Re: Distributing distros under the GNOME Banner



event "box" not event "gox" -- I shouldn't talk to someone else and type at the same time.

LC

On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 10:48 AM, Larry Cafiero <larry cafiero gmail com> wrote:
We only have a couple of really "big" events in the US -- the Southern California Linux Expo (SCALE), OSCON to name two (Open Source World, formerly Linux World, wasn't held this year) -- and there are several medium sized events that GNOME is or should be at: Linux Fest Northwest, Southeast Linux Fest, Texas Linux Fest, Utah Open Source Conference, Ohio Linux Fest (we weren't there this year, but has anyone solved the mystery of who asked for the table?) -- I'm forgetting some and apologies to those whose events I'm forgetting.

For those events, the event box should be there. For smaller events, probably just a box of swag sent to the person heading up the table/booth would suffice. At least that's how the Fedora Project does it.

Speaking of Utah Open Source Conference (10/7-9), does the event gox need to go there?

Larry Cafiero
North American Event Box babysitter


On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 10:36 AM, Sriram Ramkrishna <sri ramkrishna me> wrote:
I'm thinking LinuxWorld or some Linux Foundation conferences.

sri

On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 9:04 PM, Bryen M. Yunashko <suserocks bryen com> wrote:
On Mon, 2010-09-13 at 12:02 -0600, Stormy Peters wrote:


On Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 11:09 AM, Sriram Ramkrishna <sri ramkrishna me> wrote:

On Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 3:33 AM, Dave Neary <dneary gnome org> wrote:
Hi,

Bryen Yunashko wrote:
> Does GNOME have a particular policy about providing distros in their
> booths at events?



We asked all our advisory board members for CDs for the event box. We include a few from each one that sent us some.


Is it worth hitting these big linux conferences?  It seems to me that the smaller linuxfests type conferences is the proper target.  They actually talk about desktop instead of cloud or whatever other buzzwords is out there.
 
Also I would much prefer hitting the government and educational conferences.  

I think we should be going to conferences that are not developer conferences. We are often preaching to the choir, i.e. talking about GNOME to people that are already GNOME fans.
 
Stormy

Sri,

I'm not sure which "big" conferences you're referring to.  But I have to agree with Stormy that "preaching to the choir" does have rather limited returns.  I think we should more rely on the knowledge of the person/people who are volunteering to man a booth at an event.  They're (hopefully) aware enough of the audiences and have a plan in mind for how to deliver the GNOME story effectively to that audience that comes to the booths.  Rather than just having a booth just for the sake of a booth.

On the other hand, some people volunteer to set up a booth just so they can get into an event at a cheaper price to themselves rather than paying a full registration price (if one exists.)  I just look at that as "Hey, its a benefit to the person in exchange for their ongoing contributions to GNOME."  As long as it doesn't cost us anything or is relatively low in cost, go for it.  :-)

As for GNOME-A11y Outreach, we generally don't intend to have our own booths at non-a11y events.  Most of our intentions are to be at non-Linux-based events, such as CSUN or AEGIS.  I generally like going to non-low hanging fruit events because that's where we cast the widest net of bringing in new attention to GNOME efforts.  We'll leave more general events to the wisdom of the GNOME Marketing force, though we may join in and assist if possible.

We will, however, probably be stepping up our efforts to present sessions at more general events to raise awareness of GNOME's role with accessibility to the general FOSS Community.


Bryen M Yunashko
GNOME-A11y Outreach


--


--
marketing-list mailing list
marketing-list gnome org
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list





[Date Prev][Date Next]   [Thread Prev][Thread Next]   [Thread Index] [Date Index] [Author Index]