gpg: failed to create temporary file '/var/lib/lurker/.#lk0x579e0100.hantslug.org.uk.27289': Permission denied
gpg: keyblock resource '/var/lib/lurker/pubring.gpg': Permission denied
gpg: Signature made Sun Jun  3 12:52:27 2007 BST
gpg:                using DSA key 019AD0D8166C4BF0
gpg: Can't check signature: No public key
Hi,
Yesterday was a BBC/London.pm teach-in at the BBC Broadcase centre in 
London[1]. Annoyingly it clashed with the LUG meeting which I therefore 
missed. Anyhow it was an excellent day with a series of Perl focused talks 
running from 10am to 4pm in a single session with morning and afternoon 
tea/coffee and a light lunch.
I think it was a low-key event that our LUG could easily do. All we need is a 
normal LUG meeting, a few extra speakers and or volunteers prepared to give 
several talks, a bit of cross LUG advertising and a small sponsor.
I think our meetings are brilliant and I must thank the organisers and 
speakers because we have already is so good. However with a little more 
advertising and sponsorship (The BBC provided food and some t-shirts) we 
could stage one event per annum that is a bit bigger than normal. I'm not 
talking about a glitzy multi-session extravaganza, but taking a normal LUG 
meeting (winter ones are more popular I think), with more talks (I volunteer 
to give one or two), and some free tea/coffee/t-shirts (or whatever).
I know a few people on this list work for companies that are heavily involved 
in the open-source businesses. I'm not talking OSCON, I'm just thinking a 
tea/coffee, a few T-shirts or pens - they may even enjoy themselves or 
recruit new staff.
By the way at the BBC the talk was only audio recorded I think, so our video 
talks are already pretty advanced.
By the way there is a teach-in/Hack day thing coming up at Alexandra Palace 
this month[2].
[1]  
http://london.pm.org/teach-in/
[2]  
http://hackday.org/
Is anyone interested? or does it sound like too much effort (herding 
recalcitrant cats) or distorting what we have?
-- 
Adam Trickett
Overton, HANTS, UK
"We must get users past their misunderstandings of uptime. A reboot
 doesn't mean that anything broke, there is no hardware or software
 corrective action taken, so there wasn't any real downtime."
   -- overheard in an MS strategy meeting