ARTICLE

Unleashing The Ubuntu LoCo Directory

by | Tue 16 Mar 2010

One of the most wonderful sub-communities in the Ubuntu world are our [LoCo Teams](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LoCoTeams); the global span of Ubuntu advocacy groups that are out there every day helping to spread the word about Ubuntu. These wonderful people are on the front-lines helping people to get started with Ubuntu and providing a fantastic place to meet, greet and have fun with other Ubuntu users and contributors.

In terms of resources for this community, we have the following key components:

* [Wiki Pages](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LoCoTeams) – these wiki pages include best practise and details about how to join the community.
* [Teams List](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LoCoTeamList) – this is the big list of teams, complete with contact details and online resources.
* [Mailing List](https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/loco-contacts) – this is where the LoCo community discuss general LoCo related topics. In most cases cases [teams have mailing lists too](https://lists.ubuntu.com/#Ubuntu+Worldwide+LoCo+Teams).
* `#ubuntu-locoteams` on Freenode – this is an online discussion channel where you can ask questions and socialize with other LoCo community members.

One component we have been keen to fix is the *listing of LoCo teams and associated resources and events*. We have discussed this over a few UDSs and I am pleased to show off some work that has been going into making our LoCo portal really effective. Thanks to the wonderful LoCo Directory hackers who have been feverishly working away on this project. You can go and play with it at [https://loco.ubuntu.com](https://loco.ubuntu.com).

The LoCo directory looks like this:

Right now it has the following key features:

* **Teams** – a list of all the LoCo teams in the community.
* **Venues** – a list of venues used by LoCo teams (useful so you don’t need to repeatedly enter new venue information each time you organize and event and also good for sharing good venues with other LoCo team members).
* **Events** – events can be saved to the system and associated with LoCo teams as well as global events such as the [Ubuntu Global Jam](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuGlobalJam).

If you click on the *Teams* link you can see the list of LoCo teams:

This is the full list of teams. Teams that have a humanity colored Ubuntu circle of friends next to them are *Approved* teams, otherwise it is colored gray and indicates the team is not yet approved. Already this makes finding teams much nicer for new Ubuntu members: just point them at [https://loco.ubuntu.com/teams/](https://loco.ubuntu.com/teams/) 🙂

When you click on a team you see more information about the team and their resources/events. As an example, here is my local team *Ubuntu California*:

The team information page shows some key details such as the owner, admins, when the team is next up for re-approval and also links to a series of resources such as websites, IRC channels, forums etc. The page also rather nicely shows their logo. 🙂

Not only this, but the page also shows a list of events that have been organized by the team. In the screenshot above there are two events (they are a little squashed, that is a bug). Clicking on an event shows the details for that specific event. As an example, here are the details for the *Ubuntu Global Jam* event that I have organized in a few weeks time:

When you view an event you can see when it is, what it happens, the location, a map reference and a description. There is also an area where you can RSVP for an event to confirm your attendance or non-attendance: this is a great way of determining how many people are likely to show up to your event.

The way the LoCo directory works is to suck as much information out of Launchpad where possible about teams and then it builds in some of the other features (such as events) into the LoCo directory. This avoids duplication of data and uses Launchpad for key features such as access control and owner/admin information.

Great work, LoCo directory hackers! 🙂

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