<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
<html>
<head>
</head>
<body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000">
<p>Welcome to the Ubuntu-Arizona Weekly Newsletter, Issue #39 for the
week March 10, March 16. </p>
<ul>
<li>
<p> Arizona Loco Newsletter </p>
</li>
<li>
<p> Thirty-Ninth Edition </p>
</li>
<li>
<p> Powered by Ubuntu </p>
</li>
<li>
<p> Wednesday-March 19, 2008 </p>
</li>
<li>
<p> Arizona Loco Team Wiki: <a
href="https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ArizonaTeam">ArizonaTeam</a> </p>
</li>
<li class="gap">
<p> Next meeting: Sunday March 23, 2008 9:00PM </p>
</li>
<li>
<p> Server: Freenode: IRC Channel #ubuntu-arizona </p>
</li>
</ul>
<h3 id="head-edf002c6e83bf803d5b967eef27f7b4fb17c4ae2">Newsletter</h3>
<h4 id="head-847a9fb7ca4c9bb87f05305030e658eb5a07e383">Summary of the
March 16, 2008 meeting</h4>
<p>johnc4510 called the meeting to order at 9:01 PM </p>
<p>johnc4510 began by addressing the team: </p>
<pre>I want to start off by thanking all of you for you concern regarding my Mom and her problems. She is somewhat better, but still
having some problems that we are trying to work through. We are hopeful that in time she can get back to her normal activities.
Until that time, I will be somewhat limited on the amount of time I can spend in channel. If this becomes a problem, I will be
he first to let everyone know, and we can address it at that time. I really appreciate everyone's concern over the past week
or so.
</pre>
<p>johnc4510 has been contacted by an IT Manager here in Tucson
wanting
to donate a server to our team. johnc4510 will call him tomorrow
morning and then pick up the server around noon. The specifications
for
the server are: </p>
<ul>
<li>
<p> 2.4 GHz dual core xeon processor </p>
</li>
<li>
<p> 2 gigs of memory </p>
</li>
<li>
<p> 3 - 36 gig HD's, hot swappable </p>
</li>
<li>
<p> Raid control </p>
</li>
<li>
<p> Tape drive(for backup) </p>
</li>
</ul>
<p>A similar server can be seen at <a
href="http://www.stikc.com/dell-poweredge-4600-rackmount-p29790.html">
http://www.stikc.com/dell-poweredge-4600-rackmount-p29790.html</a>.
It is a used server, and the link does not show the actual server.
Team
members expressed their appreciation of this new server. After he
gets
it home we will see what kind of shape it's in and then determine how
to best put it into use. Going by specs alone, it should be a much
superior machine than the one we are using now, and we would own it.
He
believes that with the release of Hardy LTS that's due out in April,
this would be a great time to "upgrade" and get rid of the current
server we are using. </p>
<p>A discussion then started concerning where to put the server, and
how and whether it should be used. johnc4510 began with the fact that
he has looked into upgrading his home cox account to a business
account
with a static address. The cost isn't terribly restrictive. He is
thinking we could do a lot more with this machine than we have been
able to do with the one we have. Examples would be using drupal or
wordpress themes for our team website, hosting our own team blog for
all to use, along with individual member blogs that we could transfer
to this server for hosting, and email hosting. </p>
<p>paul928 asked if he could get it into a data-center? He didn't
feel
that we would be happy with the performance of a home server.
johnc4510
replied that he hadn't looked into it yet, but he would. tyche added
that he didn't think it would have that much of a strain against it,
and added that putting it in a data-center would increase the
expense.
johnc4510 then mentioned that paul928 has suggested a hosting service
he uses, and of course we will consider that route too. He set up a
test page for us to look at also. It's here: <a
href="http://ubuntu-az.nfshost.com/"> http://ubuntu-az.nfshost.com/</a>.
soldats said that it wouldnt up the cost of a business class cox
account. johnc4510 responded that the upgrade to business is about
$15
a month, and tyche added that he was willing to chip in $20 a year to
help with expenses. johnc4510 mentioned that we should still find out
what a data-center would charge, and added that paul928's offer was
free. </p>
<p>tyche mentioned that the advantage of johnc4510 having the server
is
that we could learn how to setup and run servers. ianmcorvidae and
kennymc0 were in favor of the server, especially given we'd be
upgrading. ianmcorvidae added that way we can continue to do things
such as: the stats, tetrinet server, so forth. johnc4510 added that
we
would have the advantage of setting up a LAMP server with file
hosting
and email hosting etc. ianmcorvidae added that nearlyfreespeech.net
does email forwarding which works just as well in that respect. He
did
counter with the fact that we can also do more customization of our
server. kennmc0 mentioned that the learning aspect alone made him
think
the server is worth it, especially since the machine itself is free.
tyche mentioned that we wouldn't be locked into anyone else's themes.
johnc4510 added that if we go with me hosting through cox here, we
also
get 10 free email addresses through them. ianmcorvidae mentioned that
nearlyfreespeech is a real host, so we can at least do anything they
have physical support for. johnc4510 closed this part of the
discussion
with the statement that we have a couple of options to think about
and
discuss in the next few weeks. </p>
<p>johnc4510 said that we wouldn't be doing anything with it until
the
Hardy LTS release. tyche asked if he was waiting for the full
release,
or would he be putting the Beta on for testing. johnc4510 felt that
we
should wait for the final release. Once we start the server, if we
do,
we want it to run non stop without having to upgrade. Waiting for the
Hardy Heron LTS final release met with general approval. paul928
added
that if we would like, we can always start using the <a
href="http://ubuntu-az.nfshost.com"> http://ubuntu-az.nfshost.com</a>
server and later he'll transfer the database to the server. johnc4510
mentioned that we have several advantages with servers. slofgren and
ianmcorvidae have good experience on them, and a lot of knowledge. </p>
<p>johnc4510 added that one thing that concerned him is that we
really
haven't been using the old server very much. If we _are_ going to use
this one he doesn't want us to be laying out extra $'s every month
for
something we aren't putting to the best use. tyche mentioned that the
old server was rather restricted, and he, for one, felt that it would
be better if he didn't put a strain on it. johnc4510 agreed, and
added
that perhaps we should discuss what people would like to do with a
server (that they would actually be willing to help implement).
soldats
suggested that he thought the team blog and personal blogs would be
nice as well as email, and johnc4510 agreed. johnc4510 suggested that
we have one person as a server leader, like slofgren, and then maybe
have small groups working on different aspects of the server. Maybe
have a instructional by each sub-team on what they are doing. soldats
suggested that since we will have a personal forum as well we can
have
subsections for that. johnc4510 added that in that way, we could all
be
learning and at the same time teaching the rest of us. </p>
<p>ianmcorvidae felt that it seems like a reasonable plan, so long as
there is enough interest within the group, such that we'll actually
HAVE those groups. soldats felt he really would like to do this but
maybe we should pull a few more people into regular meetings and see
if
more people want to be involved. johnc4510 mentioned that the
newsletter about this meeting might draw some in to learn about
servers. [ed. note: there are 95 people listed in the membership
rolls.
Typically, the IRC channel has about 20 members shown, not all of
whom
participate on a regular basis. We would enjoy having more members
active in IRC and participating in our discussions and meetings. As
you
have joined this Team you have added to our image and we have added
to
yours. The success of the Team is your success, and your
participation
enriches us all.] kennymc0 said that he would do what he can to help
but he would need to be taught a lot of this. johnc4510 told him not
to
worry about it, that he would need to learn a lot of this, too. That
is
what this is for: learning. soldats said that's what were all here
for
is to help each other. </p>
<p>johnc4510 then asked soldats if he had done the last update on the
InstallFest flier. Soldats responded with the link to the latest
version, <a href="http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=704786">
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=704786</a>.
When the Team had had a chance to see it johnc4510 mentioned that he
was a little concerned with the "What To Bring" section. ianmcorvidae
had a post above soldats' last post that included a list of what
people
should bring. soldats admitted that he had simply missed putting the
information in due to being rushed when he put the flier together.
There was a question of whether we should be helping people set up
wireless cards, considering that it was more advanced and some could
be
quite difficult. The general consensus was that we should if we
could. </p>
<p>We have a location for the Phoenix InstallFest: <br>
West Building (basketball gym) <br>
First Baptist Church of Peoria <br>
8133 W Cactus Rd <br>
Peoria, AZ 85381 </p>
<p>johnc4510 mentioned that he was still working on getting a site
for the InstallFest in the Tucson area. </p>
<p>enigmastrat got us the location. It's in a church gym, and there
are
plenty of plugs, wireless and wired internet. There will be a LAN
party
going on at the same time. Next week, we need to have a discussion of
what _we_ need to bring to the InstallFest. </p>
<p>The meeting was adjourned at 9:55 PM. </p>
<h3 id="head-b2e7a89ff3b9d39fdf78d7a3120f0bc582968861">Credits</h3>
<ul>
<li>
<p> <a href="https://wiki.ubuntu.com/CraigAEddy">CraigAEddy</a> </p>
</li>
<li>
<p> <a href="https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Johnc4510">Johnc4510</a> </p>
</li>
</ul>
</body>
</html>