chicago-free-geek.html 3.7 KB

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  1. title: Chicago Free Geek and other volunteering thoughts
  2. date: 2008-02-26 21:43
  3. author: Christine Lemmer-Webber
  4. slug: chicago-free-geek
  5. ---
  6. <p>I've been feeling a lot lately that I haven't been making enough of a
  7. social contribution as of late. I'd like to give back in ways that I
  8. feel best use my talents, and I've been thinking a lot about open
  9. source and all the good that comes with software freedom.</p>
  10. <p>So this last Sunday I took a trip along with a friend of mine to the
  11. <a href="http://freegeekchicago.org/">Chicago Free Geek</a> (which is just one of
  12. a <a href="http://freegeek.org/family.php">larger family</a> of Free Geek
  13. groups). The Free Geek movement is one with a quite noble cause;
  14. volunteers there take donated old computers and construct working
  15. computers out of the old parts, salvaging what works and recycling
  16. what doesn't. The new computers they build from the old parts are
  17. then installed with the <a href="http://www.xubuntu.org/">Xubuntu</a> GNU/Linux
  18. distribution. (Xubuntu is really just <a href="http://ubuntu.com">Ubuntu</a>
  19. with <a href="http://www.xfce.org/">XFCE</a> as its default desktop. XFCE's a bit
  20. faster and leaner than <a href="http://www.gnome.org/">GNOME</a>, the otherwise
  21. default Ubuntu desktop). These computers then make their way mostly
  22. to people who couldn't otherwise afford them, either by being sold for
  23. ultra-cheap (the money then goes toward recycling the unusable parts
  24. and upkeep) or through a program where individuals can earn computers
  25. by helping with the recycling and building for a number of hours.</p>
  26. <p>In short, it's a damn cool group, and I really enjoyed being there.
  27. The location's a bit grungier than I expected (even though I expected
  28. grungy). It's in the middle of a bit of a basement, and it was a bit
  29. cramped, but it seems that it wasn't always that way; if I understand
  30. what I was being told, the gate surrounding the work area was only
  31. recently put up by the landlord (I wasn't told why... funding?). Not
  32. all the computer parts were moved into the gate yet, and I'm not quite
  33. sure how they were going to get it all in. One of the volunteer staff
  34. pointed to a large pile of parts, informing me that, once they
  35. recycled those, they'd be able to fit more within the space, but they
  36. needed to raise more money before they could do so.</p>
  37. <p>Despite things being a bit cramped an grungy, I really did enjoy the
  38. work. It was very much so hardware related. That's not outside my
  39. area of knowledge... I was a datacenter monkey at my previous
  40. job... but I must admit that I much prefer the area in which I
  41. currently work, that of software development. I'll probably be coming
  42. back for some more volunteering, but I can't help but feel that my
  43. skills are better suited for a much more software-oriented approach to
  44. activism. I really do believe in the empowerment that <a href="http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html">free
  45. software</a> brings, and I'd
  46. like to spread that empowerment to more people. I've been thinking
  47. quite a bit that the bringing free software to education is probably
  48. the most important and useful route I could follow.</p>
  49. <p>I am considering contacting some of the more underfunded schools in
  50. the area to see how I can help. Not too long ago, some other
  51. volunteering led to discussions with a principal who seemed interested
  52. in taking this route. I am going to try to contact him, and see where
  53. that takes me. When more happens, I will write about it here.</p>
  54. <p>In the meanwhile, that friend of mine has been volunteering at a local
  55. community computer center, and has begun to install Linux there.
  56. Perhaps I will visit there and continue to volunteer at the local Free
  57. Geek chapter as I continue to figure out this education thread.</p>