Every year, on the last Saturday of October, in Italy there is a national event called “Linux Day” (www.linuxday.it). This year it was the 18th edition and it was held on 27 October. The event is promoted by the Italian Linux Society (www.ils.org), and it is independently organized in many cities all around the country by groups of volunteers, LUGs and various associations. It is probably the biggest Italian event related to Linux an FLOSS, that is directly organized by people involved in the communities and by ordinary users. The aim of such event is to to promote Linux and FLOSS in general: in each city there are many talks, presentations and installation parties. The target audience is not limited to computer enthusiasts, hackers or IT professionals, but newbies, students and curious citizens are welcome as well.
As far as we know, this year Fedora was represented by ambassadors and advocates in five events: ----Link for each event---- in Massa Carrara with a talk about Silverblue oriented to ordinary Linux users, in Ivrea (Turin) with a talk titled "Fedora: an up to date distro for everyone" and in Mezzago (Monza) with a talk titled "The three souls of the web in the service of the communities: information, collaboration, innovation". In Rieti and in Cagliari (Sardinia) there were Fedora booths.
Some details from Massa Carrara (alciregi).
In Carrara there were at least 30 people witnessing the talks, plus a lot of people jumped in just to ask something or to see some project exposed in the dedicated area, and just to grab some swag. The attendees were mainly long time Linux users using various distributions, and some students. The topic of the talk related to Fedora Silverblue has produced much excitement, mainly because on the Linux desktop ecosystem there have been not too many novelties in the last times. On the other side the new kind of Linux distribution was seen as too destabilising in the classical day to day average user workflow. However, the container technology brought to the desktop was seen as an interesting opportunity, and this is particularly true for students looking to learn modern technologies for a future job in the IT field. Here you can find the slides (in Italian) ---link----.
Some details from Ivrea (dariolesca).
In Ivrea, in the University room "Officina H", at least 100 people have took part to the event: someone attending to all the talks and some other jumped in just to lurk and see what kind of event it was. There were many talks about many topics, attendees seemed very interested and compelled, the Q&A session at the end of each talk was very active. There was a gadget booth, where people was able to grab some swag provided by Italian Linux Society and by the Fedora Project. The PC used to show the slides of each talk, it was running Fedora 29 (still beta at the time). The talk presented by Dario Lesca was titled "Fedora: una distro per tutti al passo coi tempi" (more or less translated to "Fedora: an up to date distro for everyone"). In addition it was showed how to keep many desktop environment on the same Fedora installation, and that it is possible to select one of them at each login. A note: Fedora was installed on an USB 3 stick. The attendees have shown a strong interest, and many of them asked how to try it on their PC.
Some details from Mezzago ... ...
What we have learned.
We know that the Italian Fedora Community as a whole is a little bit inactive, compared to some years ago. We know many italian Fedora users, but there is a lack of people with a compelling interest in animating a community. However there are various Italian contributors, but each of us does their work under the hood and not as a local community, in some cases collaborating directly in the international community. Users sometimes don't care about the possibility to contribute to the project (to any project, actually). It seems that people look at a Linux distribution as a product, like a smartphone or a commercial item, and it is particularly true for young people: if it works it is nice, but if they encounter a problem it is more simple to complain or to switch to another distro. At a first glance, it seems difficult to on-board them as contributors. Many people is not aware that there are many ways to contribute inside a community.
What we can do in the future.
For sure in the near future we can work in order to convince current contributors to head up and participate to events with talks ad workshops. Looking to the next year Linux Day, during the coming 12 months, we could try to solicit more people (be they regular users or contributors) to talk about Fedora Project and to organize Fedora booths in more cities than this year event. In addition we should fight laziness, and we could try to invite regular user to contribute and look with interest to the community behind the project, and not only to the technology.