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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Re: Happy New Year
- Date: Fri, 2 Jan 2004 15:51:19 +0900
- From: bofh@example.com
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Re: Happy New Year
- References: <C37AB7FC-3CC9-11D8-9CC6-000393D21E3A@example.com> <3FF4D88A.E62BC956@example.com> <20040102062710.GB4910@example.com>
- User-agent: Mutt/1.4.1i
Akemashite Omedetou! I'm one of the long-term lurkers - I've been subscribed to the list since moving to Japan in January of 1997. I was never able to go to the meetings because they were always on Friday nights and my martial arts training has priority. I did get together with the Tsukuba 'branch' one time at a beer garden at Tsukuba center back when I was doing consulting work out there. One reason that I haven't contributed to the list much was because I feel my *nix ability is quite low compared to most of the regulars, so I've contented myself with browsing and picking through interesting topics as they have arisen - selfish, yes, I know... :), but I was initially one of those people who didn't RTFM that much, largely because TFM was a bit obtuse for my newbie brain. A lot of reading over the last 7 years has changed that somewhat, but I'm still learning... My company could possibly provide space for a meeting, albeit very small meeting space - our office space will only seat about 10 people. If anyone wants a 'puchi' meeting, let me know. :) As far as hiring sysadmins go... not right now, but perhaps in the future... In the meantime, we're very hungry for Java and C++ programmers!! (resumes gladly accepted) Here's to a great new year for TLUG! 'kotoyoro'... Shawn > >>Hmm... It seems I joined this group too late. Everybody's gone now... > > It tends to seem that way. There was a time when 60 or more people would > come to a tech meeting and a nomikai would see 30. TLUG went through > some difficult politcal times and many of the long-time core members > evetually through up their hands in disgust and left because of an influx > of the new breed of newbie- the kind that say "I don't want to read the > documentation or figure it out for myself. I tried Linux, so you *owe* > it to me to hold my hand, wipe my butt, and anything else I may require > as I run Linux - and while those particular troublemakers and their > shortsighted supporters who opposed muzzling them were dealt with and they > lost the battle for control of TLUG, the damage was done. Those who > left have never returned, and they were our best and brightest. > > They could return now in safety, but I don't think any of them ever will. > If they are lurking, none of them has told me about it. > > If TLUG could find a corporate sponsor to provide meeting space and all, > it's possible that something like those glory days could return, if > there were TLUGgers willing to put in the large amount of time that > such a thing requires. Such a sponsor would be difficult to find now, > I think, and it would be even more difficult to find a lot of people > who both could and would put in all those hours of setup for a meeting, > and such. > > It was pretty great stuff, though, and I'm glad I was there to see it. > The "cross-platform Linux meeting" was especially cool. I think there > were at least half a dozen architectures represented, including an > Amiga (although I think that may have been running NetBSD, not Linux). > Not many people still in TLUG were there back then. There was me, Jim T., > Ayako, Albeto I think (Alberto, are you still out there?). Anybody else > I'm forgetting? That was in 1998, IIRC, so we've had a really huge > membership turnover since then. > > Dang, all this really makes me wish I was back in Japan. Anybody need > a sysadmin? ;-) > > Jonathan > > > -- > gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys ACC46EF9 > Key fingerprint = E52E 8153 8F37 74AF C04D 0714 364F 540E ACC4 6EF9 > I love the smell of filtered spam in the morning - it smells like victory! -- Watchful awareness has the power to transfer choice from unconscious to conscious process, to shift action from meaningless to meaningful choice, to transform automatic response into autonomous decision.
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