FLOSS Manuals UK hub warm-up

Date: 18th October 2014
Time: 2-6pm
Place: Furtherfield Commons

FLOSS Manuals was launched by Adam Hyde in 2007 to remedy the deficit of good free documentation about Free Software. Our strategy since the beginning has been to develop communities to produce high quality free manuals about Free Software in their own language. Today, through the use of Booksprints and federated publishing techniques we have more than 120 books in more than 30 languages and more than 4,000 contributors.

FLOSS Manuals is more than a collection of manuals about doing things with free and open source software, it is also the community, The contributors include designers, readers, writers, illustrators, free software fans, editors, artists, software developers, activists, and many others. Anyone can contribute to a manual – to fix a spelling mistake, add a more detailed explanation, write a new chapter, or start a whole new manual on a topic.

FLOSS Manuals now consists of 3 independent language communities (French, English, Finnish) supported by a Foundation based in Holland. Our current focus is to develop strong partnerships with grassroots educators to develop educational materials about free software. Come to our UK hub warm-up meeting at Furtherfield to propose books/manuals projects, to encourage others to propose book/manual projects and also to invite publishers, or people interested in publishing.

The afternoon is convened by Larisa Blazic, Mick Fuzz and Rachel Baker. Mick is a long-term contributor at FLOSS Manuals and community educator. Rachel has recently undertaken a detailed study of Booksprints process. Larisa is investigating how FLOSS tools and practices to be best embedded in post-graduate programmes.

reStreet

ReSync are pleased to be joining the Goethe Institut Athen for a cluster of 4 workshops around the topic of the city and autonomous networks this November, 6th – 9th called “New Babylon Revisited

Friday 7th and Saturday 8th November; The reStreet workshop @ Space Under will focus on AWMN and it’s leading role as infrastructure pioneer, techniques to help advance use of the network and promoting the access and synchronisation points we discover around the city – with maps, printed material and social mediation.

We will touch on aspects of open infrastructure and software philosophy as well as explore secure methods for file sharing and data exchange which promote the wireless network and acknowledge the the scope for services as well as introduce some of our own.

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Sunday 9th November is the the final event during which we will walk/drift from place to place and re-discover our street-sync signalling and signage, play with the network and discuss the experience of New Babylon.

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