Communication channels
{{G1G1 Support FAQ}
The primary OLPC communication channels are mailing lists, IRC channels, and discussion forums.
Mailing lists
see also Community mailing lists See also blogs for a list of OLPC related blogs and feeds.
The full list of mailing lists is at http://lists.laptop.org. Sometimes they multiply when one isn't watching.
Starting a list
The best way to start a new mailing list is to begin a discussion on a related list that already exists, and once the discussion becomes active, to ask for a separate list for that topic or that sort of traffic. Then create a page here about the list you want to start, with a brief description. Finally, add a link from this page and leave a note for sj or ivan.
Public lists
General announcements
General discussion
Country discussions
Accessibility and other end-use issues |
Software and content development
Hardware and other tech discussions
Technical announcements
|
Chat
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</imagemap>Most OLPC chat takes place on IRC (that's Internet Relay Chat). See also the older IRC page.
IRC
IRC is mainly designed for group communication in discussion 'channels', but allows for personal chat and data transfer as well.
The OLPC Community uses a series of channels in the irc.freenode.net and irc.oftc.net networks. Check {{User irc}} to see how to register your participation in the IRC channels within the wiki, and to find the category where users are registered.
irc.freenode.net channels
General: | |
#olpc-help | Community help. If you need help using your XO, and you haven't asked anywhere else: try here first. |
#olpc | Contact point for all things olpc, and the core hardware development team's own channel. Picture a room where the knowledgeable core people are hard at work. It is a good place for authoritative answers, but people may be out, or too busy to respond, or don't want interruptions at the moment. Consider going to #olpc-help first. |
#olpc-content | content related matters and general discussion. |
#olpc-meeting | OLPC meeting, developer's meeting room |
#sugar | Sugar development. |
Primary Community Channels | |
#olpc-groups | Global channel for all local communities (no language barriers) |
Secondary Community Channels | |
#olpc-es | Spanish language channel |
#olpc-pt | Portugese language channel |
#olpc-europe | Regional discussions for Europe |
irc.oftc.net channels
- #olpc-devel — for core systems and other development, now that #olpc is truly becoming a general discussion channel
- #schoolserver — dedicated to the School server
- #debian-olpc — dedicated to porting Debian to the XO
How to use irc channels
- Visit the Live Web Chat
- Some helpful resources are here, and this tutorial, which also includes basic commands.
- Learn about IRC etiquette. Try here, here, or here.
- Review the software client list. Pick one, download, install. A good all-around choice is Xchat, which works on both Linux and Windows; Linuxchix has a good tutorial.
- For IRC on your XO, install the latest XoIRC activity.
- Connect to to the above channels, and say hello. (To do this, choose irc.freenode.net as your server, and then /join a channel... if you're new to IRC, the #olpc-help channel is probably the place you want to go first).
- Note OLPC growing pains.
Other chat services
If there are any Skype, AIM, or other chatrooms about OLPC, please list them here.
Forums
There are a number of active OLPC forums, including
- http://olpc.osuosl.org, run by Michael Burns and the OSU OSL team
- http://olpcnews.com/forum/ (infrequented by developers)
- http://olpchelp.org - Where OLPC users come for help