ArcRiley

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{{attachment:CompGurus.jpg|Computer Gurus|align="right"}}After the volume of systems being donated overflowed my home, we were given space to use at the [[http://www.cityofithaca.org/index.asp?Type=B_BASIC&SEC={40F60521-3F11-4AE4-9B0E-97AC1D61C2B6}|Greater Ithaca Activities Center (GIAC)]], a multicultural community center which primarily serves families in poverty. The after school computer program I also ran there more than doubled the number of volunteers for computer recycling, both teens and adults, and dramatically increased our visibility in the community. Many people got involved with free software through this program. We had to setup a donation bin in the hallway to receive computers outside hours as they became a fire hazard, the largest problem we faced was finding families to give them to. {{attachment:CompGurus.jpg|Computer Gurus|align="left"}}After the volume of systems being donated overflowed my home, we were given space to use at the [[http://www.cityofithaca.org/index.asp?Type=B_BASIC&SEC={40F60521-3F11-4AE4-9B0E-97AC1D61C2B6}|Greater Ithaca Activities Center (GIAC)]], a multicultural community center which primarily serves families in poverty. The after school computer program I also ran there more than doubled the number of volunteers for computer recycling, both teens and adults, and dramatically increased our visibility in the community. Many people got involved with free software through this program. We had to setup a donation bin in the hallway to receive computers outside hours as they became a fire hazard, the largest problem we faced was finding families to give them to.

Introduction

Ubuntu Contributions

managing a computer recycling program

Yellow Box #0I started a computer recycling program in Ithaca, NY in 2001 called the "Yellow Box Project". The original premise was many families in Ithaca were without computers while hundreds were being thrown away at the city dump which needed only minor work or software to be useful.

We started with mostly older systems donated by my clients and from The Computer Gurus. Later we received large donations from Cornell University. At this point we were primarily using Debian with custom graphics.

Computer GurusAfter the volume of systems being donated overflowed my home, we were given space to use at the Greater Ithaca Activities Center (GIAC), a multicultural community center which primarily serves families in poverty. The after school computer program I also ran there more than doubled the number of volunteers for computer recycling, both teens and adults, and dramatically increased our visibility in the community. Many people got involved with free software through this program. We had to setup a donation bin in the hallway to receive computers outside hours as they became a fire hazard, the largest problem we faced was finding families to give them to.

Our Living RoomWe started to switch to Ubuntu with 5.04 and went exclusively with 6.06 LTS. By this point over 100 volunteer hours were being put into the project every week. Canonical was extremely supportive by sending us thousands of CDs, enough that we could include a CD with most of the recycled systems in addition to the the other outreach efforts being done (see below).

By late 2006 our "stock" was overfilled, we found it increasingly difficult to give recycled computers away due to poor advertising, our previous flooding of the "market", and "competition" with another local program (Computer All-Stars) distributing systems with pirated copies of Windows 98/2000/XP. The community center administration decided to reallocate the space we were using and we moved the program to a garage where it received far less attention. The program closed entirely when I moved to New Hampshire last Fall.

While I don't have exact numbers of the number of Ubuntu boxes distributed, well over 700 computers were processed in total and over half of them were after we switched to Ubuntu.

ubuntu cd distribution

I've been doing heavy GNU/Linux outreach since 2000 and started distributing Ubuntu CDs in the Summer of 2005 after receiving a large box of Hoary CDs from Canonical. In recent years this was done under the banner of the Ithaca Free Software Association.

The most frequent tabling locations were Greenstar Food Cooperative, the Ithaca Commons, and Dewitt Park. At times running two tables a week, other times once every month or two. We often had a CD burner at the table making CDs when we ran out of our supplies from Canonical. We also distributed lit on free software, gathered signatures on issues such as open standards (ie, ODF) in New York State, and in a few cases raised money by selling silk screened t-shirts. In more than one case over 150 CDs (3 boxes of 50) were distributed in one afternoon.

As part of the Ithaca Free Software Association, which regularly runs booths at Ithaca College's Ed-Tech Day, I helped distribute several hundred more Ubuntu CDs in 2006 and 2007. I also help organize Ithaca's Software Freedom Day events in 2005, 2006, and 2007, though I was unable to attend in 2007. In 2006 we distributed all 550 Ubuntu CDs by 2pm and spent the rest of the afternoon burning CDs for people.

I also made a habit of carrying around an Ubuntu CD to hand out to people as a shirt or button I was wearing often led to conversations with strangers. A rough guess is I've handed out about 50 CDs this way outside of clients.

installfests

user support

loco team involvement

  • Ran an afterschool computer program for GNU/Linux, Python, Blender, etc for over 3 years
  • Mentored for Google's Summer of Code and GHOP with the Python Software Foundation in 2006, 2007, and 2008
  • Presented numerous workshops on free software apps (Blender, Inkscape, Python, etc)
  • Maintain the PySoy project, a 3D game engine for Python for promoting copyleft game development

Contact Information

  • IRC: Arc on Freenode

  • Jabber: ArcRiley on Gmail

Testimonials

Place your testimonial about me here -- your name [date]


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ArcRiley (last edited 2009-05-07 15:59:12 by c-98-216-145-211)