Editing The JaxLUG Scribe No.1, Vol. 1 No Frills, Just Text Version

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Well, hello everyone.  I guess this whole thing has been quite the learning experience for me and still so much to learn.  We wanted to try to add something that would help enhance the club a bit and here is one of the ideas in action, which we hope to get more people involved with.  The purpose of the JaxLug Scribe is to attempt to provide an additional form of communication to subscribers or those who care to click on the link, where in addition to attending meetings, we will have some reading content focused on the Linux operating system and everything to do with it.  We hope that the newsletter will further bring all of our members together and offer to our members other ways to participate than just presenting. This was the concept behind many User Groups of the past and it worked. It still does, look at MeetUP, you may find articles from groups there or even when you are looking at LinkedIn, you will find people who will just write about a topic that they know about and hope that it will help some reader out there who is a part of their particular network/group.  This being said, I have to admit that I really wanted to put this together since it harkens back to my own childhood, when home computing was still a new and exciting venture finally made available to the masses, not the classes (thanks Jack Tramiel).   
Well, hello everyone.  I guess this whole thing has been quite the learning experience for me and still so much to learn.  We wanted to try to add something that would help enhance the club a bit and here is one of the ideas in action, which we hope to get more people involved with.  The purpose of the JaxLug Scribe is to attempt to provide an additional form of communication to subscribers or those who care to click on the link, where in addition to attending meetings, we will have some reading content focused on the Linux operating system and everything to do with it.  We hope that the newsletter will further bring all of our members together and offer to our members other ways to participate than just presenting. This was the concept behind many User Groups of the past and it worked. It still does, look at MeetUP, you may find articles from groups there or even when you are looking at LinkedIn, you will find people who will just write about a topic that they know about and hope that it will help some reader out there who is a part of their particular network/group.  This being said, I have to admit that I really wanted to put this together since it harkens back to my own childhood, when home computing was still a new and exciting venture finally made available to the masses, not the classes (thanks Jack Tramiel).   


When I was a young lad back in the 1980's, there were the famous Commodore User Groups, who not only met in person, but at the time, they also use to send either disks in the mail or during a meeting, one could pick up a newsletter disk that they would then pop into a disk drive and have various cool utilities and programs as well as articles talking about everything in the world of Commodore.  Not all User Groups did this, but the best ones, that lasted for the longest time had these newsletters go in kind with their meetings.  There was also the BBS where the interchange of ideas could happen, more or less, live (sorta like email at the time for those who weren't there, although there were services where one could chat about topics live as well) and of course the printed publications that I use to love to read (being an owner of a Commodore 64c as a kid, I use to beg my grandmother for money to buy a copy of Commodore Magazine, COMPUTE! and Run).  This is my first attempt to fully utilizing the full features of MediaWiki and to publish a newsletter, which I hope will  benefit the club and its members.  For now, this is a bi-monthly publication, but it is possible that we may have articles that happen monthly, as time permits and as we receive more help from volunteer writers who wish to share their knowledge and experience of Linux with our fellow club members.   
When I was a young lad back in the 1980's, there were the famous Commodore User Groups, who not only met in person, but at the time, they also use to send either disks in the mail or during a meeting, one could pick up a newsletter disk that they would then pop into a disk drive and have various cool utilities and programs as well as articles talking about everything in the world of Commodore.  Not all User Groups did this, but the best ones, that lasted for the longest time had these newsletters go in kind with their meetings.  There was also the BBS where the interchange of ideas could happen, more or less, live (sorta like email at the time for those who weren't there, although there were services where one could chat about topics live as well) and of course the printed publications that I use to love to read (being an owner of a Commodore 64c as a kid, I use to beg my grandmother for money to buy a copy of Commodore Magazine, COMPUTE! and Run).  This is my first attempt to fully utilizing the full features of MediaWiki and to publish a newsletter, which I hope will  benefit the club and its members.  For now, this is a bi-monthly publication, but it is possible that we may have articles that happen monthly, as time permits and as we will receive more help from volunteer writers who wish to share their knowledge and experience of Linux with our fellow club members.   


A little about the process for creating this newsletter.  I used a combination of old technology and new. The articles are written and edited in VIM,  then the final draft gets migrated to MediaWiki.  Other than that, just mastering the syntax of MediaWiki so to get things looking just right, is the only other work I have to do to get these articles put together.  We are actually planning, as presented in an earlier gathering, to have a graphical version of this newsletter made using GIMP, however, it seems for now quite fitting that we keep it simple and easily readable on a variety of devices.     
A little about the process for creating this newsletter.  I used a combination of old technology and new. The articles are written and edited in VIM,  then the final draft gets migrated to MediaWiki.  Other than that, just mastering the syntax of MediaWiki so to get things looking just right, is the only other work I have to do to get these articles put together.  We are actually planning, as presented in an earlier gathering, to have a graphical version of this newsletter made using GIMP, however, it seems for now quite fitting that we keep it simple and easily readable on a variety of devices.     
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