On Thu, 2002-09-12 at 18:48, Dan Kegel wrote: > I've put together a resource page re "Linux in Universities" > at http://www.kegel.com/linux/edu/
Federal Institute of Technology in Zürich, Switzerland - has several computer labs (generally accessible to students) with various Linux distributions (mainly RH and Debian). - offers Laptops pre-installed with Linux/Windows dual boot preinstalled (dunno what Linux, though; and the main point here is that they offer Laptop hardware at relatively good prices). - there is debian.ethz.ch (but I doubt it's an official mirror. It's open from the outside, though). The non-Linux systems are mainly Solaris, Windows, MacOS, with practically every OS that ever was around is probably still running on a box somewhere (they got rid of quite a few oddities over the last years, though, so it's not as diverse as it was). David P James <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > difficulty, I guess, is that to have the workstations of undergrads > being linux-based would entail some additional amount of support that > the department really can't provide, even though I am sure they would > like to be able to. Just training students to mount and unmount a > floppy for instance, as we use floppies for data storage quite a bit. > Not a big task, but nevertheless, who is going to do it? Hmmm, in my experience, students helping each other works good enough. When people start at the Federal Institute, almost nobody knows anything about unix, let alone Solaris. People still manage to learn the basics of how to work on a Sun workstation soon enough - after all, there's an older student sitting at the machine next to yours, so you can pester him with questions. And there's also a student paid as a helpdesk person in most computer room, so you can always ask that one. cheers -- vbi -- secure email with gpg http://fortytwo.ch/gpg NOTICE: subkey signature! request key 92082481 from keyserver.kjsl.com
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