10:47:10 #startmeeting IRC Meeting 1 10:47:10 Meeting started Tue May 23 10:47:10 2017 UTC. The chair is hislopg. Information about MeetBot at http://wiki.debian.org/MeetBot. 10:47:10 Useful Commands: #action #agreed #halp #info #idea #link #topic. 10:47:10 The meeting name has been set to 'irc_meeting_1' 10:47:12 yes sure! 10:47:33 The agenda for the meeting is here: 10:47:34 #chair heidie 10:47:34 Current chairs: heidie hislopg 10:47:37 #link http://foss2serve.org/index.php/IRC_Meeting_1 10:48:00 I've started out meetbot - this will create a transcript and summary of the meeting 10:48:03 Let's start by introducing ourselves. 10:48:07 "our meetbot" 10:48:19 I'm Heidi Ellis, a member of the foss2serve team and a professor at Western New England University. 10:48:36 I'm Greg Hislop from Drexel University. Also a team member 10:49:14 I'm Priti Narwal, working as Assistant Professor in Manav rachna International University,India 10:49:34 Hi Priti! 10:49:58 Hi Priti! 10:50:09 I think that's all we have for introductions... 10:50:11 OK, so we've done the intros. 10:50:12 :-) 10:50:23 pri2507_, are you familiar with IRC? Have you used it before? 10:50:49 (all the others listed as being on the channel are POSSE people of some sort and I think they are all "away" 10:51:10 Hi Heidi and Hislop...No I am not familiar with IRC. 10:51:31 So IRC is a common method of communication in open source projects. 10:51:43 But i can see the information provided by you in the mentioned link. 10:51:54 Good! 10:52:16 So zodbot isn't actually a person. 10:52:25 ok ! 10:52:30 zodbot is a bot that is keeping meeting notes. 10:53:00 Not all IRC interactions are kept in notes, but all are public so you should expect that anything you say will be public. 10:53:30 Okay! i got it. 10:53:30 And IRC is also widely used as an informal form of communication. 10:53:48 You can probably see that there are other folks in our channel who aren't talking right now. 10:54:01 They're hanging out. 10:54:20 If you type one of their names, their screen will flash or machine might beep. 10:54:27 To bring their attention to the chat window. 10:54:42 Does it provides you a channel to have communication with people having similar work interests? 10:55:00 Ah, this is the fun part. 10:55:12 You can name a channel anything and you can create a channel on the fly. 10:55:27 ok 10:55:42 So you could say /join #happytimes and the IRC server would create a channel if one didn't exist, or put you in that channel if it does exist. 10:55:42 But there are also channels that people use in communities 10:55:53 Many groups have established channels. 10:56:08 so #foss2serve is a channel that we use for all the communication related to POSSE 10:56:20 Most of these channels are formally registered with the server. 10:56:36 You can also have multiple channels open simultaneously. 10:56:46 ok! now i understand. 10:56:53 When I'm online, I always have five different channels open on two different servers. 10:57:13 And when someone wants to talk with me, they type my name into their IRC window. 10:57:20 If I'm at my computer, I can respond. 10:57:37 What client are you using? 10:59:18 i didn't get it 10:59:34 What software are you using to run IRC? Chatzilla? 10:59:39 I'm using HexChat. 11:00:00 webchat 11:00:04 Ah, OK. 11:00:09 And I'm using Chatzilla 11:00:13 ok 11:00:17 So if I type your name, pri2507_ what do you see or hear. 11:00:23 Does your screen flash? A beep? 11:00:33 no 11:01:00 Ah, OK, many clients let you know when someone has typed your name. 11:01:10 Do you have other questions about IRC? 11:01:51 No , not now. 11:02:16 I will use Chatzilla for IRC then. 11:02:56 The meetbot will produce a variety of formats. 11:02:57 Chatzilla will definitely flash the icon if you are mentioned in an IRC chat 11:03:01 Here is an example of the formats: 11:03:07 #link https://meetbot-raw.fedoraproject.org/foss2serve/2017-04-14/ 11:04:03 how can i access the meetbot for #foss2serve?only by this link? 11:04:24 The meetbot itself is a program that executes on this channel. 11:04:36 The output of the meetbot for this channel may be found here: 11:04:50 okay! 11:04:52 #link https://meetbot-raw.fedoraproject.org/foss2serve/ 11:05:13 These are the meeting notes for POSSE meetings since we started hosting POSSE workshops in 2013. 11:06:35 ok.but if i want to access yesterday's meeting logs..how can i do it? 11:07:00 Ah, if you go to that link I just provided, you can see a very brief meeting, all the way at the bottom. 11:07:07 got it:) 11:07:08 This is because the meetbot happened to be broken. 11:07:11 yesterday. 11:07:27 So if you go here: 11:07:27 http://foss2serve.org/index.php/IRC_Meeting_1 11:07:44 You'll also see the notes from this meeting at that address - but they don't appear until after we end the meeting 11:07:47 And go to the bottom, you'll see a link to the raw log from yesterday's notes. 11:08:14 And you will be able to see the notes from the rest of the meetings at that same link (once they have ended). 11:08:31 And usually there are more people in the meeting so there is more interaction :-) 11:08:47 A few other things to note. 11:08:50 ok thanku so much Heidi 11:09:01 There are ways to signal that you are "away" (meaning busy or not paying attention). 11:09:22 If you use the /away command, you are flagged as being away 11:09:33 I just went away 11:09:56 I'm not sure what you see, but sometimes it makes the user name italics and sometimes it appends an underscore to the user name. 11:10:05 How "away" shows up for others depends on the client... 11:10:09 That tells you that the person isn't likely to pay attention if you flag them. 11:10:11 I am not able to see that either .. 11:10:16 Ah, OK 11:10:23 on Chatzilla, "Heidie" is now in italics 11:10:23 I came back. 11:10:40 I'm greyed out in HexChat 11:11:06 The other thing to note is that people will express thoughts using the /me command 11:11:21 For example: 11:11:23 * heidie looks for the link to the previous IRC logs. 11:11:33 I will try that in Chatzilla..webchat doesn't show all this. 11:11:42 Ah, yes, might not. 11:11:43 ok 11:11:59 OK, feels like we've thrown a lot of information at you. 11:12:02 Questions? 11:12:07 the web clients tend to have fewer features 11:13:07 I think i should first go through from all this information and try these commands in Chatzilla 11:13:18 Makes senst. 11:13:25 the other command that you may want is the /nick 11:13:36 That command allows you to change your name. For example: 11:13:48 I just changed my name to "heidi_away" 11:13:52 \nick heidie 11:13:56 Just changed i back. 11:14:27 Oh, and the /help command gives information about the commands. 11:14:28 ok 11:14:50 OK, we've got about 15 minutes left. 11:15:22 Let's change the topic to HFOSS projects. 11:15:31 #topic HFOSS Projects 11:16:01 yes i have reviewed HFOSS projects 11:16:01 #topic HFOSS Projects 11:16:19 Ah, I'm not a meeting chair. Thank you hislopg 11:16:44 you were the meeting chair - but as heidie 11:16:51 Oh, right. :-) 11:16:56 :-) 11:17:06 pri2507_, What questions do you have about HFOSS projects? 11:17:49 How can we contribute in any project? 11:18:38 The activities that you have been completing are there to help you understand HFOSS communities. 11:19:10 ok! 11:19:34 The "Intro to FOSS Project Anatomy" and "FOSS Field Trip" activities provide understanding of the major features of HFOSS projects. 11:20:11 Once you have an idea of how HFOSS projects work, you can start to see ways to contribute. 11:20:37 Ok!got it. 11:20:54 You may also find this page on the TeachingOpenSource site helpful: 11:20:57 #link http://teachingopensource.org/for-instructors/getting-started-for-instructors/ 11:22:12 At this point, we expect everyone to just be starting to look at HFOSS projects 11:22:35 So don't worry if you're still trying to figure out the basics about any project! 11:22:44 Sure. 11:23:52 pri2507: Do you have any other questions at this time? 11:25:02 No further questions. 11:25:11 But 11:25:33 but? 11:25:36 Not able to decide on projects right now. 11:25:48 Ah, don't worry about selecting a project now. 11:25:58 That's OK - you have some time to decide. 11:26:02 Some participants know what they want to do, others are just getting started. 11:26:23 At this point we want to be sure everyone is starting to explore projects - that's enough for now 11:26:41 So we can wrap this up. Note that I typically hang out in this channel so if you have questions later, ping me. 11:26:43 OK - let's wrap up this meeting... 11:26:51 Although I'll be gone for the next few hours. 11:26:55 ok. thanks again 11:27:09 nice to chat! bye all! 11:27:12 #endmeeting