Report on SFD 25th November, 16th December 2017, 27th January, 24th February and 24th March 2018. We have been over busy and being the only English speaking person, I will make quite salient and interesting encounters. We always started the day eating lunch together and brief on the activities and designate who does what. The visitors count is constant ~35 people, steady audience. We have the usual visitors and “chance” visitors. Over these five months, we made new contacts: 1. A guy popped in and wanted a webmaster, could not help because he had all his requirements in his mind and could not clearly explain what he wanted. I sent him back to the black/white board. 2. A blind person accompanied by a usual visitor wanted to ‘try’ openSUSE. I did not approve a change as his brail system was already using Ubuntu. We do not fix a working computer. He said that he had a spare PC, so I proposed to install openSUSE on the spare PC, next time. 3. A few visitors discovered our “party” they were from Marseille, we spent time talking about food et al. They had no computers, they were just visiting. They saw what we do and how openSUSE worked though. 4. The person who came in October finally bought the HP that we recommended. We started installation but when it came to transfer the old files, we had to visit her the next day Sunday to finish the job. 5. JC came with his wife, he had bought a new motorbike and wanted some changes to his profile pictures on FB and also other Social sites. 6. I noticed that Raspberry was not something that got the visitors excited. 7. However, WSL seem for them a Try before ditching Windows. I did explain that we did not recommend that they made the big step without a net. We always go through dual boot step first (just in case). 8. Our Calc student is getting better and better. 9. The teacher took a few DVDs for his esteemed students. 10. There were *two* LUGs in Rouen. The other one seem dormant and his attendees bring their sick computers running UBUNTU for repairs. Change management is of essence. We therefore give an openSUSE DVD to those who can install by themselves and for others, we have to either repair/reinstall UBUNTU or install openSUSE if they readily say *YES*. 11. From the dissidents of the other LUG, we have strange demands: email not working, hard disk replacement, in a particular lady who wanted to run Linux on a PC of 2008; repeat 2008. We could not because openSUSE Leap is 64 bit. 12. Another visitor left her PC and I personally took 6 days on and off to repair the beast…. 13. New people wanted information, some came for goodies (could not handle that one), DVD, Linux Magazine, asking for a donation (yes average of 2 people per session) 14. VLC is still an issue; It seems to me that the right repository (Packman) should be the one readily added so that it is installed smoothly. 15. We had people attempting to migrate 32 bit 13.1 openSUSE to Tumbleweed 32 bit. 16. An interesting issue, new faces and old faces not coming back. I met with a lady while doing food shopping last week and in the conversation, I asked her why don’t you come back and see us? Her answer puzzled me: All is working, so no need to visit you. Is it so? Well, we need to celebrate :D 17. Coming back to Tumbleweed, one of our visitors migrated a 64 bit openSUSE Leap 42.3 to Tumbleweed and had quite a new “distribution” on box. Reinstallation was required and I told him to stop reading articles on the Internet unless he knows what he is doing. 18. Other clubs came round as usual, but I do not expect them to move to openSUSE, they do have issues, but we are not volunteering to move them around. One of them will come in April with his laptop; he has lost the wireless module….. 19. There is a project manager who came on two different dates, he sort of mingled but he is not technical. 20. Our Greek lady is back, latest episode, she has viruses on 7 USB keys. I have taken them home for cleaning. 21. We also noticed a new comer who says he comes from Mascarenes area in the Indian Ocean, we started to discuss on fauna and recipes before getting into the nitty gritty. He had a quite old computer aged 11 years and never used Linux before. 22. The new challenge is to get openSUSE and SUSE working on WSL *with* a DE, XFCE will be nice. I successfully installed XFCE on Kali, UBUNTU and Debian. I personally demonstrated WSL and meanwhile at home succeeded in installing xfce on SUSE and openSUSE LEAP. 23. Linux Presentation Day is back 28th April ( https://nui.fr/blog/linux-presentation-day-2018-a-rouen-normandie/ ), if there are some spare Linux Magazines and some bits and pieces, I would be so ever grateful. Four more events left before Summer holidays. We will have more fun :D Best, Jimmy -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+owner@opensuse.org