[BadVista Advocate] RFC
Ringo Kamens
2600denver at gmail.com
Sat Apr 28 21:56:33 EDT 2007
This is a great idea and something I've been wanting to do for a
while. If anybody needs a place to collaborate, they can join the
Binary Freedom IFSA mailing list (binaryfreedom.info) or on our wiki
at wiki.binaryfreedom.info. Also, getting people involved in
showusthecode.com would be good as well.
In total solidarity,
Comrade Ringo Kamens
On 4/28/07, Don Hensley <Don at donhensley.com> wrote:
>
> This is not in any great order, it's just a stab at a coherent road to
> possibly start us out in a unified but broad direction. (I have a fear of
> narrow approaches. I think hackers work best when working on their own, but
> in collaborative groups --Just my take is all).
>
> - - - -
>
> 1. Set up a lot of cross linked and badged sites for our projects. A sort of
> BadVista Ring, we already have enough of us to make a good core. This
> diversifies the reach of our project, and helps all the Ring sites gain
> Google rank.
>
> 2. Each site should "do it's own thing", but use heavy cross linkage to other
> sites (within the Ring - so there is a cohesive wholeness to the links) to
> show aspects that any one site is not delving into as deeply as the linked to
> site is, for that particular subject. This gives us the ability to coordinate
> both sites to play well off the strengths of the other site - because we have
> a back end communication that is not apparent to the visitor.
>
> Among our Ring sites, I would encourage deep linking, as well as just linking
> to the home page. Let the Ring links do the home pages, let deep links do the
> internal work of leading people around. Use "open in a new window (tab)" so
> the visitor does not lose where he was.
>
> 3. For that back end communication we need a wiki for resource management and
> a board much like Slashdot only without the vote system (actually the Bruce
> Perens Technocrat.net site does just what I have in mind). That way we can
> track separate subjects and proposals by individual - and reply in a cogent
> manner, instead of what we are doing now.
>
> 4. We link back to BadVista.org, of course, but mostly we try to use this mail
> list as a recruiting ground for more participants, and general pointing out
> new sites and findings. That gives us the drawing power of the FSF to find
> ever more adherents to the cause. Of course we advocate joining the BadVista
> Advocate program (and the FSF!), and provide links to the
> http://badvista.fsf.org/mailman/listinfo/advocate and FSF.org sites for those
> that wish to take part, at whatever level.
>
> 5. We need to link heavily to already existing sites that cover much of the
> ground that there is little point in our repeating. With luck eventually some
> of them will link back to our sites.
>
> 6. I do not think we need to pick a particular Distro, or try to create our
> own. But I do think we should all use one or two Distros like gNewSense (it
> is a Distro, you can download the ISO from here if you want):
> http://www.gnewsense.org/Main/Features --but it is also more then just a
> Distro, because you can use Builder and create a Distro to your liking.
>
> This does not mean limiting your self to just gNewSense, or any particular
> Distro, just that we all should use some agreed on totally Free Distro, like
> gNewSense, as our shared Distro for explanations when ever we are working the
> notion of Free Software into our pages.
>
> Links and excerpts from the GNU philosophy pages would go well at the
> appropriate points.
>
> 7. Also one might consider showing off http://www.lnx-bbc.com/ it is the way
> the FSF Associate Membership Cards are done (an entire GNU/Linux mini distro
> on a business card sized (and shape) CD.
>
> 8. We should actually introduce the players and explain what they do and how
> they work to create the entity generally known as GNU/Linux.
>
> By this I mean start with the Logos. Like the KDE dragon Konqi, the Gnome foot
> print, the GNU GNU, the Linux penguin (Tux), and so on.
>
> Do lightweight intros into what each of those projects are, and where they fit
> in the scheme of things. Link to another persons site on the Ring that is
> doing a more in depth look at what ever your not going into in depth, like if
> you are a Gnome user, link to a KDE users site (or several of the RING sites)
> in your description of KDE. Deep link as required in descriptions of each
> project, to other Ring members sites.
>
> A sort of distributed attack on the perception problem, make it fun and
> educational. And I think each of us probably can, and does, reach a different
> segment of end users that we each can present stuff to as fun. Lets try to
> use that diversity, with a combined strategy.
>
> That way we can use our expertise to good instruction, and feel free to talk
> about your favorite Distro... just always return to the shared pure GNU/Linux
> Distro of choice (like gNewSense) as the example of totally Free Software.
>
> A pragmatic method, but consistently pointed at Free Software as the ultimate
> goal.
>
> 9. Along the way, without making a big deal out of it, slip in little things
> like how Vista does not allow you to control things like how you interface
> with your own computer. Explain why it's so much more useful to be able to
> change things, or have a community to ask for changes, rather then just being
> at the mercy of one monopoly. The ***AA's are a monopolistic group too, not
> just Microsoft.
>
> Easy segueway into why DRM is harmful, why Treacherous Computing is dangerous.
>
> 10. Have ever more layered pages that go into these subjects in more depth, if
> the visitor wishes to follow up on some point you have made.
>
> BIG DISCLAIMER: I'm no good at jazzy web sites, and I don't know much about
> marketing. These are just things --Starting points, for a possible road to
> follow.
>
> There have been so many good ideas tossed out already that I am a bit
> overwhelmed, so this is actually a sort of outline to bring our efforts into
> some cohesive form.
>
> I read at least one person that said he'd managed to explain what an API was
> to a pointy haired boss, I'll bet he and all you people can improve on my
> little list. Probably in ways I'd never imagine.
>
> So this is more like a RFC, if you will.
>
> So bring on the comments.
>
> Don.
> --
> GNU/Linux is the future.
> Join the FSF: http://www.fsf.org/register_form?referrer=4458
> Get the Real Facts: http://BadVista.org
>
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