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