I’m looking at starting a small local Linux Users Group (LUG).
What are good easy ways to get started?
Seems like meetup.com is kinda anti-foss.
Are there better alternatives?
I’m looking at starting a small local Linux Users Group (LUG).
What are good easy ways to get started?
Seems like meetup.com is kinda anti-foss.
Are there better alternatives?
I’m in the process of setting one up right now.
If you’re looking for easy, meetup.com probably is the way to go. Personally I’m leveraging the connections I made via a recent end of 10 install event I organized. My state also has a directory of LUGs that I got added to. Our first meeting is in January so we’ll see how it goes 🤞
I should add that first order of business will be deciding on a communication platform. I know mailing lists and IRC are the traditional solutions, but I’m trying to start a LUG that is more accessible to newbies who want help using Linux and don’t necessarily want to learn how to connect to IRC or learn mailing list etiquette. I’m going to push for some kind of forum software, possibly Discourse.
This may sound kind of weird, but do you really need a communication platform for a LUG?
Our local LUG uses meetup and a website for advertising and telling people when we meet (once every two weeks at the same spot). (Okay I guess the one time our spot was closed and we had to track down people’s phone numbers to inform them of the new spot wasn’t that fun).
Anyway, we have a mailing list, an irc, and a matrix chat bridged to the irc, but they are effectively dead and no one uses them. The lack of activity on them makes me wonder if you really need to have a chatroom to run a LUG. We seem to get by just fine, for the most part.
If you could give Mobilizon a try, I’d be interested in hearing your experience.
I really, genuinely like Mobilizon, but the network effect is real, sadly, there aren’t nearly as many people there. I’d probably suggest doing both, and maybe the like-minded people that you find on meetup can follow on Mobilizon, and help that cause as well. Meetup has nothing special, except for lots of people that go there to find events.
it seems like its mostly European or game themed instances
I believe the idea is that you run your own instance if none of the existing one fits your need.
If you do set one up for your own LUG you can, if you want, decide to then open it up for LUGs organizers elsewhere.
Traditionally they’ve been email lists. Easy to set up and everyone has an email address.
My LUG uses discord :/ but we are working on a matrix bridge.
Bridges IMHO seem like the way to go.
https://matrix.org/ecosystem/bridges/
Services that link matrix servers to other chat services.
My recommendation is meetup and a website for advertising purposes. Meetup is frustrating, yes, but at the same time it’s where I have found almost all the linux and tech groups near me.
Oops! I ended up writing a wall of text…
I would suggest using methods other than platforms to find events, as there are lots of people that don’t use them. In fact, where I live, I’ve never seen people using that kind of platforms. I guess this can be different for you, but I think you should at least consider other methods of spreading the word, to guarantee that some people don’t miss the event just because they never heard of it. Here are some.
Start with a email list and then try to get together in a pub or somthing like this on a regular basis.
If the LUG gains ground begin to look to some place where you can get together and eventually keep some hardware.
If possible, once the LUG has some regulars, look into joning some events, maybe as guest at a booth
Back at the time I used Mailman, it have a web interface and it should be easy enough to install on every distro. For example, KDE’s mailing lists are handled with it