On 11/7/06, Nathan Eckenrode <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I'd just like to weigh in on this issue, as I have come up against it, and > generally the solution I seek - which allows me to have some crediblity as > well as remain 'unofficial' - is the position of Community Representative. > > This seems to solve a couple of problems as well as giving me a title that > don't sound too corny. Additionally, as the most important feature which I am > advocating during any event where I am representing Ubuntu is that of the > community, speaking as a Community Representative reinforces the > philosophical views as expressed on the front page of http://ubuntu.com. > > On Tuesday 07 November 2006 06:26, Daniel Buch wrote:
Here are my thoughts on representing Ubuntu officially: -Ubuntu and Canonical are different thinks. When you go to sell Ubuntu to somebody, stress the Marketplace of vendors, backstopped by Canonical -As long as you are being sane, I see no reason for people creating business cards with a "community rep" tagline on them. I believe there are business card templates on DYIMarketing page on the wiki. Corey -- ubuntu-marketing mailing list ubuntu-marketing@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-marketing