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by marc3842h
2101 days ago
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My primary and secondary school used Free Software extensively. They ran Ubuntu on all school laptops and everyone used LibreOffice. The web browser of choice was Firefox. The teachers recommended us to use LibreOffice at home too in order to have full compatibility for our assignments. I spoke with the IT manager of the school and he's a real fan of open-source. He gave a talk at a open-source convention about it (in german)[0]. In this video he talks about how he convinced the local government to budget this, how it saved cost and much more. I think this is a great example that this can work and more schools should try this out. From what I heard, the teachers didn't have too many problems and my classmats were quick to adopt without many problems. If I'm honest, I experience more problems with the Microsoft stack in my current school. [0]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fY47YY5BIGc |
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In 1996.
That meant Debian on desktops (in classrooms, 486s with boot floppies and 10MB LAN mounting root over NFS and then XDMCP'ing over to a bigger X server; in the offices and computer labs, Pentiums with local installations, still sharing /home over NFS).
StarOffice was used for everything. We learned Perl in Grade 9 and had our own ~username websites. I ran a LambdaMOO.
I didn't realize how extraordinary this was until I visited a school with locked-down Windows NT 4.0 workstations and began to understand how amazing of a perk I had by having a computer teacher who pushed for this, against the wishes of more conventional teachers who wanted the safe option.
FVWM95 was a godsend in this regard - we could fool some people into thinking they were just on a weird variety of Windows.
I credit my career to this choice and wish I could find the teacher to thank him, but he has a John Smith tier name making him impossible to track down.