Re: [gugmasters] How to open Gnome Malaysia Usergroup
- From: Frederic Muller <fredm gnome org>
- To: Mohd Fazli Azran <mfazliazran gmail com>
- Cc: gugmasters-list gnome org, foundation-list gnome org, board gnome org
- Subject: Re: [gugmasters] How to open Gnome Malaysia Usergroup
- Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2011 11:30:31 +0800
On 01/26/2011 11:02 AM, Mohd Fazli Azran wrote:
[...]
Yep. We know in not good for us if the community keep having war but now
community are on sleep mode. I need to poke them all and create hype to
wake of all them.
[...]
Yes, we need GNOME, GNU, FSF or other related organisation to help us to
build good communication and keep the relationship. Although your word
some of it sound like indonesian :). Thank to you all
Dear Mohd (hope that's the right way to address you),
I'm just reacting to those 2 statements of yours within the context of
that long exchange we've had.
I have been running and involved in user groups for quite some time and
here is what I can offer as an advice:
1. you need to inspire your community, not create hype
2. getting businesses seems to be a major focus of yours, however
businesses compete, they do not collaborate well in general. Inspired
people on the contrary share ideology and do things beyond money and
companies interests, because they believe it's the right thing to do and
they have fun doing it. This is why it's called a user group, and not a
business group.
3. you do not need GNOME, GNU, FSF: you can chose to be part of those
communities and do what you believe should be done. A community is a
flat organization where everyone is at the same level. We all do what we
can at our level, and I would recommend you to do the same. This is the
best way to strengthen the GNOME community. At this stage I wonder what
else you need?
4. Getting involved in building a user group is easy (almost), you
already have all the needed pointers: now you should lay out a plan and
act upon it. From my experience a user group tends to cost time and
money to its organizers, which seems to be what you lack of.
5. Having so many FOSS projects under one umbrella might not be the best
way to attract volunteers and contributors: I would personally doubt
about the focus of such an organization and be afraid to come to learn
about GNOME and be told about ...Drupal.
6. What I've learned in my years as a contributor in the Free Software
communities: when you want something to happen you need to start
yourself and show the way, rather than expect people to do the work for
you. People will usually have a different perspective and other opinions
on how to execute. As a community leader your role is often to start and
help combine all those energies towards a good direction for the project
(not necessarily what you initially envisioned).
Those comments are really based on what I have learned and I hope they
will benefit you and help you to get started. I have participated, lead
and contributed to my local GNU/Linux User Group for years and I'd say
it has been a wonderful experience. I've met great people, had fun and
did stuff that I felt mattered. I hope you can experience the same as I
did, or even more!
Good luck and let us know when you're planning on your first meeting!
Kind regards,
Fred
ps: also do subscribe to the gugmasters-list@ which is where GNOME User
Group issues are being discussed.
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