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DATE 2022-03-01

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DATE 2022-03-20
FROM From: "Free Software Foundation"
SUBJECT Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Day one reflections for LibrePlanet: "Living
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Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Day one reflections for LibrePlanet: "Living
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Dear Ruben Safir,

Today marked the first of two days of events and talks for the Free
Software Foundation's (FSF) annual conference, LibrePlanet. This
year's theme is "Living Liberation," and the talks and activities are
centered around how to live a more liberated life in the modern world.

To start the conference off, campaigns manager, Greg Farough,
gave opening remarks, introduced the day's events and other activities
outside of the main [conference][1], and asked participants to report which
countries they were attending from.

[1]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/

Of the countries represented, we heard from: Brazil, Canada, Finland,
Haiti, Iran, Italy, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, (various states within
the) United States, and many more.

### From GNU Emacs to code.gouv.fr

There were many talks today, and there is much to be said about all of
them, but here are some highlights.

Early in the program, [Bastien Guerry][2] spoke about hacktivism and
the work people like himself have done toward creating just laws via
`code.gouv.fr`. He spoke about "Public money, public code," and the
progress made towards bringing free software into government
administrations. They help governments to publish their code, so that
others may benefit as well. For example, software is published so that
citizens know that their data is not being tracked (e.g. COVID-19
contact tracing).

[2]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5774

### Opening keynote

This year's opening keynote was [Marleen Stikker][3] of [Public
Stack][4], and was scheduled in the middle of the day to accommodate
global time zones. Stikker's talk addressed what she calls the
"technology stack" and what we can do to achieve a more
"freedom-respecting stack."

[3]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5914
[4]: https://publicstack.net/

Marleen shared that, before the conference, FSF staff asked, "What
operating system are you going to use?" A good and important question
for a conference, but not a common one. Of mobile devices she said,
"If you own a device, you should have the right to change its firmware
and drivers." Moving on to talk about infrastructure, she mentioned
"it should a public utility." The talk was well received, as Marleen
touched upon many of the issues faced by people who try to liberate
their lives more and more every day.

### Ethical e-books

Later in the day, [Nicholas Bernhard][5] spoke about the challenges
and opportunities to "building an ethical e-book." He explained how,
while the redistribution of physical books are permitted under
"first-sale" doctrine, e-books are often not, "since the publisher is
merely offering access, not ownership, the law does not apply." The
main thesis of Nicholas's talk centered around the freedom to read,
saying that you should be able to "read a book, or e-book, on your own
terms."

[5]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5763

Digital devices are driving us further away from the way we understand
reading and ownership. He said, "Very often, we are reading by the
publisher's permission." Nicholas followed with a statement of
support to free software, saying, "That is why I think free software
is *essential* to an ethical e-book."

For this conference, Craig Topham of FSF's Licensing and Compliance
Lab conducted a trivia quiz game, keeping people entertained during
the lunch break. The winners have been announced. First prize goes to
Luukas Ahola, second prize goes to Lovish (IRC nickname), and third
prize goes to Juan Luis Gonzalo.

### Why our economy fails public goods like free software

Near the end of the day, Aaron Wolf, founder of [snowdrift.coop][6],
gave an overview of various economic models and the implications for
free software. He even, to the audience's delight, sang a phrase from
the "Free Software Song."

[6]: https://snowdrift.coop

The day concluded with this year's [Free Software Awards ceremony][7],
followed by closing remarks. This year's recipients of the awards are
Paul Eggert, Protesilaos Stavrou, and SecuRepairs. As the ceremony was
conducted virtually this year, each winner selected the person they
wished to present them the award.

[7]: https://www.fsf.org/news/free-software-awards-winners-announced-securepairs-protesilaos-stavrou-paul-eggert

Each recipient submitted a pre-recorded acceptance speech. Paul
Roberts, of SecuRepairs, in his acceptance speech said, "You cannot
afford to sit this one out," referring to the fight for the Right to
Repair. Recipient of the Award for the Advancement of Free Software,
Paul Eggert, gave a talk about his work on the Time Zone Database
(TZDB), highlighting some of the challenges they have to deal with to
keep the system running smoothly. Recipient of the Award for
Outstanding New Free Software Contributor, Protesilaos Stavrou (also
known as Prot), is on our schedule for Sunday at 14:30 - 15:15 EDT
(18:30 UTC), and we are working with Paul Roberts of SecuRepairs, who
won the Award for Projects of Social Benefit, on a future date to talk
at the FSF.

### Coming Sunday

Sunday, we have [many more talks][8] by many more fantastic speakers!
The lineup includes everything from command-line graphic design (with
[Manufactura Independente][9]) tricks to "The state of software
patents in 2022," with ([Panos Alevropoulos][10]), to "brain hacking,"
with [Rubén Rodríguez][11], and more! [Hundred Rabbits][12] is
Sunday's keynote with their talk that explores "the dangers and
shortcomings of relying on always-online proprietary platforms," and
the FSF is conducting the closing keynote.

[8]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/program
[9]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5846
[10]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5739
[11]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5835
[12]: https://100r.co

Please join me in thanking the tech team for doing such incredible
work pushing through all the challenges (as well as taking advantage
of all the wonderful opportunities in running a fully free (as in
freedom) event. For those who attended today, I hope that you enjoyed
the conference, and that you can attend tomorrow as well. Don't miss
this year's LibrePlanet day two!

***

Devin Ulibarri
Outreach & Communications Coordinator

-----
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LibrePlanet 2022: Living Liberation







 


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Read and share online: https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/day-one-reflections-for-libreplanet-living-liberation





Dear Ruben Safir,



Today marked the first of two days of events and talks for the Free
Software Foundation's (FSF) annual conference, LibrePlanet. This
year's theme is "Living Liberation," and the talks and activities are
centered around how to live a more liberated life in the modern world.



To start the conference off, campaigns manager, Greg Farough,
gave opening remarks, introduced the day's events and other activities
outside of the main conference, and asked participants to report which
countries they were attending from.


Of the countries represented, we heard from: Brazil, Canada, Finland,
Haiti, Iran, Italy, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, (various states within
the) United States, and many more.


From GNU Emacs to code.gouv.fr


There were many talks today, and there is much to be said about all of
them, but here are some highlights.


Early in the program, Bastien Guerry spoke about hacktivism and
the work people like himself have done toward creating just laws via
code.gouv.fr. He spoke about "Public money, public code," and the
progress made towards bringing free software into government
administrations. They help governments to publish their code, so that
others may benefit as well. For example, software is published so that
citizens know that their data is not being tracked (e.g. COVID-19
contact tracing).


Opening keynote


This year's opening keynote was Marleen Stikker of Public
Stack
, and was scheduled in the middle of the day to accommodate
global time zones. Stikker's talk addressed what she calls the
"technology stack" and what we can do to achieve a more
"freedom-respecting stack."


Marleen shared that, before the conference, FSF staff asked, "What
operating system are you going to use?" A good and important question
for a conference, but not a common one. Of mobile devices she said,
"If you own a device, you should have the right to change its firmware
and drivers." Moving on to talk about infrastructure, she mentioned
"it should a public utility." The talk was well received, as Marleen
touched upon many of the issues faced by people who try to liberate
their lives more and more every day.


Ethical e-books


Later in the day, Nicholas Bernhard spoke about the challenges
and opportunities to "building an ethical e-book." He explained how,
while the redistribution of physical books are permitted under
"first-sale" doctrine, e-books are often not, "since the publisher is
merely offering access, not ownership, the law does not apply." The
main thesis of Nicholas's talk centered around the freedom to read,
saying that you should be able to "read a book, or e-book, on your own
terms."


Digital devices are driving us further away from the way we understand
reading and ownership. He said, "Very often, we are reading by the
publisher's permission." Nicholas followed with a statement of
support to free software, saying, "That is why I think free software
is essential to an ethical e-book."


For this conference, Craig Topham of FSF's Licensing and Compliance
Lab conducted a trivia quiz game, keeping people entertained during
the lunch break. The winners have been announced. First prize goes to
Luukas Ahola, second prize goes to Lovish (IRC nickname), and third
prize goes to Juan Luis Gonzalo.


Why our economy fails public goods like free software


Near the end of the day, Aaron Wolf, founder of snowdrift.coop,
gave an overview of various economic models and the implications for
free software. He even, to the audience's delight, sang a phrase from
the "Free Software Song."


The day concluded with this year's Free Software Awards ceremony,
followed by closing remarks. This year's recipients of the awards are
Paul Eggert, Protesilaos Stavrou, and SecuRepairs. As the ceremony was
conducted virtually this year, each winner selected the person they
wished to present them the award.


Each recipient submitted a pre-recorded acceptance speech. Paul
Roberts, of SecuRepairs, in his acceptance speech said, "You cannot
afford to sit this one out," referring to the fight for the Right to
Repair. Recipient of the Award for the Advancement of Free Software,
Paul Eggert, gave a talk about his work on the Time Zone Database
(TZDB), highlighting some of the challenges they have to deal with to
keep the system running smoothly. Recipient of the Award for
Outstanding New Free Software Contributor, Protesilaos Stavrou (also
known as Prot), is on our schedule for Sunday at 14:30 - 15:15 EDT
(18:30 UTC), and we are working with Paul Roberts of SecuRepairs, who
won the Award for Projects of Social Benefit, on a future date to talk
at the FSF.


Coming Sunday


Sunday, we have many more talks by many more fantastic speakers!
The lineup includes everything from command-line graphic design (with
Manufactura Independente) tricks to "The state of software
patents in 2022," with (Panos Alevropoulos), to "brain hacking,"
with Rubén Rodríguez, and more! Hundred Rabbits is
Sunday's keynote with their talk that explores "the dangers and
shortcomings of relying on always-online proprietary platforms," and
the FSF is conducting the closing keynote.


Please join me in thanking the tech team for doing such incredible
work pushing through all the challenges (as well as taking advantage
of all the wonderful opportunities in running a fully free (as in
freedom) event. For those who attended today, I hope that you enjoyed
the conference, and that you can attend tomorrow as well. Don't miss
this year's LibrePlanet day two!



Devin Ulibarri

Outreach & Communications Coordinator


Images Copyright © 2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc., licensed under
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.








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*Please consider adding to your address book, which
will ensure that our messages reach you and not your spam box.*

*Read and share online: *


Dear Ruben Safir,

Today marked the first of two days of events and talks for the Free
Software Foundation's (FSF) annual conference, LibrePlanet. This
year's theme is "Living Liberation," and the talks and activities are
centered around how to live a more liberated life in the modern world.

To start the conference off, campaigns manager, Greg Farough,
gave opening remarks, introduced the day's events and other activities
outside of the main [conference][1], and asked participants to report which
countries they were attending from.

[1]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/

Of the countries represented, we heard from: Brazil, Canada, Finland,
Haiti, Iran, Italy, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, (various states within
the) United States, and many more.

### From GNU Emacs to code.gouv.fr

There were many talks today, and there is much to be said about all of
them, but here are some highlights.

Early in the program, [Bastien Guerry][2] spoke about hacktivism and
the work people like himself have done toward creating just laws via
`code.gouv.fr`. He spoke about "Public money, public code," and the
progress made towards bringing free software into government
administrations. They help governments to publish their code, so that
others may benefit as well. For example, software is published so that
citizens know that their data is not being tracked (e.g. COVID-19
contact tracing).

[2]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5774

### Opening keynote

This year's opening keynote was [Marleen Stikker][3] of [Public
Stack][4], and was scheduled in the middle of the day to accommodate
global time zones. Stikker's talk addressed what she calls the
"technology stack" and what we can do to achieve a more
"freedom-respecting stack."

[3]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5914
[4]: https://publicstack.net/

Marleen shared that, before the conference, FSF staff asked, "What
operating system are you going to use?" A good and important question
for a conference, but not a common one. Of mobile devices she said,
"If you own a device, you should have the right to change its firmware
and drivers." Moving on to talk about infrastructure, she mentioned
"it should a public utility." The talk was well received, as Marleen
touched upon many of the issues faced by people who try to liberate
their lives more and more every day.

### Ethical e-books

Later in the day, [Nicholas Bernhard][5] spoke about the challenges
and opportunities to "building an ethical e-book." He explained how,
while the redistribution of physical books are permitted under
"first-sale" doctrine, e-books are often not, "since the publisher is
merely offering access, not ownership, the law does not apply." The
main thesis of Nicholas's talk centered around the freedom to read,
saying that you should be able to "read a book, or e-book, on your own
terms."

[5]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5763

Digital devices are driving us further away from the way we understand
reading and ownership. He said, "Very often, we are reading by the
publisher's permission." Nicholas followed with a statement of
support to free software, saying, "That is why I think free software
is *essential* to an ethical e-book."

For this conference, Craig Topham of FSF's Licensing and Compliance
Lab conducted a trivia quiz game, keeping people entertained during
the lunch break. The winners have been announced. First prize goes to
Luukas Ahola, second prize goes to Lovish (IRC nickname), and third
prize goes to Juan Luis Gonzalo.

### Why our economy fails public goods like free software

Near the end of the day, Aaron Wolf, founder of [snowdrift.coop][6],
gave an overview of various economic models and the implications for
free software. He even, to the audience's delight, sang a phrase from
the "Free Software Song."

[6]: https://snowdrift.coop

The day concluded with this year's [Free Software Awards ceremony][7],
followed by closing remarks. This year's recipients of the awards are
Paul Eggert, Protesilaos Stavrou, and SecuRepairs. As the ceremony was
conducted virtually this year, each winner selected the person they
wished to present them the award.

[7]: https://www.fsf.org/news/free-software-awards-winners-announced-securepairs-protesilaos-stavrou-paul-eggert

Each recipient submitted a pre-recorded acceptance speech. Paul
Roberts, of SecuRepairs, in his acceptance speech said, "You cannot
afford to sit this one out," referring to the fight for the Right to
Repair. Recipient of the Award for the Advancement of Free Software,
Paul Eggert, gave a talk about his work on the Time Zone Database
(TZDB), highlighting some of the challenges they have to deal with to
keep the system running smoothly. Recipient of the Award for
Outstanding New Free Software Contributor, Protesilaos Stavrou (also
known as Prot), is on our schedule for Sunday at 14:30 - 15:15 EDT
(18:30 UTC), and we are working with Paul Roberts of SecuRepairs, who
won the Award for Projects of Social Benefit, on a future date to talk
at the FSF.

### Coming Sunday

Sunday, we have [many more talks][8] by many more fantastic speakers!
The lineup includes everything from command-line graphic design (with
[Manufactura Independente][9]) tricks to "The state of software
patents in 2022," with ([Panos Alevropoulos][10]), to "brain hacking,"
with [Rubén Rodríguez][11], and more! [Hundred Rabbits][12] is
Sunday's keynote with their talk that explores "the dangers and
shortcomings of relying on always-online proprietary platforms," and
the FSF is conducting the closing keynote.

[8]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/program
[9]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5846
[10]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5739
[11]: https://libreplanet.org/2022/speakers/#5835
[12]: https://100r.co

Please join me in thanking the tech team for doing such incredible
work pushing through all the challenges (as well as taking advantage
of all the wonderful opportunities in running a fully free (as in
freedom) event. For those who attended today, I hope that you enjoyed
the conference, and that you can attend tomorrow as well. Don't miss
this year's LibrePlanet day two!

***

Devin Ulibarri
Outreach & Communications Coordinator

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LibrePlanet 2022: Living Liberation







 


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Read and share online: https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/day-one-reflections-for-libreplanet-living-liberation





Dear Ruben Safir,



Today marked the first of two days of events and talks for the Free
Software Foundation's (FSF) annual conference, LibrePlanet. This
year's theme is "Living Liberation," and the talks and activities are
centered around how to live a more liberated life in the modern world.



To start the conference off, campaigns manager, Greg Farough,
gave opening remarks, introduced the day's events and other activities
outside of the main conference, and asked participants to report which
countries they were attending from.


Of the countries represented, we heard from: Brazil, Canada, Finland,
Haiti, Iran, Italy, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, (various states within
the) United States, and many more.


From GNU Emacs to code.gouv.fr


There were many talks today, and there is much to be said about all of
them, but here are some highlights.


Early in the program, Bastien Guerry spoke about hacktivism and
the work people like himself have done toward creating just laws via
code.gouv.fr. He spoke about "Public money, public code," and the
progress made towards bringing free software into government
administrations. They help governments to publish their code, so that
others may benefit as well. For example, software is published so that
citizens know that their data is not being tracked (e.g. COVID-19
contact tracing).


Opening keynote


This year's opening keynote was Marleen Stikker of Public
Stack
, and was scheduled in the middle of the day to accommodate
global time zones. Stikker's talk addressed what she calls the
"technology stack" and what we can do to achieve a more
"freedom-respecting stack."


Marleen shared that, before the conference, FSF staff asked, "What
operating system are you going to use?" A good and important question
for a conference, but not a common one. Of mobile devices she said,
"If you own a device, you should have the right to change its firmware
and drivers." Moving on to talk about infrastructure, she mentioned
"it should a public utility." The talk was well received, as Marleen
touched upon many of the issues faced by people who try to liberate
their lives more and more every day.


Ethical e-books


Later in the day, Nicholas Bernhard spoke about the challenges
and opportunities to "building an ethical e-book." He explained how,
while the redistribution of physical books are permitted under
"first-sale" doctrine, e-books are often not, "since the publisher is
merely offering access, not ownership, the law does not apply." The
main thesis of Nicholas's talk centered around the freedom to read,
saying that you should be able to "read a book, or e-book, on your own
terms."


Digital devices are driving us further away from the way we understand
reading and ownership. He said, "Very often, we are reading by the
publisher's permission." Nicholas followed with a statement of
support to free software, saying, "That is why I think free software
is essential to an ethical e-book."


For this conference, Craig Topham of FSF's Licensing and Compliance
Lab conducted a trivia quiz game, keeping people entertained during
the lunch break. The winners have been announced. First prize goes to
Luukas Ahola, second prize goes to Lovish (IRC nickname), and third
prize goes to Juan Luis Gonzalo.


Why our economy fails public goods like free software


Near the end of the day, Aaron Wolf, founder of snowdrift.coop,
gave an overview of various economic models and the implications for
free software. He even, to the audience's delight, sang a phrase from
the "Free Software Song."


The day concluded with this year's Free Software Awards ceremony,
followed by closing remarks. This year's recipients of the awards are
Paul Eggert, Protesilaos Stavrou, and SecuRepairs. As the ceremony was
conducted virtually this year, each winner selected the person they
wished to present them the award.


Each recipient submitted a pre-recorded acceptance speech. Paul
Roberts, of SecuRepairs, in his acceptance speech said, "You cannot
afford to sit this one out," referring to the fight for the Right to
Repair. Recipient of the Award for the Advancement of Free Software,
Paul Eggert, gave a talk about his work on the Time Zone Database
(TZDB), highlighting some of the challenges they have to deal with to
keep the system running smoothly. Recipient of the Award for
Outstanding New Free Software Contributor, Protesilaos Stavrou (also
known as Prot), is on our schedule for Sunday at 14:30 - 15:15 EDT
(18:30 UTC), and we are working with Paul Roberts of SecuRepairs, who
won the Award for Projects of Social Benefit, on a future date to talk
at the FSF.


Coming Sunday


Sunday, we have many more talks by many more fantastic speakers!
The lineup includes everything from command-line graphic design (with
Manufactura Independente) tricks to "The state of software
patents in 2022," with (Panos Alevropoulos), to "brain hacking,"
with Rubén Rodríguez, and more! Hundred Rabbits is
Sunday's keynote with their talk that explores "the dangers and
shortcomings of relying on always-online proprietary platforms," and
the FSF is conducting the closing keynote.


Please join me in thanking the tech team for doing such incredible
work pushing through all the challenges (as well as taking advantage
of all the wonderful opportunities in running a fully free (as in
freedom) event. For those who attended today, I hope that you enjoyed
the conference, and that you can attend tomorrow as well. Don't miss
this year's LibrePlanet day two!



Devin Ulibarri

Outreach & Communications Coordinator


Images Copyright © 2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc., licensed under
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.








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  1. 2022-03-01 Ruben Safir <ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] New Suse and Admon tools
  2. 2022-03-01 From: =?utf-8?Q?Zo=C3=AB_Kooyman=2C_FSF?= <info-at-fsf.org> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] My appointment as the FSF's new executive director
  3. 2022-03-02 From: "Free Software Foundation" <info-at-fsf.org> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Free Software Supporter - Issue 167, March 2022
  4. 2022-03-02 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] How to generate invoices/receipt on
  5. 2022-03-02 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] GNUHealth back-up
  6. 2022-03-04 Ruben Safir <ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Fwd: All-Time High Number of ADA Title III Suits
  7. 2022-03-05 Ruben Safir <ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] AI AND THE INTERNET
  8. 2022-03-06 Ruben Safir <ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Research oppurtunities
  9. 2022-03-07 G?bor Szab? <gabor-at-szabgab.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Perlweekly] #554 - Exceptions in Perl?
  10. 2022-03-07 Yael Israel <masainfo-at-join.masaisrael.org> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [NEW] TLV Tech Jobs for You!
  11. 2022-03-08 Ruben Safir <mrbrklyn-at-panix.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Don't waste your time
  12. 2022-03-08 From: "Northwell Health Careers" <northwell_careers-at-email.northwellhealth.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Join Northwell Health this Wednesday,
  13. 2022-03-08 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] GNUHealth back-up
  14. 2022-03-08 From: "Dr. Axel Braun" <axel.braun-at-gnuhealth.org> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] GNUHealth back-up
  15. 2022-03-08 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] How to generate invoices/receipt on
  16. 2022-03-08 From: "Northwell Health Careers" <northwell_careers-at-email.northwellhealth.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Join Northwell Health this Wednesday,
  17. 2022-03-09 Ruben Safir <ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Ending the war in the Urkraine toot suite..
  18. 2022-03-09 Aviva <aviva-at-gmx.us> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [ Docs ] Ending the war in the Urkraine toot
  19. 2022-03-09 Ruben Safir <ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [ Docs ] Ending the war in the Urkraine toot
  20. 2022-03-09 sderrick <sderrick-at-optonline.net> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] Ending the war in the Urkraine toot suite..
  21. 2022-03-08 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] BLANK Page on Health_Lab Report
  22. 2022-03-09 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] BLANK Page on Health_Lab Report
  23. 2022-03-09 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] BLANK Page on Health_Lab Report
  24. 2022-03-09 From: "Dr. Axel Braun" <axel.braun-at-gnuhealth.org> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] BLANK Page on Health_Lab Report
  25. 2022-03-09 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] BLANK Page on Health_Lab Report
  26. 2022-03-09 Luis Falcon <falcon-at-gnuhealth.org> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] GNUHealth back-up
  27. 2022-03-09 From: "Dr. Axel Braun" <axel.braun-at-gnuhealth.org> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] BLANK Page on Health_Lab Report
  28. 2022-03-09 Luis Falcon <falcon-at-gnuhealth.org> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] BLANK Page on Health_Lab Report
  29. 2022-03-08 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] BLANK Page on Health_Lab Report
  30. 2022-03-09 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] BLANK Page on Health_Lab Report
  31. 2022-03-07 Professional Career Services via Docs <docs-at-mrbrklyn.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [ Docs ] PCS Postings March 7
  32. 2022-03-14 G?bor Szab? <gabor-at-szabgab.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Perlweekly] #555 - Holidays
  33. 2022-03-15 Ruben Safir <ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Copyright Wars and Databases and Robots
  34. 2022-03-14 From: "nixCraft: Linux Tips, Hacks, Tutorials, Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] nixCraft Linux / UNIX Newsletter
  35. 2022-03-18 Ruben Safir <ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Occasionally - a completely transformative
  36. 2022-03-18 From: "Medscape News Alert" <Medscape_News_Alert-at-mail.medscape.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] FDA Approves New Immunotherapy Combo for Melanoma
  37. 2022-03-19 From: "Dr. Axel Braun" <axel.braun-at-gnuhealth.org> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] Incompatible version of the server
  38. 2022-03-19 Yusif Suleiman <yusifsuleiman-at-hotmail.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] Incompatible version of the server
  39. 2022-03-20 From: "Free Software Foundation" <info-at-fsf.org> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Day one reflections for LibrePlanet: "Living
  40. 2022-03-20 From: "Dr. Axel Braun" <axel.braun-at-gnuhealth.org> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] Incompatible version of the server
  41. 2022-03-21 From: "Devin Ulibarri, FSF" <info-at-fsf.org> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] LibrePlanet: "Living Liberation" Day two
  42. 2022-03-21 Luis Falcon <falcon-at-gnuhealth.org> Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Health] Incompatible version of the server
  43. 2022-03-21 G?bor Szab? <gabor-at-szabgab.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Perlweekly] #556 - Cucumber & Perl
  44. 2022-03-21 G?bor Szab? <gabor-at-szabgab.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Perlweekly] #556 - Cucumber & Perl
  45. 2022-03-22 From: "Professional Career Services" <nj-at-nj.pcsjobs.org> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] PCS Postings March 22
  46. 2022-03-28 G?bor Szab? <gabor-at-szabgab.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Perlweekly] #557 - Human languages
  47. 2022-03-28 G?bor Szab? <gabor-at-szabgab.com> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] [Perlweekly] #557 - Human languages
  48. 2022-03-29 From: "Free Software Foundation" <info-at-fsf.org> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] Take the next step in "living liberation": watch
  49. 2022-03-31 The Billie Holiday Theatre <info-at-thebillieholiday.org> Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] ruben Happy Women's History Month

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