[Lancaster] Fwd: Re: Meeting interest ...
Wayne Ward
wayne at lancastercomputers.co.uk
Tue May 14 20:06:15 UTC 2013
we are meeting this thursday night with a few newbies so wont clash with
your meeting ... but next month ill make it the the first thursday of
the month and keep it at that so it doesnt clash with the hackerspace
meetings!
yes when i tried back in 2000 there was a mention somebody had setup one
meeting but it never came off! thats why i used the preston list to get
build up the interest to start the lancaster lug which we had a few
meetings then it went to the folly in 2002 thats when i stepped back and
it stopped at the folly and moved to the yorkshire house which didnt
last to long soi reformed it back at the brit and for some reason we
moved it to the gregson!? i wanted to make it more organised in the ways
of demonstrations and events which didnt go down to well! so i stepped
back again! and its gone quiet again! but im back and this is the new
re-newed version!
* ill give the site a full update
* keep updated LLUG blogs
* organise events
* keep lists of demonstrations people would like to run
* keep lists of demonstrations people would like to see
* put posters up to gain more interest locally
* keep the mailing list active
* keep social networking active
* attend every monthly meeting on the 1st thursday to keep group flowing
* be organising and funding the yearly XMAS so like the brit one i
sorted :) ho ho ho
ive got some new members interested for this meeting and have some more
on the horizon, ill hopefully get the meetings healthy and well attended
as when we had it rolling back in the brit!
as for distros you cant go wrong with the debain / ubunu distros for
desktop / server setups with the similarities - can you use the
landscape service on the debian server setups?.. its something im
looking at right now and im looking atcloud computing and juju ill be
hopefully running some demo on this soon as well as a demo for ardour
and jack and jamin on linux at one of the meetings!
at one time was i was doing my rhce,rhct's i was onling using yum and
rpm's now i couldnt see myself going back that was again.. the only
other package system i prefer from them is is gentoo's but its has a lot
of up keep and its far to easy to break so ill just have that setup in
one of the VM's im buidling this week just to keep my hand in!!!
good hearing from you darren be great to see you next month for a geek
chat and a pint!
oh and enjoy that gig im sure it will be a good one!
wayne
On 14/05/13 20:19, Darren Poulson wrote:
> Hey people! I'm here too, tho won't be able to make it to the meeting
> tomorrow due to last minute cheap tickets to see New Model Army in
> Preston.
>
> This is actually the third incarnation of a Lancaster LUG if I recall
> correctly. About 20 years ago a couple of friends tried to start one,
> but very little interest back then. A few years later my housemate
> started one up for a couple of years too. :) This one seems to be
> hanging on in there! I could be wrong, the memory is the first thing
> to go so they say! ;)
>
> As far as distro of choice, I still prefer debian for servers
> (headless machines) and Ubuntu for desktops. For work I'm stuck with
> CentOS boxes, but that wasn't my choice. Debian/Ubuntu's upgrade paths
> are so much better than CentOS or RPM based distros. I'm not sure
> about the way they all seem to be going as far as the user interface.
> I try to use vanilla ubuntu as much as possible with the view that I
> can then recommend it to others and know how to answer their queries.
> Also, it means I'm allowed to bitch about it! :) Do need to have a
> proper mess with gnome 3, but last time I tried it didn't like my
> triple monitor setup.
> Windows I haven't used since XP, and last one I installed at home to
> use was 98! :D
>
> Ken, how hard was the ham license? I've been tempted many times in the
> past, mainly for packet radio, but never got round to it. Definitely
> more interested now they've dropped the morse requirement.
>
> I'm actually doing less with linux outside work these days, I find it
> just works and don't think about it any more. Good sign of success!
> I'm getting more into the arduino side of things, but just got another
> couple of Pi boards to mess with. They're a really good combination of
> power and hackability. Arduino still have the edge if you want solid
> state and low power, just designing an electronic dice circuit on an
> attiny chip, small enough to fit into a keyring. If anyone wants a
> case for a Pi, let me know and I'll cut one out with my laser cutter!
> :) My first two Pi are running xbmc and some energy monitoring
> software. (emoncms.org <http://emoncms.org>)
>
> Anyway, if you have another meeting next month I'm up for it. Also got
> hacker space meetings running monthly (2nd thursday of each month), so
> would be good if they don't clash! ;)
>
> Cheers,
>
> Darren.
>
>
>
> On 14 May 2013 20:00, Wayne Ward <wayne at lancastercomputers.co.uk
> <mailto:wayne at lancastercomputers.co.uk>> wrote:
>
> sounds interesting ken i just got these two raspberrys to use as
> front ends for xbmc to stream media from my nas, although i have
> installed and used a desktop machine and had quake 3 running on
> them.. great for media servers, ive just updated both of them to
> the latest version of xbian and xbmc andthey are running great i
> think the machines lack optical out or a module that plugs in for
> optical out as a lot of people are using for home cinema setups!
> they are quiet cheap to buy and cases are like 5 pound each if you
> want to change the case! you can also power of a mobile phone
> charger or from the USB on your TV!
>
> Wayne
>
> On 14/05/13 14:47, Ken Hough wrote:
>
> On Tuesday 14 May 2013 14:14:58 you wrote:
>
> <snip>
>
>
> did you get a look at the raspberry Pi ken...
>
> I've been reading about it in Linux Format, etc, but I just
> don't have the
> time to play with one. I do have an old Arduino and have
> developed software
> for it to control a couple of stepper motors via a home made
> interface/driver
> board. This software can be compiled to run either as a stand
> alone app
> controlled via Arduino I/O lines, or via USB to a PC. I've
> also developed a
> matching GUI app to drive the Arduino app from a PC. All done
> under Linux of
> course.
>
> The raspberry Pi is clearly a much more powerful and complete
> device than
> Arduino. Maybe one day......
>
>
> Regards
>
> Ken Hough
> Kendal
> Cumbria
>
> Wayne
> 07957448652 <tel:07957448652>
>
> http://linuxconnect.co.uk/
>
>
> On 14/05/13 09:00, Ken Hough wrote:
>
> Wayne,
>
> I didn't realise that you were the creator of this
> Lug. Well done!
>
> My first contact was at the Folly -- just across the
> road from the
> prison, My contacts with the LUG have been patchy,
> mainly because I live
> so far away. It's definitely not because of lack of
> interest in Linux.
> The more I see of recent MS Windows developments
> (shenanigans?), the
> more I appreciate Linux. I recently got to play with
> Windows 8 ---
> Ughhh!
>
> I mentioned that I've recently installed the latest
> version of Debian (64
> bit Wheezy v7.0.0). For anyone thinking of doing
> likewise, there are a
> few points that might be of interest:
>
> 1. Synaptic
> Before running synaptic, run the command 'apt-get
> update', otherwise when
> trying to do a package search, Synaptic simply and
> unceremoniously shuts
> down! Someone has messed up on this one.
>
> 2. Annoying speech synthesiser
> By default, all keyboard actions are reported via a
> speech synthesiser
> -- even to the extent that sounds of individual key
> letters are spoken.
> I found that this rapidly becomes VERY annoying. I
> intend to disable
> this ASAP.
>
> 3. Don't like Gnome 3!
> It's quite pretty, but not very sensible in ergonomic
> terms. For example,
> to access the windows box down the RIGHT hand side of
> the screen, one
> must first click on "Actions" which is situated at
> the top LEFT hand
> side of the screen. IMHO, very silly! Why not show the
> box when the
> curser is pushed up to the right hand side of the
> screen? For now, I've
> reverted to "classic gnome" and am renewing contact
> with KDE. I used to
> use KDE3.
>
> My main PC is fitted with plug-in hard drive caddies,
> so it's easy to
> swap drives. So just now, I have my normal working
> system on one drive
> (which I'm using just now) and other trial systems on
> other drives. This
> makes trying out new stuff a breeze.
>
> Regards
>
> Ken Hough
> Kendal
> Cumbria
>
> On Monday 13 May 2013 17:48:18 Wayne Ward wrote:
>
> Ah somebody is still on the list!!
> The amateur radio stuff sounds interesting ken
>
> I used to swear by debian its solid i used to use
> the studio64 edition
> used to work a treat for me, im currently running
> ubuntu on my
> workstation and laptop and soon will be using it
> on the nexus 4 and
> nexus 7 when the final release of debian touch
> arrives! Im using unity
> but im going to try gnome on a VM when i get my
> new dell xps developer
> edition this week! Its good hearing from you ken
> and glad to hear your
> still running linux and hopefully see you at one
> of the next meetings
>
> im just trying to date back when i originally
> created the LUG and its
> going back to 2000 im thinking because i did the
> first meeting at the
> george and dragon back in 2000 and it didnt work
> so the folly created
> one in 2002 as faras i can see from the archive on
> the mailing lists!
> did you attend the first meeting at the george and
> dragon on the quay i
> cant remember it was that long ago!!!
>
> wayne
>
> RE
>
> Hi Wayne,
>
> It's good to see that you are keeping the LUG ball
> rolling. I haven't
> been down to Lancaster for some time, mainly
> because other interests
> are taking up my time -- mainly amateur radio. I
> now have a full
> amateur radio license which means that not only
> can I transmit on any
> of the amateur radio frequencies, but I am also
> allowed to build my own
> transmitters, etc.
>
> Of course I still use Debian Linux as my main OS
> with VirtualBox for the
> odd occasion when I have to use Win XP. I use
> 'wine' for a few Win apps
> that can be run via wine.
>
> Last night I downloaded and installed the latest
> and very recently
> released version of Debian Linux (Wheezy v7.0.0).
> As expected with
> Debian, installation went faultlessly.
>
> Not sure that I like the latest desktop, but then
> I'm still a Gnome 2
> user who is used to a big VDU (Dell Ultrasharp
> 24") and a comfortable
> mouse. It seems to me that recent desktops are
> really aimed at small
> touch screens. I dislike recent versions of Ubuntu
> for the same reason.
>
> Time will tell.
>
> Keep up the good work.
>
> Best wishes to all.
>
> Regards
>
> Ken Hough
> Kendal
> Cumbria
>
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--
Wayne Ward
www.wayneward.co.uk
UK 07957448652
Spain 653468888
Skype waynepaulward
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