What is a Linux User Group
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What is Linux?
To fully appreciate LUGs' role in the Linux movement, it helps
to understand what makes Linux unique. Linux as an operating
system is powerful -- but Linux as an idea about software
development is even more so. Linux is a free operating system:
It's licensed under the GNU General Public License. Thus,
source code is freely available in perpetuity to anyone. It's
maintained by a unstructured group of programmers world-wide,
under technical direction from Linus Torvalds and other key
developers. Linux as a movement has no central structure,
bureaucracy, or other entity to direct its affairs. While this
situation has advantages, it poses challenges for allocation
of human resources, effective advocacy, public relations, user
education, and training.
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How is Linux unique?
Linux's loose structure is unlikely to change. That's a good
thing: Linux works precisely because people are free to come
and go as they please: Free programmers are happy programmers
are effective programmers.
However, this loose structure can disorient the new Linux
user: Whom does she call for support, training, or education?
How does she know what Linux is suitable for?
In large part, LUGs provide the answers, which is why LUGs are
vital to the Linux movement: Because your town, village, or
metropolis sports no Linux Corporation "regional office", the
LUG takes on many of the same roles a regional office does for
a large multi-national corporation.
Linux is unique in neither having nor being burdened by
central structures or bureaucracies to allocate its resources,
train its users, and support its products. These jobs get done
through diverse means: the Internet, consultants, VARs,
support companies, colleges, and universities. However,
increasingly, in many places around the globe, they are done
by a LUG.
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What is a user group?
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Computer user groups are not new. In fact, they were central to
the personal computer's history: Microcomputers arose in large
part to satisfy demand for affordable, personal access to
computing resources from electronics, ham radio, and other
hobbyist user groups. Giants like IBM eventually discovered the
PC to be a good and profitable thing, but initial impetus came
from the grassroots.
In the USA, user groups have changed –&ndash many for the worse ––
with the times. The financial woes and dissolution of the
largest user group ever, the Boston Computer Society, were
well-reported; but, all over the USA, most PC user groups have
seen memberships decline. American user groups in their heyday
produced newsletters, maintained shareware and diskette
libraries, held meetings and social events, and, sometimes,
even ran electronic bulletin board systems (BBSes). With the
advent of the Internet, however, many services that user groups
once provided migrated to things like CompuServe and the Web.
Linux's rise, however, coincided with and was intensified by
the general public "discovering" the Internet. As the Internet
grew more popular, so did Linux: The Internet brought to Linux
new users, developers, and vendors. So, the same force that
sent traditional user groups into decline propelled Linux
forward and inspired new groups concerned exclusively with it.
To give just one indication of how LUGs differ from
traditional user groups: Traditional groups must closely
monitor what software users redistribute at meetings. While
illegal copying of restricted proprietary software certainly
occurred, it was officially discouraged -- for good reason. At
LUG meetings, however, that entire mindset simply does not
apply: Far from being forbidden, unrestricted copying of Linux
should be among a LUG's primary goals. In fact, there is
anecdotal evidence of traditional user groups having
difficulty adapting to Linux's ability to be lawfully copied
at will.
(Caveat: A few Linux distributions bundle Linux with
proprietary software packages whose terms don't permit public
redistribution. Check license terms, if in doubt. Offers or
requests to copy distribution-restricted proprietary software
of any sort should be heavily discouraged anywhere in LUGs, and
declared off-topic for all Linux user group on-line forums, for
legal reasons.)
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Summary
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For the Linux movement to grow, among other requirements, LUGs
must proliferate and succeed. Because of Linux's unusual
nature, LUGs must provide some of the same functions a
"regional office" provides for large computer corporations
like IBM, Microsoft, and Sun. LUGs can and must train,
support, and educate Linux users, coordinate Linux
consultants, advocate Linux as a computing solution, and even
serve as liaison to local news outlets.
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Reference: Linux Online
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