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Date:      Sun, 10 Jan 1999 22:35:21 -0800
From:      gummibear@we.mediaone.net
To:        questions@FreeBSD.ORG, chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: State of the union, 1999. - Concerning User Groups
Message-ID:  <3.0.1.32.19990110223521.006a52bc@we.mediaone.net>
In-Reply-To: <49859.915950870.1@zippy.cdrom.com>

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Okay, I'm sending this to Questions because I have a few questions for you
all.  But, if you want the condensed version of all this, then here it is:

Do you you want to see FreeBSD succeed?  If you do, then you should really
get involved.

Please read on. :)


At 10:47 PM 1/9/99 -0800, "Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
>Looking forward:
>
>Our users also need to become more involved and I'm hoping that 1999
>will be the year when a lot more local user groups and other self-help
>type of organizations are formed.  The Handbook and FAQ are documents
>which are getting better, hopefully another trend we'll see continue
>into 1999 as Nik Clayton, our fearless new Documentation Project
>leader, continues at the helm.  We still have to remember, however,
>that for many users the handbook and FAQ docs are just not enough.

I totally agree here.  Users really need to get involved.  I have noticed
that there is a FreeBSD Webring.  I think that is one of the greatest
things  that has been thought of for FreeBSD Advocacy.  If you're HTML savy
and have something to say about FreeBSD, then by all means put your HTML
skills to work and let people know what you think about FreeBSD.  You
create an online FreeBSD diary dedicated on what you did when you
installed, what problems you had and how you fixed them, what software
packages you liked the best, how did you set up your kernel, etc.  Use your
imagination and have some fun with it! :)

>
>Linux has succeeded largely because of a large grass-roots support and
>evangelism network which allows it to reach such people and
>communicate the message to them.  If FreeBSD's own users want to see
>FreeBSD doing better against whomever they most perceive as its
>competition, and 1998 was certainly a year where I heard a lot of
>complaining about this, then they're going to simply have to get off
>their collective duffs and put in more of this kind of work.  When was
>the last time a bunch of FreeBSD users got together to hand out
>FreeBSD literature at a Microsoft product launch, for example, or held
>an install-a-thon at a local computer show?

Yes!!! That is exactly how Linux got so popular.  It was the Linux addicts
and the Linux obsessed that let the world know that Linux is a great
operating system. Let's learn from their success and try to do what they
did, but instead we'd be telling the world how great FreeBSD is and that
sort of stuff.  But, let's not make it a Linux vs. FreeBSD thing. ;)  I'm
am totally prepared to go to Computer Shows and pass out FreeBSD flyers, or
better yet, FreeBSD News letters straight from the source.  Are you willing
to work for your OS?  Think about all the fun you'll have going to computer
shows looking at the neat hardware and stuff while promoting your favorite
sofware (FreeBSD).

>The Linux folks do things like that all the time, apparently, whereas
>only a very few die-hard FreeBSD users currently do it now, so why not
>help these people out?  Join the advocacy@freebsd.org mailing list and
>discuss your plans there so that others with more enthusiasm than
>ideas can also learn from and perhaps help you with yours.  Write
>short articles for the new advocacy sites like www.daemonnews.org or
>www.freebsdrocks.com and help promote the success of BSD evangelical
>publications.

This is where the big question comes in.  Are you willing to work for your
OS?  If you are, then lets band together and let people know that FreeBSD
is a killer OS.  Who should we let know of this information?  I'm currently
planning a few things.  Here they are:

1) Do research on FreeBSD vs. NT servers and FreeBSD vs. Linux servers.
Probably show which can handle more users, and what-not.

2) Try to push the FreeBSD Webring.

3) Try to push for more X support, and perhaps try to come up with a voting
scheme for a default windowmanager for FreeBSD or something like that.

4) Bombard every magazine that I know politely letting them know that I
found a great OS that is totally free and totally awesome (ack, I'm
starting to sound valley - like fer sure).  Also, I have noticed some
letters to magazines by people pushing the free software thing, but only
mentioning Linux.  Okay, I feel if you are going to be a "Free Sofware
Advocate" then don't be so one-sided and only mention Linux, try mentioning
the other free OS's and stuff.  (FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Hurd, Linux,
etc)  Just to be fair.

Hopefully, this project of mine will be done before Febuary.  I may need
help with writing letters to magazines.  I'm thinking of an easily
modifyable (that's probably not a word) form letter that can be changed for
different target audiences.

Can anyone help?

Thanks,

Joey


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