some paid help, and all I got was
this pre written e-mail sent telling nothing useful.
John
Another thing you could do if you want a more interactive conversation
(which the rapid emails indicate that you might) is to get on
John Matthews wrote:
Yes, but unfortunately, that hasnt been a very good option for me
either. I prefer the e-mail to be honest.
John
Email is good when you just want one answer to a question. If you want
someone to help you do something then IRC is better. People don't reply
to emails
John Matthews wrote:
It also kind of negates this 'Improving Support' thread really, doesnt
it, nothing has really changed has it, the same thing comes across, you
are all 'just' volunteers, which you do push down peoples throats. I
wish I could something about it, I would like to be able
John Matthews wrote:
What is the point of having IRC chat and this e-mail chat, when nobody
is prepared to help. Its kind of really a piss take when you get threads
that talk about changing the way support is given, but all you get is
those same people can just barely post to take you to
John Matthews wrote:
The grub appears as its booting up. It has a list of two kernels with
recvoery underneath and a few other things, including the xp partition,
that I tried getting help for months ago, but that didnt get anywhere
either. I then learnt by accident, that this grub had a
John Matthews wrote:
Ok, I dont know what else I can tell you. What I have told is all that
happens. I click on the recover link under the kernal when in the grub,
and it freezes after about 20 secs. Nothing else happens, no script
comes up, no other boxes, I cannot get into a terminal. It
John Matthews wrote:
Isnt it funny really, you are all too busy to answer an e-mail, because
you are all volunteers, yet you arent too busy to chat quite avidly
about games and things like that on IRC. From what I see that happens
all day on IRC. No wonder you dont have the time.
Yep,
John Matthews wrote:
Yes I have tried using the answer system, and posting questions, but
havent been able to get an answer. I got told a couple of weeks ago
somebody on here had an answer, and was going to post a video to help.
But, as I posted earlier, nothing has been done, which is why
John Matthews wrote:
On 10/06/10 23:04, Alan Bell wrote:
I would encourage you to take steps that would lead to more information
being available, the more information you can provide the more likely it
is that someone will understand what is occurring. Installing a small
dual boot
Rob Beard wrote:
Depends how big it is, not sure if the Lighthouse would realistically
have enough room considering it's layout. I'd have thought Westpoint in
Exeter (where Business South West is held) would be a better venue.
There is also the question of how easy is it for folks to get
Daniel Case wrote:
Depends when it is as to whether i can attend...7th of July is my
return date.
What time will the meeting be? (my first one too!)
the meeting will be at 9PM UK time (or 20:00 UTC - all Ubuntu meeting
times are set in UTC)
this should always point to the agenda (including date
1 - 100 of 541 matches
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