A while back ago when Ed an I kind of started KC Lug I had a clear direction and goal in mind: simply to gather with like minded individuals to advocate the use of Linux within the business community as well as to help Linux newbies with their problems. We did some volunteer work for Independent Electric (www.iemco.com) meeting on Saturday mornings for a couple of weeks until we were finished with the project. I wanted this to be the format for the meetings for the future of the LUG. Unfortunately my employer was having terrible financial difficulty and I bailed out of that company which was going downhill very fast. My next (and current) job is located in the south Chicago 'burbs. At this time I handed off the website responsibility to whomever would take it. I'm pleased with the website, considering no one is getting paid to do it--it is all done by volunteers. I manage the facilities and the listserv. Gauging what I see with kclug and comparing it to the Chicagoland LUG (clug) I'm real happy with kclug. We're unmoderated. Clug is not. There are definately more holy flame wars on silly things such as desktops for X and why ABC editor is better than XYZ editor. We need to steer clear of these kinds of pitfalls and remember our goal. kclug is here to advocate linux to everyone, and implement it in the field wherever possible as well as teaching both newbies and peers in areas an individual has strength. A lot of my time lately has been spent doing consulting after work hours as well as ramping up for the North West Indiana Linux User's Group. There is nothing in NW Indiana where I live, but there definately is a lot of interest. The goal with kclug will eventually be to hand it off when the group settles in to where it needs to be. I'm am going to try my best to be present for kclinuxfest, however I suspect I might be way to busy here with consulting jobs among other things. Here is what I'd like to see happen at the KCLug booth: o someone contact vendors not attending the fest, find out what freebies we can get from them to give out to booth visitors o set up squid caching server and precache a lot of linux pages like the kclug webpage, freshmeat, debian.org etc etc o have a posterboard of local linux success stories. Include production projects that run linux, especially if the app is mission critical. For example, I set up cistron-radius when I was at Olsten Health along with an idiot proof user manager scripted in cdialog so their helpdesk could manage the users. Also we should include what the group did at Independent Electric. o Somebody set up that linux-webcam. I would LOVE to see this. We'll set the webpage up to point to the local connection for the "live broadcast". I will personally put up $50 towards funding the connection if someone will do the above tasks. o Do an application comparison. For every commercial application, there is an equivalent app that you can probablyeven buy support if upper management requires it. o Ever see that commercial from IBM where they claim to make 23 platform work as one? They do it with linux... We need to show how it is being used by big business in real world solutions. o Someone needs to video-tape everything. We need to walk the floor, get a feeling of the energy that is out there with the vendors and the people attending. Then we go back and put some of the choice intervues up on the website. Whew! This is getting too long, but you guys get the idea. Think of this week at kclinuxfest as a really really long kclug meeting that lasts a whole week. Do that and all of you will be ok. Mike Neuliep mike@illiana.net