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Re: [Fsfe-uk] Intro and a request for information


From: Graham Seaman
Subject: Re: [Fsfe-uk] Intro and a request for information
Date: Wed, 10 Nov 2004 11:26:07 +0000
User-agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 0.8 (X11/20040918)

Chris Lale wrote:

Hello Simon.

On Tue, 2004-11-09 at 19:52, Simon wrote:
The school is using RM for the network, and I want to
install any Linux distro as long as the kids (aged about 14 - 16) can
get along with it. But I need some cds to get started.

My preference would be for something based on Debian
(http://www.debian.org/). It is free software (as in freedom and as in
price) - a good ethic to expose young people to. It is also very robust
and easy to maintain.

Ubuntu is also Debian based and has a live CD. Since the intention is to provide a user-focused version of debian with reasonably uptodate packages (without the complexities of dealing with unstable/testing), it's probably a good bet for your purposes (disclaimer: I have no experience of running Linux in a school, but am happily using ubuntu at home, and have just booted the live CD for the first time - on a laptop, nice clean window manager, from inserting cd to editing in open office in around a minute).

Cheers
Graham

I used to run an RM network. Unless things have changed, I don't expect
that you will be allowed to run Linux over the network. Perhaps you
could install Linux on each workstation hard drive, making it dual-boot.
Perhaps that is not allowed either!

If your workstations have CD drives, you could use live CD's. There are
several Debian-based live distros: Knoppix (http://www.knoppix.com/) is
KDE-based, Gnoppix (http://www.gnoppix.org) is Gnome-based as is Morphix
(http://www.morphix.org). A great advantage of this route is that your
students can legally take the CD home and use it on their own computer,
copy it, distribute it to friends, etc.

Just download the iso image(s) from the website(s) using your school's
broadband connection, and burn onto CD.
If you download the full Debian distro, the testing version (Sarge) runs
to 13 CDs. A better idea in this case might be to install Debian to
workstations directly over the network using your broadband connection.

Have fun!

Chris.





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