I think it was a year or so later that I got Theo a space to talk to the Calgary Unix Users Group.
He was the first not to be a for-profit company.
In 1999, I had a little distribution (if you will) I called "BSDwall", which was just a vanilla OpenBSD install with added scripts to set up two network cards and make it a home firewall.
CUUG then got donations of about 50 destined-for-dumpster 486s and we had "install it, learn it, take it home free" seminars for members and friends.
