On Saturday 24 Jul 2004 06:25, =?iso-8859-1?q?Colin=20Brett?=
<colinabrett(a)yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
<snip>
> In the meantime, what is the "form" for asking
> questions on the list, so I get the netiquette right!
Thats it, you asked a question, I've answered, (I just couldn't remember
where the apostrophe went in <thats>).
--
John Seago
Linux User #219566 (http://counter.li.org)
Hi All,
I have just joined the list and am introducing myself
as suggested in the confirmation mail.
My name's Colin Brett. I am, by profession, a UNIX
systems administrator and (reluctant) Oracle DBA for a
firm in Cambridge. I've been using various flavours of
UNIX for over 10 years now and got into the Linux
scene about 4 years ago. I don't unfortunately use
Linux in my job but have been using RedHat and/or
Mandrake at home on a regular basis. In fact, the only
reason I have a machine at home is because of Linux:
there's no way I'd pay the Microsoft tax for a windows
machine!
I'm willing to share any experience you may find
useful from the wider UNIX arena: scripting,
administration, a bit of Perl programming, some HTML.
Just drop me a line or to the list in general and I'll
see what I can come up with. I can't promise a quick
answer, however, as work and family committments (a 9
month old baby boy!) do keep me rather busy.
In the meantime, what is the "form" for asking
questions on the list, so I get the netiquette right!
Cheers,
Colin
=====
==
Colin Brett.
colinabrett(a)yahoo.co.uk
==
___________________________________________________________ALL-NEW Yahoo! Messenger - sooooo many all-new ways to express yourself http://uk.messenger.yahoo.com
On 2004-07-22 13:03:27 +0100 Simon Williams <alug(a)no-dns-yet.org.uk>
wrote:
> * On Thu, Jul 22, 2004 at 12:29:28AM +0100, MJ Ray wrote:
>> Sorry you felt you couldn't help ALUG serve Essex better.
> I think it was mainly the name that could cause confusion. It it
> stayed part of ALUG, it would be the Chelmsford branch, which might
> make some people think that it's more localised than it is.
Why not an Essex branch, like the mid-Suffolk one?
I suspect this has more to do with some people wanting to be called
"admin" like in all the worst LUGs, but I hope I'm wrong and wish it
the best. The LUGs I've liked best, Peterborough and Anglian, have had
"admin" people who spend most of the time trying to avoid the label,
but still do the work.
>> Remember we're here if you need a hand and co-operation is always
>> good.
> Thanks (even though I'm not the/an admin). I don't see why members of
> each LUG couldn't turn up to the other LUG's meetings and be welcomed.
Oh, I agree. I'd take up SoSLUG's invitation if I could find time to
travel there and I visit PLUG as often as I can. Cam-LUG have been
very hostile to ALUG in the past, though.
Because of the above suspicions, I'd appreciate this staying off-list
so I don't start a flamewar. You emailed me off-list first, anyway.
--
MJR/slef My Opinion Only and not of any group I know
http://www.ttllp.co.uk/ for creative copyleft computing
Please email about: BT alternative for line rental+DSL;
Education on SMEs+EU FP6; office filing that works fast
Broadband seems finaly to have arrived at my small coastal village. I have
a Dell laptop with an Ethernet port and no network. Assuming I go for a
wires only package, what is the most suitable hardware?
As far as ISPs are concerned I have heard good reports of F9 and ukfsn.org
ought to be worth a look/supporting. Any group experience of,
preference for either?
Thanks
Ian
http://www.luge.org.uk
I know there's one in Southend, but I thought Chelmsford would be too
narrow, and I like the name Chris Walker came up with a couple of months
back and after all, Linux is supposed to be fun!
Look forward to building something cool and having some meetings. My
design friend Kelly said she'd wave her magic wand at some point in the
next week or two and make it look pretty (she did www.LinuxVAR.co.uk
design) so I look forward to Tux on Ice! ;)
I'm "semi-geek" (you think after 20 years of coding I would class
higher!) so look forward to learning from the uber-geeks and helping a
few non-geeks experience and enjoy the freedom of FLOSS.
Steve Purkiss
Linux User Group Essex admin
http://www.luge.org.uk
Dear all,
If anyone out there has been looking for an alternative to Sage or
Quickbooks that they can run on a Linux or BSD box, then take a look at
phpOrganisation.
phpOrganisation is an open source php/mysql based business process
application, which is aimed at UK organisations (because it understands
VAT).
It features:
An address database, which is the central information around which
phpOrganisation structures its processes. All entities relating to the
organisations processes are in this database, whether employee,
supplier, associate or personal.
Customer relationship tools. Two marketing lists are available; the
tracker, and the client list. Move a contact onto one of these lists,
and then keep a record of emails, phone conversations and use the "next
contact due" feature to act as a reminder for re-contacting.
Ordering System. Generate purchase orders for products and services,
view the PO and print it out for the supplier. As invoices are received
from the supplier, register the invoices and track the time left to pay
on the supplier invoice page.
Project and Contracts can be set up and time and costs can be allocated
to a project or contract. Track your costs to learn what it really costs
to deliver your services and develop your products.
Generate quotations and store a record of previous quotations.
phpOrganisation assists you in storing your quotation wordprocessor
files in a single location on your filesystem. phpOrganisation doesn't
generate web based quotations, in the way it does for purchase orders,
invoices and statements, as this lacks the flexibility that is required
in drafting quotations for most small businesses.
Generate client invoices against contracts, print the invoices, or
generate statements for a client, showing paid and overdue invoices.
Generation of VAT return information, to aid to process of completing
your VAT paperwork.
Help notes feature. Each user can have descriptive notes about
phpOrganisation show up in the webpages. When familiarity is gained, the
helpnotes can be turned off.
phpOrganisation does not yet feature stock control, or a groupware style
shared calendar, but these are planned features.
phpOrganisation is GPLed and available at sourceforge:
http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/phporganisation
Support in installing, running and implementing new features for
phpOrganisation is available; contact me at the email address below.
We'd welcome contributions to phpOrganisation - there's much still to
do. Drop me a line if you'd like to help.
More information about phpOrganisation and Hypercube Systems is at:
http://www.hypercubesystems.co.uk/
regards,
Seb James
--
Business Systems, Hypercube Systems Ltd
Providing Open Source IT solutions.
Tel: 0845 458 0277 Web: www.hypercubesystems.co.uk
Mob: 07900 958964 Email: seb(a)hypercubesystems.co.uk
On Tue, 2004-07-20 at 08:50, bjsamuels(a)beenthere-donethat.org.uk wrote:
> On 19-Jul-2004 Steve Purkiss wrote:
> >
> > Met Chris from frugalIT in Witham the other night at my A12 business
> > networking club meeting and he said would be good to set something up
> > for the - let's say "lower" regions of East Anglia - Norwich is a bit
> > too far and Southend is an entirely different world to Chelmsford.
> >
> > So, where do I start then? Do I buy a domain or set up a subdomain?
> > Anyone wanna point me in the right direction?
> >
> > I may not be a sysadmin wizard but I'll help all I can to set up and
> > run...
>
> Chris
>
> Are you aware that there is an Essex Linux User Group (ELUG) in existence?
>
> It does have a web site at http://www.epos.demon.co.uk and I am still actually
> subscribed, I think, to the mailing list. The web site doesn't appear to have
> been updated since 1997 and the mailing list has been dead since 2001.
>
> I did post about this to the ALUG list at the beginning of July but it seems to
> have gone largely unnoticed.
>
> I don't know where you are geographically but I am near Tiptree. I may be able
> to offer some help. You can either email me or telephone on 01621 816561.
>
> Regards
>
> Barry Samuels
> http://www.beenthere-donethat.org.uk
> The Unofficial Guide to Great Britain
Hi,
Steve here actually - yes was aware of the one in Essex - I contacted
the guy who ran it about a year back and he said it was now defunct.
So I'm starting up a group for Essex/the East which is not covered by
the rest - mainly Chelmsford and surrounding areas (Brentwood,
Braintree, etc.)
Until I get the site up then happy to collect names if anyone's
interested.
Cheers,
steve
--
Open for Organisations
supporting open source software
http://www.open4.org/
Further to my earlier post on this matter, I will put something in the
uk.local East Anglian and uk.local Essex, with a view to eliciting a
response to the ALUG main list.
--
John Seago
Linux User #219566 (http://counter.li.org)
On Tuesday 20 Jul 2004 06:25, Steve Purkiss <bnmlist(a)open4.org> wrote:
>
> Met Chris from frugalIT in Witham the other night at my A12 business
> networking club meeting and he said would be good to set something up
> for the - let's say "lower" regions of East Anglia - Norwich is a bit
> too far and Southend is an entirely different world to Chelmsford.
>
> So, where do I start then? Do I buy a domain or set up a subdomain?
> Anyone wanna point me in the right direction?
>
> I may not be a sysadmin wizard but I'll help all I can to set up and
> run...
>
> I'm planning a "training" event for ecademy sometime in the next month
> or two so may just slip Linux on all the machines and run a dual event.
> At the end of the day, all that is needed is a web browser to run
> ecademy so why not?!
>
> Steve Purkiss
I would have thought that it depends on whether this is an extension South
of ALUG, or the construction of ELUG. The former may make an easer start,
which can be developed into something else if there is a big enough base,
later. The ALUG Web site is already there, along with this mailing list.
It looks as though all you really need to do is find the bodies and
perhaps when you think you've got enough organise a meeting for them.
Whilst it may seem a long way to go perhaps attending the ALUG Barbecue
may give you an idea of what works further North.
--
John Seago
Linux User #219566 (http://counter.li.org)