[TriLUG] TriLUG Frequently Asked Questions
TriLUG FAQ Maintainer
lovelace at wayfarer.org
Mon Jan 5 03:00:01 EST 2004
This is a monthly posting of the Frequently Asked Questions
of The Triangle Linux Users Group. More information about TriLUG
can be found at http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/trilug and
http://www.trilug.org/.
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The TriLUG FAQ
Maintained by Tanner Lovelace <lovelace(at)wayfarer.org>,
v1.8, 05 Jun 2003
The TriLUG mailing list has become rather successful as a channel for
discussion of all aspects of Linux and free/open-source software. As
is often a result with such lists, increased in the volume of traffic
has prompted users to call for a FAQ to help maintain the signal-to-
noise ratio. If you would like any help from the TriLUG mailing list,
this is the place to start!
______________________________________________________________________
Table of Contents
1. Preface
1.1 About the Document
1.2 Contact
2. TriLUG in General
2.1 What is TriLUG?
2.2 What does TriLUG do?
2.3 Who can join TriLUG?
2.4 Why join TriLUG?
2.5 How do I join TriLUG?
2.6 Who "runs" TriLUG?
2.7 Where is the member services FAQ?
3. TriLUG Mailing Lists
3.1 What are the TriLUG lists?
3.2 What is "appropriate content" for each of the TriLUG lists?
3.3 Somebody said my post was spam but I don't think so. Who is right?
3.4 If the lists aren't moderated, how can there be any rules?
3.5 Are jobs-posts welcome?
3.6 Are other advertisements welcome?
4. TriLUG Meetings
4.1 May I request a topic for a talk?
4.2 How do I become a sponsor?
5. Miscellaneous Questions
5.1 What is the Barnes & Noble Card?
5.2 May I have a shell account on the TriLUG servers?
5.3 Why don't the mailto links in the HTML version of this FAQ work?
6. Information about this FAQ
6.1 Maintainers
6.2 Changelog
______________________________________________________________________
1. Preface
1.1. About the Document
This document is a collection of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for
the Triangle Linux Users Group (TriLUG). It is mainly intended as a
helpful reference point for the TriLUG mailing lists, though it is a
good starting point for anyone interested in TriLUG in general.
This document is also available in a variety of formats: HTML, text,
Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF), Postscript, and SGML (Standard
Generalized Markup Language).
1.2. Contact
If you have any suggestions, additions, or corrections for this
document, please contact the following:
o TriLUG Steering Committee (steering(at)trilug.org)
o The current FAQ maintainer, Tanner Lovelace
(lovelace(at)wayfarer.org)
o The main TriLUG List (trilug(at)trilug.org)
2. TriLUG in General
These are general questions about TriLUG.
2.1. What is TriLUG?
TriLUG is the Triangle Linux Users Group. It is an educational
nonprofit (incorporated as a 501(c)3 for tax purposes) in the State of
North Carolina. Our primary point of contact is our web site at
www.trilug.org. For further information including a copy of our
articles of incorporation and bylaws, please visit our web site at
www.trilug.org.
2.2. What does TriLUG do?
As an educational nonprofit, TriLUG devoted to teaching and otherwise
helping people use Linux and other free/open-source software. We have
monthly meetings, active mailing lists, and quarterly installfests.
2.3. Who can join TriLUG?
Under our current articles of incorporation, all North Carolina
residents are invited and welcome to join!
2.4. Why join TriLUG?
In addition to our mailing list (which is open to everyone, not just
members, and is an EXCELLENT source of free linux-related tech
support), membership provides voting privileges and discounts at many
local vendors. See our web pages for further details.
2.5. How do I join TriLUG?
To join, come to one of our meetings and and we'll gladly issue you an
official membership card, member number, and further details.
2.6. Who "runs" TriLUG?
Monthly meetings, our webserver, quarterly installfests, the treasury,
and other organizational and day-to-day issues are handled by an
elected Steering Committee (steering(at)trilug.org) on behalf of the
members. The function of the Steering Committee is not to "run the
show" or to set policy, rather the committee tries to bring the
members requests to fruition. Every effort is made to openly discuss
and bring about the events, talks, and other ideas that the members
put forward. If there is something that you (as a member) would like
to see happen (i.e. a talk topic, a fundraiser, a mailing list change,
or any other idea) then please feel free to propose and discuss it on
our general discussion list, on the steering committee list, or at a
meeting. Essentially everything that TriLUG now does began as an idea
on one of our email lists!
The steering committee is elected by majority vote once per year at
the May meeting of the general TriLUG membership. Though all
committee members have individual addresses, it is a good idea to send
official correspondence to the steering committee list
(steering(at)trilug.org) since this generally results in a speedier
response. The Steering Committee is comprised of a Chair
(chair(at)trilug.org), Vice Chair (vicechair(at)trilug.org), Treasurer
(treasurer(at)trilug.org), Webmaster (webmaster(at)trilug.org), and
Public Relations Officer (pr(at)trilug.org). Steering Committee
members must reside in the state of North Carolina. For more details
on the Steering Committee, please see the Articles of Incorporation.
2.7. Where is the member services FAQ?
The TriLUG Member Services FAQ gives detailed information about the
services available to members such as shell accounts and mail server
access. It can be found at http://members.trilug.org/services_faq/.
3. TriLUG Mailing Lists
Questions and "Netiquette" for the mailing lists.
3.1. What are the TriLUG lists?
Currently, there are several TriLUG lists. Information about most of
them can be found at http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo.
o the main TriLUG list
(http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/trilug) is for open
(unmoderated) discussion of all things Linux, *BSD, Free Software,
and/or Open Source related;
o the steering committee list (steering(at)trilug.org) is the place
to go to contact the current steering committee members;
o the development list (http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/dev)
is the place to discuss questions relating scripts, programs, and
development on linux and other open source OSs.
o the education list
(http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/education) is for the
education subcommittee.
o the hosting list (http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/hosting)
is for the project to setup hosting for local open source projects.
o the security talk list
(http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/security_talk) was for
putting together a talk about security for TriLUG and will probably
go away soon.
o the welcome list (http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/welcome)
is about how to welcome new members to the LUG, and
o the announcement list
(http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/trilug-announce) is for
announcement of TriLUG events and activities. This is not a
discussion list, and only the admins for the list may post messages
to the list. Subscribe to this list if you are not a member of
the main discussion list, but want notices of upcoming meetings and
special events.
All the lists currently run off of moya, our mail server. Only
three lists are currently archived:
o The main list (http://www.trilug.org/pipermail/trilug)
o The dev list (http://www.trilug.org/pipermail/dev)
o The hosting list (http://www.trilug.org/pipermail/hosting)
3.2. What is "appropriate content" for each of the TriLUG lists?
The rules for "appropriate content" on the TriLUG lists are simple:
o Be courteous to others in your postings (no personal attacks on the
list please and no profanity)
o Try to stay on topic, or at least post items that are of interest
to the group
o No advertising, and no spam.
In addition, the following guidelines are also a good starting point:
o As stated above, the main TriLUG discussion list
(http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/trilug) is for the
discussion of all topics related to Linux or Free/Open Source
software. Everyone is welcome to join! Please feel free to join
the list and ask any questions you may have as either a Linux
beginner, intermediate, or expert. We currently have all levels of
experience subscribed and you are likely to find someone who can
either help out with answers or point you towards further help.
Occasionally the list will drift slightly off-topic, it happens.
This is a community. The best thing to do in those occasions is to
just wait and let the thread die. Past experience has shown that
attempts to squelch a particular topic usually result in a flame
war that dwarfs the off-topic thread. Before you respond with a
'THIS IS OFF TOPIC' sit back and read your response. Does it
contribute? Is it merely prolonging a thread that would otherwise
have died? Will it cause the list to errupt in flames (most
likely)? If so, don't post it. If you really feel a need, send
your response to the steering committee. They'd be happy to chat
with you about it.
In general, the TriLUG list stays on topic. We have great
discussions and question & answer posts that help not only our
membership, but others that read posts via the web archives (thanks
to Google). It's a great list, it's a community. There is some
noise, for sure, but the signal far outweighs it.
So please, don't take it upon yourself to tell people what they can
and cannot post. People are generally smart enough to think before
they post. Occasionally, when someone hits the send button a
little too early, or cannot find a better outlet, something way off
in left field will slip through. Just let it go. If you really
feel a need, send it to the steering committee
(steering(at)trilug.org). If it's way out there, the SC will
likely send the original poster a direct e-mail, politely
requesting they stay on topic. Please, don't take the law (as it
were) into your own hands. :)
o The steering committee list (steering(at)trilug.org) is meant both
as a place to contact the steering committee and as a place for
committee member discussions. All are welcome to send messages to
the list, but only current committee members are subscribed.
Please send all communication to the steering list or one of the
TriLUG "role" emails accounts instead of the sending them directly
to the personal emails of steering committee members.
o The trilug-announce list
(http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/trilug-announce) is open to
everyone (all are welcome to subscribe) and is meant to be a very
low volume channel.
Finally, before asking a question on the list, it might help to read
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
(http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html) by Eric
Raymond.
3.3. Somebody said my post was spam but I don't think so. Who is
right?
Spam is many different things to many different people. There are
several different kinds in particular that will get you in trouble:
o Unsolicited Commercial Email (UCE) - Mail is sent individually or
in bulk to a list of recipients that never asked for this email.
The nature of the email is typically commercial advertisement of
some sort.
o Spam-For-Cause - Mail is usually sent in bulk to recipients so that
the sender can share information about their cause. It may be
political, social, or religious in nature (among other things).
Like UCE, the major offending factor here is that this is
unsolicited mail. This organization exists for the promotion of
open source and free source software, and to champion any other
cause in this forum would be highly inappropriate.
o Chain letters - You've seen them before and you know what I'm
talking about. A chain letter may be a message of friendship, or
one that promises good fortune will come upon you if you send it to
seven other people. The plain truth of the matter is that
propagating chain letters is a great way to lose friends online,
and certainly a good way to offend the members of a forum that the
message is broadcast to.
3.4. If the lists aren't moderated, how can there be any rules?
Well, good question... *grin*
In practice we have had very few problems with off-topic posts,
flames, and other list annoyances. If they do become a more serious
problem, the steering committee will first remind the offenders. If
the problems persist, various defenses including moderation and
banning of abusers may be implemented. We hope that it won't be
necessary.
3.5. Are jobs-posts welcome?
In the past, jobs posts were not allowed on our lists. More recently,
the new steering committee has voted to allow posts under specific
circumstances. Thus, if the job post in question meets the following
criteria:
o the position is primarily (that is, 51%) Linux or Free Software or
Open Source related; and
o the position is advertised only *once* (absolutely no repeat
spamming will be tolerated)
then it is welcome on our main discussion list. These posts are
not welcome on the announce list. If there are any questions or if
these policies need clarification, please feel free to contact the
steering committee and we'll be glad to help. If you decide your
job post is not appropriate for our mailing list, you might instead
consider posting it in the triangle.jobs newsgroup.
3.6. Are other advertisements welcome?
General advertisements to the TriLUG discussion list are strongly
discouraged. Note that other kinds of "ads" are possible through
sponsoring pizza and soda for our monthly meetings.
4. TriLUG Meetings
4.1. May I request a topic for a talk?
Absolutely! If you have any ideas for a future talk, please post them
to the main discussion list. Even better, please post if you think
you might like to give a talk. We're always open to suggestions.
4.2. How do I become a sponsor?
We're always looking for sponsors! Please contact the Steering
Committee (steering(at)trilug.org) if you or your company would like
to be an official pizza sponsor for a meeting. In return for your
sponsorship, we will allow you to give a 10min talk at the beginning
of the meeting. If you have further questions or any other proposals,
please contact us.
5. Miscellaneous Questions
5.1. What is the Barnes & Noble Card?
The TriLUG Barnes and Noble cards used to be for discounts on O'Reilly
books ONLY at local Barnes and Nobel stores. They expired in October,
2000 and are not likely to be renewed. Note that this is different
from the Barnes & Nobel Readers Advantage card.
5.2. May I have a shell account on the TriLUG servers?
Any official member is welcome to an account on TriLUG's servers. To
request an account, send an email to sysadmin(at)trilug.org or to
steering(at)trilug.org. More information about accounts on TriLUG's
servers and other member services, please see the Member Services FAQ
(http://members.trilug.org/services_faq/).
5.3. Why don't the mailto links in the HTML version of this FAQ work?
The mailto links in the FAQ have been munged to prevent easy
collection by spam bots. Looking at the the addresses should make it
perfectly clear what needs to be modified to make them valid
addresses.
6. Information about this FAQ
6.1. Maintainers
o Tanner Lovelace <lovelace(at)wayfarer.org> is the current
maintainer.
o Ed Hill <edhill(at)eh3.com> originally created and maintained the
FAQ.
6.2. Changelog
o Thu Jun 05 2003 - Tanner Lovelace - Clarified a bit about the
Barnes and Noble card.
o Thu Jun 05 2003 - Tanner Lovelace - Added Changelog and reference
to member services faq.
More information about the TriLUG
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