UCLALUG Mission Statement
Objective
The UCLALUG's purpose is to faciliate learning, creativity, and the advancement of computer science. The UCLALUG
accomplishes this goal by promoting the use of the Linux operating system at UCLA and encouraging its use among
students, faculty, staff, and University departments. The UCLALUG promotes Linux use by providing a support
network for Linux users and by building a library of Linux-related materials, as well as various versions of Linux on
multiple platforms. These publically available resources are stored and used in the UCLALUG lounge, which also
serves as a meeting room and classroom.
Activities
In promoting the use of Linux, UCLALUG also encourages programming under this operating system in the form of
student-coordinated projects. UCLALUG student projects benefit the UCLA community, and the Linux community, with
emphasis on the intersection of the two. All software produced under the auspices of UCLALUG is distributed under
an Open Source approved license.
The UCLALUG facilitates certain activities which benefit the UCLA and/or Linux community. These events include:
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The operation of at least one 'Install Fest' per academic quarter, which average between 35 to 45 installs. These
install fests directly benefit students and faculty involved with the CS111 (Operating Systems) series of classes. They
also provide the UCLALUG with our greatest in-person exposure to the community and give the organization an
excellent opportunity to recruit new members.
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The UCLALUG gives classes to the community on a wide range of topics that benefit many groups. Some of the topics lectured upon include:
These sessions are typically instructed by UCLALUG members.
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Technical talks from several individuals including:
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The organization of UCLALUG members interested in participating in local Linux community events. Such events
include talks on Open Source software by anthropologist Eric Raymond (a popular Open Source Advocate), a
'LUGFest' event in the Simi Valley (hosted by Nortel Networks), and an upcoming event hosted by
Linux Mandrake.
In addition to events, the UCLALUG provides several resources to UCLA students. These resources include:
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The operation of several mailing lists, the most popular of which is used as a community support forum.
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The operation of several servers with the explicit goals of providing shell access to students, unlimited web and
e-mail space, and a vast ftp resource with mirrors of kernel.org, helixcode.com, redhat.com and
mandrake.com. The maintenance of these machines has given the students who run them valuable System
Administration experience. Student Administrators regularly deal with real issues such as network security, account
administration, network policy, and hardware maintenance/troubleshooting.
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The operation of several software development machines, and development resources (such as whiteboards,
programming/design books, etc). Several free software projects have been developed on by UCLALUG
members, ranging from CPU Emulation software (Phaethon's Hack For CUSP;), interactive 3-D games (Hover Carnage, Weapons Factory Arena), Printing Software (GNU Lpr), Integrated Development Environments (gIDE), A Powell Library authentication
client (bol-auth.tar.gz), and a multitude of small utilities, shell and perl scripts.
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A lab and accompanying computing resources which students use for:
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Hands on learning of UNIX systems, including system administration of such services as FTP, SMTP, HTTP, DNS,
NFS, SSH, POP3, Relational Databases (MySQL), DHCP, CVS, basic account management, and security auditing.
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Study sessions, including tutoring sessions, study group sessions, and most importantly, overflow space for when
other HSSEAS computer labs are full (students in CS130, CS174, and CS152A/B have especially found the extra
resources useful)
UCLALUG adds significant value to the UCLA community. The hands-on experiences, training, and practice that are
availible to UCLALUG members, especially when coupled with the top-tier theoretical training in Computer Science
available from HSSEAS provide an academic setting which is unmatched in most university environments.
Related Links:
Henry Samueli School of Engineering & Applied Science
Linux Online
UCLA
UCLA Department of Computer Science
UCLALUG
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