Reaching Out To Which Community?
I'm going to do something a little unusual today and get myself into a little bit of trouble. *chuckle* *snort* Unusual indeed . . .
This collection of words is a bit of a rant, I'm afraid. It's about what some call preaching to the choir or more specifically, not preaching to the choir. The Ubuntu Linux crowd prides itself on being a glowing example of the Free Software community at work. Actually, the Free Software community as a whole prides itself on being a model of the ultimate distributed work group, having, through its collective talents, created the greatest operating system of all time, including the software that runs on that OS. I'm only exaggerating a little tiny bit. But I digress . . .
A few days back, there was quite a bit of discussion on my online Linux User Group (the WFTL-LUG) regarding the treatment of newbies. The actual discussion actually started out with Christian Einfeldt (one of the members of my LUG) posting a link to a link Tweeted by Glyn Moody from an article by Teresa Jewell titled "Open to Everyone: How Open Source Communities Can Benefit from Diversity Without Disunity." Now that's community at work.
The article compares the Free Software movement to the Feminist movement and argues that we can learn a great deal from the feminist movement, from its fractured beginnings to its successful emergence as a force that could, and did, rewrite laws to benefit all women. There are some interesting observations including rivalries between different camps in the world of FOSS; the obvious historical rift between the FSF and the OSI is of course mentioned. Who do these organizations really represent and to what degree is disunity within these groups (and others) harming the adoption of Free Software. It's an interesting and important read (so go read it), but the line that stands out the most, to me at least is the following:
Within open source, the group most often ignored is the non-technical user.
Over the years I've written for everyone from the highly technical to the casual end user. I value the importance of addressing as many groups and individuals as possible, but in my mind, the most important is the end user. The casual user. The newbie.
I want Linux and FOSS to reach as many people as possible and whether we in this community like it or not, there are a lot more casual users than highly technical ones. The endgame for me is Linux World Domination. Or at least a healthy distribution of major operating systems with Linux as a powerful and mainstream player in the desktop marketplace.
Back on my WFTL-LUG, Jim, a member, posted the following.
I am a member of two LUG mailing lists, of course this one, and the local LUG. I attended a local meeting once and have not gone back. Not because the guys there were bad or anything but because in many respects the LUG really wasn't about Linux and spreading Open Source. It was more of a techno geek boys club. Nothing wrong with that if your a techno geek boy but if your not it isn't much fun.
This is where I got myself in trouble and it started with me nodding enthusiastically to Jim's post. How I got myself into trouble is by naming names. Over in yonder big city down the road (*cough* Toronto ) where I lived for 10 years (okay, I was actually living in Mississauga), I decided that I should probably attend TLUG, the Toronto Linux User Group. Given my involvement in the FOSS world, I thought this was a good idea; support the troops and all that. So I started showing up for meetings, quasi-incognito. After a couple of meetings where alpha-geek wannabees spent most of the meeting time arguing over whether this particular line of code in the kernel would actually improve the performance of another chunk of kernel code, I stood up and very loudly said, "Who gives a sh*t! We're supposed to be learning/talking about 'your favorite application goes here' ."
I then went on a rant about how this kind of "I'm a bigger geek than thou " crap was worthless and did nothing to help new Linux and FOSS users and certainly did nothing to bring new people to the community, that it scared them away and made sure they didn't attend a second meeting. I might have gone a little over the top, but here I was, a pretty technical guy myself, and I was bored out of my skull listening to this discussion regarding a 14 line chunk of code in the Linux kernel scheduler. Soon thereafter, I stopped going to TLUG meetings.
Eventually, somebody thought it would be a good idea to start a NEWTLUG, a version of the main LUG for new users so that their needs could be addressed and, perhaps, the community would grow with the introduction of fresh blood. It was, in fact, a great idea, one that I applauded; consequently, I spoke at NEWTLUG meetings on a handful of occasions. It was at that time very successful but that was a few years ago. Needs change, FOSS and Linux have changed, and hopefully the community changes as well to serve its members. I do know that TLUG morphed into GTALUG after I was gone. Given that I am no longer in the area, I've been seriously out of the loop these last three or four years. My understanding is that NEWTLUG exists as a group to serve the 'North of Toronto' people now, but there's that out of the loop thing again.
Perhaps GTALUG members on the list whom I haven't permanently offended would like to jump in and let us know where things stand. [ insert appropriate smiley here ]
When it comes to Linux and FOSS, I am personally about reaching out to just about everyone because I believe that Linux and FOSS can help just about everyone. I think we can bring new users to FOSS and bring FOSS to new users and still have fun. Or, as Jim rightly pointed out, actually have some fun because the alternative is fun for at most, one or two people. And one or two people isn't a community. I'm not saying the minutiae of scheduler coding isn't interesting for some, but I'd wager Linus' annual salary that it certainly wasn'tgripping to the majority of people in the room.
That non-technical user is the future of FOSS. If we don't reach out to that person and get them using FOSS, it's only a matter of time before Linux on the desktop is synonymous with OS/2. Yes, I acknowledge that Linux powers the Internet, and most of the search traffic and the most e-commerce and most supercomputers, etc . . . but that's not enough. People have to know they are using Linux and FOSS and that means it has to power their desktop. In the absence of an awesome Linux desktop marketing machine (Canonical is good, but they've got a ways to go before they can match the awesome marketing of Microsoft, or that up and comer, Apple, it's up to us. The community. We've got to speak with something resembling a unified voice, delivering a consistent, inclusive message.
Perhaps the greatest challenge we face is that non-technical user, but it's a challenge we are up to. The catch is doing it, and that requires a very different approach because now we have to talk to and reach out to people other than our own community of geeks.
Thus endeth my rant. Until next time . . .
Comments
Non-technical end user
Wednesday September 01 2010 01:04:24 pm
Calvin R
TLUG and New Users
Wednesday August 25 2010 03:06:30 pm
Drew Sullivan
Computer Support
Friday August 20 2010 09:47:15 pm
Charles
Re Reaching Out To Which Community?
Friday August 20 2010 02:39:54 pm
Jonathan
New Linux users
Friday August 20 2010 06:06:48 am
Tracyanne
one glitch and you're gone?
Thursday August 19 2010 09:09:44 pm
Artie Blaine
Re. Reaching Out To Which Community?
Thursday August 19 2010 06:41:03 pm
Jonathan Blaine