[K12OSN] OT:Microsoft Windows ousted at California school district

Kemp, Levi lnkemp at bolivar.k12.mo.us
Fri Mar 2 21:13:25 UTC 2007


Would using WINE be the same as "Ericom software - a Citrix alternative
-- enabled the terminals to run the district's existing and
irreplaceable Microsoft Windows educational applications, including Type
to Learn, Reading Counts and Kid Pix." as stated in the article? We have
those programs and I was planning on running them using WINE, but I was
trying to figure out what they used.

 

Levi Kemp

Technology Specialist

Bolivar R-I School District

417-328-8943

lnkemp at bolivar.k12.mo.us <mailto:lnkemp at bolivar.k12.mo.us> 

________________________________

From: k12osn-bounces at redhat.com [mailto:k12osn-bounces at redhat.com] On
Behalf Of pogson
Sent: Friday, March 02, 2007 8:37 AM
To: k12osn at redhat.com
Subject: [K12OSN] OT:Microsoft Windows ousted at California school
district

 

The story is pretty sparse. It looks to me that they had a couple of
issues:
User permissions for files and thin clients. 

I do not understand the comment that they had to add one user at a time.
That is the Windows way. In Linux, one would use scripts and it would
take minutes. Perhaps they had to get the info out of AD first... That
makes sense if they wanted to keep users connected to their data. I had
the privilege of creating a system with no user history. I created staff
accounts from a list of usernames and created student accounts using APG
(Automatic Password Generator). I had teachers associate student names
with account userids. They could have solved their problems by grouping
staff, teachers, students. Perhaps they had staff that moved between
buildings...

I have never seen a Linux system that would not work with thin clients.
Use LTSP to boot the thin clients and an X connection to whatever server
you run.

I guess they got locked into Suse and their way of doing things and it
did not fit their setup. That is the problem with migration. You try to
do the same old thing with the new system when it is unnatural. I say,
make a clean break with the old system, automate account generation and
migrate the data. If Windows will not produce clean text files with user
information, scan the system with a Linux live CD or whatever to harvest
the information. If file directories match usernames, and teachers and
students are segragated it shoud be doable.

Robert Pogson

On Thu, 2007-01-03 at 20:32 -0500, k12osn-request at redhat.com wrote:



From: Sergio Chaves <sergio at turbocorp.com>
Subject: [K12OSN] OT:Microsoft Windows ousted at California school
        district
To: k12osn at redhat.com
Message-ID: <200703011316.15838.sergio at turbocorp.com>
Content-Type: Text/Plain;  charset="iso-8859-1"

It would be better if it was LTSP but still a nice headline to read on a
rainy 
morning here in ATL.

http://searchopensource.techtarget.com/originalContent/0,289142,sid39_gc
i1245710,00.htm 

 
-- 
A problem is an opportunity.

 

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