Hey Everyone,
Just a reminder that we have a volunteer safety inspector coming at 10am to
suggest ways that we can improve safety. Everyone who is interested in
learning is welcome to join. Feel free as well to e-mail me questions that
we should ask. Ironically, I believe we have a real safety inspection at
1pm. I suspect the 10am version will be more pleasant.
Maureen
Would it be possible to set up a very simple site for the DIY Space Safety
group on Omni's server?
It would basically consist of two intake forms propagating spreadsheets
that only a few people would need access to.
Is anyone interested in helping with this? We're hoping to be able to put
something in place tonight as communications have been really disorganized.
Does anyone have an issue with this?
Niki
Original thread is 'recommendations for vps for beginning hacker/coder'
started by Jake at
https://sudoroom.org/pipermail/sudo-discuss/2016-December/012673.html
Marc Juul <juul at labitat.dk> recently wrote:
> ...
> He could however get someone with a terminal
> program to install one on the VPS for him:
>
> http://web-console.org/
>
> Super easy. Just install apache2 and the php
> module and follow the instructions.
>
BTW, as apache2 and php are specifically mentioned here, it might be
good to know that it's also possible to run (and learn)
Linux/Apache/MySQL/PHP on the Android devices they own (e.g., standard
smartphones and tablets.)
Quoting Dmitri Popov at
www.linux-magazine.com/Online/Features/Convert-an-Android-Device-to-Linux
:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Installing a regular Linux distribution on an Android device opens a
whole new world of possibilities. You can turn your Android device into
a full-blown Linux/Apache/MySQL/PHP server and run web-based
applications on it, install and use your favorite Linux tools, and even
run a graphical desktop environment. In short, having a Linux distro on
an Android device can come in handy in many situations.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Besides Popov's Linux Magazine feature article, a cursory online search
for "Linux" and "Android" yielded these additionally relevant hits ...
- SourceForge's 'LinuxonAndroid'
https://sourceforge.net/projects/linuxonandroid/
- TechRadar's 'How to install Linux on an Android phone'
http://www.techradar.com/how-to/phone-and-communications/mobile-phones/how-…
- Instructables' 'Install GNU/Linux on your Android mobile phone'
http://www.instructables.com/id/Install-GNULinux-on-your-Android-mobile-pho…
- Google Play's 'Complete Linux Installer' app
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.zpwebsites.linuxonandroid
aaronco36
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aaronco36@
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my friend Christopher is trying to learn linux and coding of various kinds, but
he doesn't have a computer that he can install software onto, so i'm
recommending that he get a VPS somewhere, install linux on it, and play with
web stuff and use it as his computer until he can get his own hardware back.
is linode a good choice? i'm not sure if he has funds to pay subscription fees
or whether he would need to find a free one, or maybe he can get started with a
digitalocean free giftcard if someone has one.
anyway, pipe up if you have recommendations for him.
thanks,
-jake
Sudo friends,
Please consider signing this pledge to never contribute to the information
architecture required for building a Muslim registry or to aid in mass
deportations: http://neveragain.tech/
The time is now.
Thank you,
Vicky
Gamma Ray <gammashine at gmail.com> wrote:
> Pidgin goes by a different name now (which I can't recall at the moment),
> but Pidgin and Gina are different people. Gina was the other party in the
> conflict resolution case with J, and she has not been banned from the Omni.
FWIiW, the ~17th entry on Noisebridge's '86' page
https://noisebridge.net/wiki/86 mentions "Pidgeon (aka Violet)", but
doesn't [currently] mention anyone named "Gina".
I'm guessing that "Pidgeon" and "Pidgin" are one and the same person.
aaronco36
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aaronco36@
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in October 2014 at a meeting, a provisional ban was initiated on J by Liz and
Korl provisionally while further investigation was done. There were some
caveats listed at the meeting:
https://sudoroom.org/pipermail/sudo-discuss/2014-October/008160.html
i found more information at the next meeting here:
https://sudoroom.org/wiki/Meeting_Notes_2014-12-17#Conflict_Resolution_Foll…
for those who don't remember, Pigeon aka Gina? was banned later but i don't
know where the links to that process are.
anyway, J is asking for my advice in continuing the process which was
interrupted in December of 2014, so now that i've posted the above links to get
everyone back to speed, I leave it to J to continue the introduction and
presentation.
the complication is that J remembers that this mediation process (and
provisional ban) were moved to the "omni board" and I haven't been able to find
any links to that discussion, maybe i don't know which meeting notes to search,
or how. Maybe someone remembers something about this.
J was asked to write a statement denouncing rape culture, after which J would
be unbanned, but J only recently completed this writing assignment and needs
help to know where it should be submitted.
J is included in this email from me, and will reply-all including to this list.
-jake
Jake <jake at spaz.org> wrote:
> my friend Christopher is trying to learn linux and coding of various kinds, but
> he doesn't have a computer that he can install software onto, so i'm
> recommending that he get a VPS somewhere, install linux on it, and play with
> web stuff and use it as his computer until he can get his own hardware back.
> ...
> ...
> anyway, pipe up if you have recommendations for him.
One of the major constraints here is "he doesn't have a computer that he
can install software onto", so that quickly rules out using using an
installation of VirtualBox on his host computer (along with a linux
guest distribution) as well as booting-up his host computer with a linux
liveUSB/liveCD distribution.
While it is not directly "learning Linux" by itself, the 'SDF Public
Access UNIX System' https://sdf.org/ offers the useful ability to setup
a free UNIX shell account on SDF using SSH (Secure Shell) or TELNET.
IIRC, all Windows and Mac OS's have some equivalent of SSH and TELNET
already available(?), so no additional installation of software is
really required here. The SDF Public Access UNIX System uses NetBSD 7.x
instead of linux.
Another virtual means of "learning linux and coding of various kinds" is
Zed A Shaw's 'Learn Code the Hard Way' series
https://learncodethehardway.org/ .
The 'Learn UNIX the Hard Way' site https://learncodethehardway.org/unix/
writes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Learn Unix The Hard Way is a full course in manual system administration
of Linux, BSD, and OSX machines through continually setting up and
breaking them. That's right, you'll learn how to configure and destroy
Linux. If you're a DevOps professional or programmer who feels weak in
your Unix skills then this book is perfect for you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Have to break here, 'cause Jake just walked in for HHN.
aaronco36
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