I've been lurking on here for a few months and although I'm impressed and 
excited about all the great work you're all doing, there is really nothing 
going on here that is useful to me or that I can be useful to (the more 
important issue, IMHO).
 
I love that you're working so hard on bringing computer access to 
resource-light areas of the world. I am from a third-world country myself 
(Venezuela), and belong to the national Ubuntu users group there.
 
I've introduced myself before, but let me do that again as it's been a while:
 
My name is Simón Anibal Ruiz Rolfs, and I am the Technology Assistant at 
Bloomington High School North in Bloomington, Indiana. Some of you may know 
that the Department of Education in Indiana is moving towards Open Source 
integration for the purposes of facilitating a 1:1 computing environment in 
classrooms, an environment that some research points to as having beneficial 
effects on education. At my high school we have received, through two separate 
instances of grants from this program, nine 1:1 computing classrooms (279+ 
workstations) which are required to run Linux.
 
Our existing tech support structure has abandoned this program, and I have 
become the de facto support for this entire program.
 
I blog at indianalinux.blogspot.com about the experiences I'm having, if you're 
interested.
 
Anyhow, these workstations are far too beefy to be LTSP clients (that is, it'd 
be a waste to use them as such), so they all run as desktops. Last year I used 
Edubuntu on the first batch of computers, and this year as I'm redesigning the 
system we're using I've honestly started using plain vanilla Ubuntu.
 
In my work, I'm concerned with managing a large network of "modern" desktop 
computers and integrating them with the existing Windows network. I don't use 
the LTSP component, and since these computers are in Language Arts (English) 
classrooms, all the nifty educational packages are just games as far as the 
teachers are concerned.
 
Since I'm using Ubuntu in an educational setting, flying the Edubuntu flag may 
seem the obvious answer. As I said, though, the project doesn't really bring 
anything useful to me, or allow me to bring something useful back to the 
project.
 
I've stayed on this list in case circumstances change, though, but I figured 
I've waited long enough and should say something.
 
So, any ideas? How can I be useful to Edubuntu? Or should I just stick with 
vanilla Ubuntu?
 
Hope this finds you all having a great day!
 
Simón

-- 
edubuntu-devel mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/edubuntu-devel

Reply via email to