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Australia's LinuxChix unite to form AussieChix

By Melissa Draper on March 07, 2007 (8:00:00 AM)

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LinuxChix, a social networking group for women who use Linux and other open source software, was formed in 1999 by Deb Richardson, a Linux user who was frustrated by the attitudes of many other Linux-oriented groups. Since then, the organisation has grown dramatically, and there are currently more than 40 regional LinuxChix chapters around the world. Until February, LinuxChix had chapters in Australia in Melbourne and Sydney. Following discussions at the Linux.Conf.Au conference in Sydney in January, members realised that a national group would better serve the country. Last month the groups united to form AussieChix, a new nationwide chapter that makes the group more accommodating to women from across Australia, whilst also improving the communications between the members of the previous chapters.

AussieChix is not an exclusive club. It is free to join, and the only requirements are to "be polite, be helpful." According to the group's pitch to members, "You don't need to love Linux -- you don't even need to have dabbled in the deviant delights of open source software. If you are a woman who wants to get more out of her machine, we want you."

Being a woman in IT can be lonely at times, according to Donna Benjamin, the chapter's spokeswoman. "Many of us have expressed a sense of isolation. The image created for our conference T-shirts this year showed one woman in a line of men, and the caption was 'standing out from the crowd' because it's a bit like that. We're often the only girl-geek in our local communities."

Benjamin first started using Linux via an account on a friend's computer 12 years ago. "It was just an account on someone else's Linux box, and I used to Telnet in, check email, browse the Web, and connect to bulletin boards."

She met her husband on a bulletin board in 1994, and they, along with a group of other guys, set up and ran their own BBS. "That was my first experience in being involved in the leadership of a virtual community. It ran software called YAWC on Linux."

Benjamin now has many roles in the open source community. She is director of Open Source Industry Australia, an industry association for open source companies, and conference director for the 2008 Linux.Conf.Au, which is to be held in Melbourne. Additionally, she runs a business, Creative Contingencies, which she started back in 1997 and which runs on Linux. It offers Web services, research, meeting facilitation, and more recently, event management.

"All our servers run the Linux operating system and a range of other free and open source applications," she says. "Our desktop computers run Linux almost exclusively, and our laptops are multiboot machines running a range of different operating systems."

Quite a few of the AussieChix members are veteran geeks. Some started out in the early '80s when computing was not quite a male-dominated industry, but there are many novices too.

"LinuxChix is a place to hang out with other women who appreciate technology, and most importantly, to have fun," Benjamin says. "It's early days for us, but we're all keen to increase the number of women in our network, to reach out to each other and share our experiences, knowledge and ideas."

March 8 is International Women's Day. To celebrate, AussieChix is holding its official launch, with the aim being to highlight the existence and importance of women in the IT industry. You're invited to visit the chapter's Web site or drop into the #aussiechix IRC channel on irc.linuxchix.org.

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contact

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 08, 2007 06:51 AM
I noticed how the suse 10.1 and 10.2 releases at he local book store (Introduction to linux and Linux User magazine) were only available for three or four days befor they sold out. This gave me the idea that a store ( were I live there are pharmacies that sell a little of everything but not to much of anything - household supplies, outdoor & gardening, patch kit for bicycle, quart of oil, magazine rack, cosmetics etc.) a pharmacy could sell the intro to linux in the stationary or office supplies areas. There could be a version that included softwere for a telephone connection to avoid internet problems and maintain privacy for business or personel comunication used for ftp, fax, picture, vidio, audio sold in the greeting card section for families, a program for white board and something that left mesages (read from text or send voice mesage using auto dial and send upon answere) could be usfull communications tool for local clubs and community groups sports clubs and so on. Internet access could be made available and info on shortwave connection. (After reading this forum last mounth I noticed related articals about short wave and how the current CW mag has info. about radio that connects to a local router so a person can get on air using only a mic. or qwerty key board for the equivalent cost of a graphics card, 25 watts and can talk efectivly around the world.) This lead to the idea that a pharmacy and hardware store mite offer an entry level computer for about $300.00 (sempron upgradable to dual or quad, 512 ram, RW dvd, case, and options between a vidio card that allows a TV as a monitor or a standard computer screen.) This same entry level computer could be made available at hardwere stores to help small bussiness trac project costs, scheduling, and inventory. If an ellectonics chain partnered to provide tech assistance the pharmacy and hardware store would promote the ellectronics chain and have another product to offer that allowed associated sales of software as well.

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Re:contact - something to add to your list

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 08, 2007 10:30 PM
Suse may be getting around the issue (Linspire doing good work in this area also) of multimedia codex. From what I've read, I agree that the codex issue will continue to be a huge stumbling block for Linux use outside of geekdom. If the average home user can't open the box, plug in the machine, press on and see all the pretty videos and music without legally questionable (and geekly intricate) codex installs then we're boned from the start.

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LinuxChix?

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 08, 2007 06:57 AM
whooooot that's hot.

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and you are why

Posted by: Administrator on March 08, 2007 03:34 PM
there's a LinuxChix in the first place. Grow up, or go back to your parents' basement and leave the rest of the world alone.

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Re:LinuxChix?

Posted by: Administrator on March 09, 2007 01:55 PM
No, that's good. Tech doesn't have to be male-dominated, and it would be nice to have a gender mix so that tech can appeal to all people.

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Re:and you are why

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 09, 2007 07:39 AM
you must be a feminist

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oh please

Posted by: Administrator on March 09, 2007 01:29 PM
I take issue with the attitude that women are for sex first, intelligence second, and that somehow makes me a feminist? No, it makes me someone with a brain in the upper head, where it belongs.

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anything with a keyboard was "women's work"

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 10, 2007 12:20 AM
"Some started out in the early '80s when computing was not quite a male-dominated industry" -- Yup. And in the 70's, when I started, while it was not quite a pink-collar ghetto, in a lot of uber-manly man environments (electronics and electrical engineering, geophysics, architecture, mechanical engineering...) programming and particularly systems wrok was considered just the kind of scut work that "maybe Susie can do for us..."<nobr> <wbr></nobr>...because it involved sitting at a keyboard, typing, rather than sitting at a drawing board doing "more technical" work. Tee hee. I sure took THAT ball and ran with it! The jerks. Half of those "manly men" engineers and architects I've worked for are unemployed, unemployable or early-semi-"retarded" today. Hnf. Serves them right.

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Re:anything with a keyboard was "women's work"

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 13, 2007 12:49 AM
Susie is that you? come back to bed

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Selling out?

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 16, 2007 02:25 AM
"AussieChix"? What happened to the "Linux" part of the name?

If there were a bunch of "Linux Dudes" chapters in the U.S. that got together and called themselves "AmericanDudes", would that make any sense?

I understand the desire to appeal to a broader base, but I hope the group retains its focus on Free Software and not just "how to use a computer, for women".

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Re:oh please

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 16, 2007 08:06 AM
Right gus3, because having intelligent conversations is the most important thing in life and sex is second<nobr> <wbr></nobr>:)

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Australia's LinuxChix unite to form AussieChix

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