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- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: comp japan article
- From: Craig Oda <craig@example.com>
- Date: Wed, 19 Jul 1995 18:54:54 +0900 (JST)
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This is part of the text I am going to submit to the editors at Comp Japan. The reason I wrote it from my perspective is that I didn't have time get more information from all the members. If you want to add or change something, please make the corrections and additions now. I have to wrap this up on Thursday. This is your opportunity to speak out *before* it goes to press. Pictures will be taken at the meeting on Sunday. Regards, Craig ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Craig Oda 12 40 82 A8 DF DD DD 30 BB 0E 26 22 E0 D8 F2 87 craig@example.com Public Key: finger craig@example.com phone: +81-3-3351-5977 fax: 81-3353-6096 Twics / IEC Building / 1-21 Yotsuya, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 160 Japan Now accepting resumes by postal mail. CS or engineering degree required. send me e-mail for additional requirements. -------------------------------------------------------------------------_TLUG: History In the beginning of March, 1994, Craig Oda and Nori Nishigaya sat next to each other on a plane going from Tokyo to Oita prefecture and spoke about the Hyper Network conference they would soon attend. Commercial Internet had been in Japan less than 6 months, but it was apparent that Japan would soon witness explosive growth in its Internet services. At the conference, Craig and Nori spoke about a world without physical boundaries, where hundreds of people thousands of miles apart could work on the same project using the Internet. They spoke about an outstanding example of the Internet being used to coordinate a large project, the Linux kernel and the host of FSF software that make it a complete UNIX-like system. The Internet was necessary for the creation of Linux and it was necessary for the creation of the Tokyo Linux Users Group. Craig and Nori had a strong interest in the Internet and had informal meetings with others to talk about the Internet and hack on Linux. In the beginning, everyone was on the TWICS public-access Internet system because TWICS was the only Internet system in Japan at the time. On June 16, 1994, Jim Tittsler, an old MIT UNIX hacker, started the "LINUX" conference on TWICS and everyone started helping each other to fix problems and learn about Linux. The atmosphere was exciting and friendly. One of the early members comments: "It felt as if we were all on the edge of this frontier and that together we were taming this networked, high-tech jungle. It was great!" The founding members were pioneers in their professional careers as well. Nori got venture capital and started an ISP in Tokyo shortly after the club got started. Craig was running around trying to survive a monthly growth rate of 20 percent a month at TWICS. Rainer was starting up the Japan office for FORE Systems, the dominant manufacturer of ATM (Asynchrnous Transfer Mode) switches in the world. Steve Casmar was busy hooking up the American School in Japan with a very fast Internet connection. Steve Turnbull was teaching at Tsukuba University and hacking away at Linux all he could. Jim Tittsler was catching the multimedia wave and rapidly designing controllers for CD-ROM drives. The first meeting in September of 1994 was held at an all you can eat Mexican restaurant in Shibuya and ended at Ed Harter's apartment. Rainer successfully installed Linux on Ed's system from scratch. This was surprising because he was doing pretty with his beer before the installation. By the December, the club had moved the meetings to the Cyber Technolgies office in Yotsuya. The office was equipped 64Kbps Internet access and about 6 Linux machines. A summary of all the meetings can be read on the TLUG homepage. The URL is shown below. Current Status of TLUG TLUG is a non-profit, non-political, users group whose members exchange information on the development and use of the Linux kernel and Free Software Foundation tools. Physical and online meetings are held in English. The group is in the process of organization and will elect officers in the future. Meeting times and dates are announced on the mailing list and the TLUG homepage: http://www.twics.com/~craig/tlug.html The TLUG mailing list is the major method of communication for TLUG: To join the tlug mailing list send e-mail to majordomo@example.com The subject line is optional. include the command: subscribe tlug in the body of your message. Example: echo 'subscribe tlug' | mail majordomo@example.com If you encounter any problems with the mailing list, send a message to listmaster@example.com TLUG has a new BBS accessible with a WWW browser such as Netscape: http://metanoia.cyber.ad.jp/tlug-bbs.html Contacts: craig@example.com anishi@example.com rvm@example.com Everyone is welcome to join!
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