[ale] ALS - A few thoughts
Ray Knight - Clientlink
rayk at clientlink.com
Wed Sep 20 10:10:54 EDT 2000
> All,
>
> On Tue, 19 Sep 2000, michael d. ivey wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Sep 19, 2000 at 04:42:41PM -0400, Vaidhyanathan
> Mayilrangam wrote:
> > > Just read a few days ago from the list that ALS is now moving
> from city to
> > > city and will be in Oakland, CA next year. It saddens me to
> think that the
> > > showcase which was a part of Atlanta Linux scene will no
> longer be Atlanta's.
> >
> > I just heard on debian-devel. I'm not surprised, but it is a shame.
> > There are so many West Coast Linux shows. And LW in New York. And
> > everywhere else...except the Southeast. Isn't the Durham show gone,
> > too?
>
> Yes, it is.
>
> > > Maybe it is time we need to start a new convention for linux folks in
> > > Southeast, every six months.. Sorta get-together for the local LUGs?
> > > Where folks could demo their machines, ask questions, conduct
> forums etc..
> >
> > I'm all in favor. The best ALSes were the early ALSes. Re-capturing
> > some of that feel, plus replacing a show in the Southeast sounds like a
> > great idea. The problem is coordination.
> >
> > How does ALS staff, especially from the years past, feel about the move?
>
> I am disappointed too. The main problem was finding a venue.
> Apparently the Galleria simply wanted more commitment than we were willing
> to give, so we had to start looking elsewhere.
>
> We had bounced this idea around before, but it always degenerated
> into suggestions like 'ALS Armenia' or 'ALS Aruba' or even 'ALS
> Antarctica'
> (anyone see a theme here? ;-).
>
> For several reasons, USENIX must decide the venue. First, they're
> financially responsible; second, they have the staff and experience to
> properly negotiate with venues; and third, they have 20+ years of clout
> that ALS doesn't. Venue management will talk to USENIX where
> they wouldn't
> even consider speaking to 'a bunch of trade show volunteers', which is how
> we're still perceived.
>
> We have also wanted to host a smaller event, like an install fest,
> but no one has stepped forward to lead it. The current board already has
> plenty of work to do, in addition to our real jobs, and we could use some
> help. It's probably too late to bring anyone in for ALS 2000, but I know
> the board will be smaller next year, and we need new blood.
>
Well I got the impression that the board didn't want new blood. I
volunteered and worked a lot of hours at the last two ALS shows. After last
year's show I inquired about becoming a member of the board and helping with
this year's show. I never really heard back from anyone after the show was
over, so I just assumed that it was a closed group and they didn't want or
need any additional help.
> We need people who are willing to sacrifice a great deal of their
> time, energy, creative juices, and a little blood, to bring off ALS 2001,
> and also to "own" a local install fest. By "own", I mean just that: this
> is your baby, you coordinate everything: date, location, schedule, vendor
> involvment, sponsors (ALS can help, but I'm not the money person),
> advertisements, hardware, software, volunteers, power,
> internet.... You see
> the magnitude? An install fest is a much smaller event, but it's
> still like
> herding cats (hi Blake!)!
>
> We (I'm speaking for the Board here) are decidedly in favor
> of holding
> local events like an install fest. However, none of us are
> willing to take
> on that responsibility. For those of us with a family, we'd be
> lynched for
> sure! If someone (or several someones) would like to take the
> ball and run
> with this idea, I'll be happy to support them however I can. The other
> Board members must speak for themselves (they've not had problems
> speaking
> before ;-).
>
> Okay, enough jabbering from me. DISCLAIMER: I am a Board member,
> and I *think* I'm spouting the Board's collective reasoning, but I may be
> incorrect, of course. In those cases, I speak only for myself.
>
> In the meantime, please spread the word about ALS 2000. See
> http://www.linuxshowcase.org for details and registration. We have MANY
> vendors this year, the conference looks excellent, Linux In
> Action is back,
> as well as the XFree86 Hothouse and the Dave & Buster's party.
> Ken Coar and
> Larry Wall are our keynotes (Larry is sure to be a scream!),
> along with a guy
> from Google (my apologies; I've never been good with names, and
> getting older
> isn't helping). User Friendly is having a Quake III "Skins"
> contest. Imagine
> meeting Stef in Quake (grin!). See http://www.userfriendly.org for those
> details.
>
> Danny
>
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