Thread: Fwd: I would like to start a local PUG
Greetings, i am Santiago Zarate, a postgreSQL enthusiast from venezuela, and i would like to start a PUG. i already know about 10 people wanting to go with it... and well i would like some guidance, since its my first step with all this...
any help/suggestion are going to be very very welcome
any help/suggestion are going to be very very welcome
Cesar?... i know many Cesar, one of them its member of Ubuntu-ve (The LoCo team for venezuela at ubuntu).. but could you please be a little bit more specific?
About the contacts that would be great, im asking atm in my team searching for more people...
About the contacts that would be great, im asking atm in my team searching for more people...
2007/10/30, Josh Berkus <josh@agliodbs.com>:
Santiago,
> Greetings, i am Santiago Zarate, a postgreSQL enthusiast from venezuela,
> and i would like to start a PUG. i already know about 10 people wanting
> to go with it... and well i would like some guidance, since its my first
> step with all this...
>
> any help/suggestion are going to be very very welcome
First off, you know Cesar?
Starting a PUG is easy for us. We give you a mailing list and a Movable
Type page. The hard part is yours: you need to schedule a meeting, and
get people to show up.
When I'm back in my office, I can probably find a few more contacts in
VE for you.
--Josh
"Santiago Zarate" wrote: > Greetings, i am Santiago Zarate, a postgreSQL enthusiast from > venezuela, and > i would like to start a PUG. i already know about 10 people > wanting to go > with it... and well i would like some guidance, since its my > first step with > all this... > > any help/suggestion are going to be very very welcome Hi Santiago! What an exciting project! Ten people is a great start. I'm part of PDXPUG (the Portland, Oregon [USA] PUG). I think we had 3 or 4 interested people at first, and we just had our first anniversary meeting with 21 attendees. Our fearless leader Selena Deckelmann is out this week and will probably add to my comments here when she gets back. Meanwhile, here's what we did: Meeting topics: We started out by lining up topics & speakers from our core group of interested people. It can help to have speakers scheduled a couple of months in advance, but that's certainly not a requirement. Bonus tip: Have a backup presentation prepared in case a speaker has to cancel at the last minute. Facilities: Portland is the home of FreeGeek, and we use their (free) meeting facilities. I have no idea what you have available in Venezuela... maybe try local universities, community centers, libraries? Businesses may be willing to donate space for a monthly meeting too. Of course, somebody's house or a pub will work, but IME those meetings end up being more social than technical. (I guess it all depends on what you're after. :) ) If presenters are going to use a projector + laptop, make sure the correct cables are available. If using whiteboards, make sure there's a selection of *working* pens. (I carry my own.) Members: We have a mailing list (http://archives.postgresql.org/pdxpug/) and a page on the PUGs site (http://pugs.postgresql.org/), where Selena posts meeting announcements & recaps. I *think* Josh Berkus is the person to talk to about getting those set up. Announcements include the time, location, speaker, and a description of the topic, and usually go out twice: a week before and the day before/day of. Selena writes up a recap of each meeting ("this is what happened last night, it was brilliant and we had an incredible amount of fun.") We get a lot of positive feedback about the recaps. If you're lucky enough to have them, other LUGs and local universities are good pools for expanding your group base. For example, we're planning a joint meeting with our local pHp users's group. Some of our regular attendees & speakers are graduate students in the local uni's CS department. From a social perspective, make sure new people are greeted. It's really, really discouraging to go to a meeting for 6 months before anybody will talk to you. We do an "introduce yourself" round at the beginning of the meeting when we have new people, and try to make sure they get invited to the pub afterward with the rest of the group. You: Don't be surprised if you are really, really tired after the meeting. It is a lot of work being in charge, even just for an hour meeting. :) Good luck, and let us know how it goes! - gabrielle - PostgreSQL Army of Smurfs - gabrielle -
Santiago, > Greetings, i am Santiago Zarate, a postgreSQL enthusiast from venezuela, > and i would like to start a PUG. i already know about 10 people wanting > to go with it... and well i would like some guidance, since its my first > step with all this... > > any help/suggestion are going to be very very welcome First off, you know Cesar? Starting a PUG is easy for us. We give you a mailing list and a Movable Type page. The hard part is yours: you need to schedule a meeting, and get people to show up. When I'm back in my office, I can probably find a few more contacts in VE for you. --Josh
Santiago Zarate wrote: > Cesar?... i know many Cesar, one of them its member of Ubuntu-ve (The > LoCo team for venezuela at ubuntu).. but could you please be a little > bit more specific? Cesar Villanueva. He's been taking care of ve@postgresql.org for us for 3 years. He should be a part of your PUG ... --Josh Berkus
Ok, thanks gabrielle, josh... i wil try to contact Cesar Villanueva, ASAP
2007/10/31, Josh Berkus <josh@agliodbs.com>:
Santiago Zarate wrote:
> Cesar?... i know many Cesar, one of them its member of Ubuntu-ve (The
> LoCo team for venezuela at ubuntu).. but could you please be a little
> bit more specific?
Cesar Villanueva. He's been taking care of ve@postgresql.org for us
for 3 years.
He should be a part of your PUG ...
--Josh Berkus