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The First-Ever Installfest in Egypt

MadFarmAnimalz writes "On the first of May, the Egyptian LUG had the first ever Linux Installfest (check out the photos and for Pete's sake mirror them!) at the Sawy Cultural Center in downtown Cairo. Turnout was absolutely incredible; the hall was maxed out at something between 500 and 1,000 persons for 7 solid hours (not bad considering our geurrilla marketing campaign can't have cost more than 7 or 8 dollars), and we were absolutely swamped!" Read on below for more details.

"The atmosphere was just unbelievable; people who had had linux installed realised the LUGgers were overwhelmed and stayed on helping other people with installs, we couldn't burn CDs fast enough, several thousand educational pamphlets were not enough by a wide margin. We were expecting maybe 150 or 200 people throughout the day, but we had already reached that number by 9:45 a.m. (15 minutes before opening!). To the best of our knowledge, the most successful LUG-driven event in the middle-east, certainly the biggest, and one hell of a day that we'll all remember. Note that we are now looking at the possibility of another Installfest during summer at the Bibliotecha Alexandrina and would welcome any extra resources. (A big thanks to MadFarmAnimalz' family who served the volunteers sandwiches carefully wrapped in copies of the GPL preamble and the deCSS code)"

13 of 214 comments (clear)

  1. Since they asked for it by detritus` · · Score: 5, Informative

    Theres a mirror of the site here

    1. Re:Since they asked for it by Scarblac · · Score: 5, Informative

      You beat me to it... another mirror. Should be plenty, this story isn't even on the front page, is it?

      --
      I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
  2. Network Install by karmatic · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've held a couple of small-scale linux "Installfests" in the past, and the availability of CDs (and CD-Rom drives, in some cases) can certainly be an issue.

    I found that many computers support Network Booting, which RedHat supports easily. While not every machine supports it, doing net installs on the machines that do frees up CD-ROM drives and CDs for the ones that don't.

    1. Re:Network Install by ajs318 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Starting a distro flame war is not my intention here, I am just speaking from experience. But:
      Debian allows you to boot from CD, do a minimal installation {just enough to get the network up}, then eject the CD and finish the rest of the installation from the Internet. And it has no way of knowing whether the ftp.country.debian.org it's connected to is the real one, or just some LAN address that a bullshitting name server gave them which happens to contain a full mirror, but runs at full 100Mb/s rather than ADSL rate. {Unless you have > 200 clients connected to that server ..... but you wouldn't, would you?} When the users get home and plug into the real Internet, their ISP's {truthful} nameserver gives them the address of the distribution's real main ftp site, so they can pull all the extra packages they want.

      I'm sure the same technique could be applied to other distributions, though ..... Debian wouldn't really be my first choice for a n00b event. I suppose it's a balancing act really -- too much advance preparation is in vain if nobody turns up on the day, not enough and people get frustrated {and the Open Source movement can get cast in a bad light; ha ha, look, those smelly lentil-sucking communist hippies didn't think ahead did they?}.

      Perhaps someone will make an InstallFest kit, with a full mirror of a distro {Mandrake would be my favourite for this application -- n00b-friendly, good hardware detection, easy graphical setup, not sure though how it handles installation from network}, a DHCP server and a hacked BIND {to manage the aforementioned DNS spoofing}, and an ISO image of a minimal network install / recovery CD {itself in the form of an installable package, but with a depends: cdrecord and a recommends: k3b, just for ompleteness}. This net-install CD would hardly need any packages, so it could be quick to burn. You'd still need stackloads of blank media if you were giving them out rather than taking them back to use for the next person {and I'd think psychologically it's better that visitors do get a CD that they can take away with them}, but you might blag ..... I mean, arrange for these to be sponsored by a local computer store.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  3. And now the real holy war starts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    vi vs emacs

  4. Awesome job! Guerilla Marketing Campaign by quantumparadox · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Great job getting that many people out guys, thst's amazing. I'm sure you're completely wasted right now but a further description of your marketing campaign and why you think it was so effective would be a great help to LUG's around the world. Was there some cultural aspect that you used to help you out or are Egyptians just dying to get Linux installed?

  5. mirror to help out by spre3368 · · Score: 5, Informative
    --
    my sig sucks, you dont want to see it....
  6. Bring On The Stats by karmatic · · Score: 5, Interesting

    According to the Linux Counter, Egypt has 2262 registered machines (with 156 registered users), or 2.26 users for every million people that live there. With a really low turnover, and half the people being actually getting linux installed, they could easily have enough people to quadruple the counter stats. Perhaps the organizers should invite people to Register.

    With 3 more users, they could pass nepal.

  7. Re:marketing by Spy+Hunter · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Replying to myself; turns out navigating the site wasn't as hard as I expected; there's enough english to point the way. They posted their flyer in these places, and their text message in these places. They were very organized; their Wiki system of keeping track of where things were posted seems to have worked excellently. The success of this event should be a model for people planning other community events.

    --
    main(c,r){for(r=32;r;) printf(++c>31?c=!r--,"\n":c<r?" ":~c&r?" `":" #");}
  8. How to make this more efficient. by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 5, Interesting
    If the availability and speed of CD writers causes a problem at Installfests, then why not make up a distributed system for making these CDs? If you can get, say, 1000 Linux users to each make 2 copies of a Linux installation CD, and then mail those two CDs to the LUG ahead of time, then you'd have 2000 CDs ready to go.

    The only problem I can think of is verifying that what's on the CD isn't malicious code. Hmmmmm... That's a tough one. Maybe a better idea would be for Linux users around the world to each donate some money to a nonprofit organization created for the purpose of Linux Installfests. That nonprofit would then have thousands of copies of Linux CDs pressed each day, at a cost of almost nothing per CD. I can see how it would be in the best interest of all Linux distro makers, and all companies that use Linux as part of their strategy (e.g., IBM) to donate a few cents from each CD they sell to this organization. This organization would then routinely ship crates of CDs to LUGs around the world, for the purpose of installing on folks' computers, and giving them the CD as their welcome gift to the Linux community. If a nonprofit can't be started, then why not donate some of those CD duplication units that can make 10 CDs at once, or at least the funds to buy those things...

    By making this community grow as much as possible, we will all be doing a great thing. It is likely that companies will produce hardware drivers, application software, and other products for Linux. It is likely that by experimenting with Linux, a lot of people will become a lot smarter about computers, and the ratios of 1337 users to the idiot users (that Microsoft helped create with its talking paperclips) will be more favorable.

    Finally, some other folks mentioned network boots. Yes, I think this is a good idea. But still give folks a CD so they can reinstall if they hose their system.

  9. software to handle installfests by jasontheking · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I've run three installfests for the past three years, and after the second time I decided to write some software to handle things more easily. (I must admit though, I've only had about 50 people turn up at the events I'm running, I guess I suck at marketing). Its at https://sourceforge.net/projects/installfest/
    You're going to have to pull it out of cvs , I haven't bothered doing any official releases or anything yet , its just a bunch of php scripts.



    It lets you gather the number of each distro , type of CPU , harware type (desktop , laptop, etc) that people want linux installed and configured for, as well as the number of people turning up to help who can handle it. And you get a nice little graph showing you how many people sign up each day before the event.



    There's another installfest project on sourceforge here

  10. Slashdot People can help - PLEASE MOD UP by MadFarmAnimalz · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Sawy Cultural Center is new and the management there was really supportive. We at the LUG feel we can do a lot of work with their support, and one way to get them enthusiastic about linux and open source is for them to feel the power of the open source community. We showed them that day how many people we could pull in, and I'm getting their admin to look at their server stats today ( ; hit it hard people).

    If you want to help us, e-mail Khaled Mohsen who was our liason there and just tell him that you as a linux user and/or open source proponent would like to thank him for helping out the Egyptian Linux Users' Group, and make sure to extend the thanks to Mr. Mohamed Al Sawy too through Khaled.

    Show me the power of slashdot :)

    --
    Blearf. Blearf, I say.
    1. Re:Slashdot People can help - PLEASE MOD UP by MadFarmAnimalz · · Score: 5, Informative

      My profuse apologies for the bungled links (still groggy). Here they are:

      Khaled Mohsen

      and

      Sawy Cultural Center

      --
      Blearf. Blearf, I say.