Fedora, Public School budgets, Volunteerism??
Matt Morgan
matt.morgan-fedora-list at brooklynmuseum.org
Mon Jun 21 14:29:41 UTC 2004
On 06/19/2004 01:45 PM, Rodolfo J. Paiz wrote:
> At 11:20 6/19/2004, Ken Jones wrote:
>
>> I have the idea that I could volunteer my LINUX skills to the
>> District (a strict MicroSoft house) by building and maintaining for
>> them a software freebie VPN system.
>>
>> It would seem that with the present budget crunches our public school
>> districts, LINUX, plus volunteerism make a natural combo.
>
>
> It would indeed. However, the key cost to a "freebie VPN system" is
> the bandwidth. What exactly do you propose to do and how? Easier to
> help if we have a more complete idea.
>
>
Bandwidth is big, and another huge issue is support. Coming into this
discussion late, I haven't seen any mention of how the original poster
intends for this project to stay free /after/ it goes live. VPN is
confusing for users and they run into lots of surprising issues even
after it's all configured and running. It's like giving them a PC for
the first time, all over again. You don't want to give them something
that works technically, and then be unprepared to give them a lot of
hand holding when they need it.
Here at the museum where I work, the biggest, most difficult issues
about getting our VPN started up were all about ease-of-use. VPN
confuses people, and in general the people who need it most are the
worst computer users. Many people don't really understand drives and
hardware in the first place ... they don't even know where their files
go when they save them. When they get on the VPN, the complication of
local drives, network drives, "here" and "there" can be really bad.
There's nothing so frustrating for a support person as someone getting
to work, having saved an important document on a local drive at home,
accidentally.
Ultimately what we decided was to go with the tunnel-to-terminal server
approach. In other words, the VPN does not allow connecting remote
resources directly; rather, it's just a tunnel to a terminal server
that's inside the network. When they login, what they get looks and
works almost exactly like the desktop they have on their workstations in
the office. It's a little harder to set up, but once it gets going it's
very easy for the users to get productive on it. We actually disabled
any access to local drives from the terminal session, partly for
security reasons but mainly so the users can't make mistakes. This is
just one example of many usability decisions we had to make.
Setting this up a couple years ago, we went with MS Terminal Server, but
there are similar open-source options like LTSP and VNC, etc. Probably
you can set it up with pure X, but why kill yourself? FYI,
http://k12ltsp.org is a great place for help, support, and conversation
about this and other similar topics.
I guess I'm not saying anything specific, except this: make it as easy
as possible to use and that's what will make this project successful.
Don't assume that setting it up with free, open-source solutions will
solve the money problem the school district has. They will be concerned
not just about the initial expense, but also the sustainability of the
project and how it affects their ability to manage their time, long-term.
Good luck,
Matt
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