News
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A School Grows In Brooklyn 02/04/2001 14:37:27
With help from the back-office outfit for the New York Stock Exchange, an inner-city school that taught jewelry repair is transforming into "IT High," where students seek Cisco training certificates - +
Open Source VOIP Connects to Business 21/03/2007 09:39:09
Open Source VoIP is slowly making gains in enterprise adoption.Nearly three years since Jon "maddog" Hall predicted that "VOIP using an open source solution, such as Asterisk, will generate more business than the entire Linux marketplace today," open source VOIP for the enterprise remains a wild frontier. SMB uptake has been considerable, as open source VOIP's promise of control and cost savings make it a natural fit. But when it comes to large-scale implementations, open source voice has yet to get most enterprises to listen.
Linux may be struggling to gain a foothold in the primary and secondary education market but one Sydney school is setting itself higher grades - all without Microsoft.
At the Lorien Novalis School in the suburb of Glenhaven, 350 students from kindergarten through to year 12 and 38 staff have been learning with the penguin for the past four years.
Stuart Rushton, the school's ICT manager, told Computerworld that senior students first suggested the move to Linux.
"The school was Mac shop and when it was time to upgrade they said why not try Linux?" Rushton said. "So we bought cheap second-hand computers and put Linux on them and we've been running it ever since."
With about 30 desktops running Mandriva (formerly Mandrake) Linux 2006 - chosen for its ease of installation and use - on modest 1GHz Pentium desktops, students use a variety of open source applications for their coursework, including OpenOffice, Firefox, Nvu for Web editing, Evolution for e-mail, Scribus for publishing, the Gimp for image manipulation, QCad for design, and KDevelop for Pascal programming.
"They more than cover everything for education," Rushton said. "If we came to a blockage we would organize around it but have not yet."
The non-open source application is Mojo for animation which Rushton said "works brilliantly on Linux".
Other computers at the school are eight "legacy" Macs used for administration and two Windows machines required for a proprietary library catalogue application. Six other classic Macs are used for video editing but Rushton is seriously looking at replacing Apple's iMovie with the open source Cinelerra video editing tool.
The school's main server is also running Mandriva, version 10.1.
"In 2002 our first server was a well used Sun Ultra 10 (Sparc) running Mandrake 7 [and] it worked very well until the hardware failed," Rushton said. "In 2003 our second server was a very well used HP Netserver LD Pro 133MHz, running Mandrake 9. It couldn't cope with the demand [but] nonetheless it gave good service 90 percent of the time. Late in 2004 our third server, a new HP Proliant ML 110 running Mandrake 10.1 has given 100 percent service ever since [with] no downtime."
While Rushton's focus is on the "education side" everyone at the school is interested in extending Linux use, including moving the library system to the open source Koha. Also under consideration is locally-born Moodle for online course management.
"We have an opportunity to consolidate everything on Linux," he said. "Most important is students working with open source and evolving from there. We started with education because it's where the future of Linux is."
Because Lorien Novalis is comparatively small, Rushton said it does not suffer from the bureaucracy or the "enormous inertia to overcome" of a large school so Linux could get in easily and "everyone was unanimous".
"Our reason for going to Linux was predominantly philosophical, then for quality, and third was the cost - we wanted the best option," he said. "We bought the Mandriva PowerPack to get the manuals and to support open source companies. Often we download free stuff but the latest version was purchased. We're interested in free as in freedom, not that you don't have to pay for something."
Rushton said cost is important but likened vendors that give away educational software to McDonald's giving away free food, "that's a short-term gain".
"School education should be about cooperation and sharing knowledge, which is exactly what open source is about - that's why I can't understand why schools don't embrace it on that level," he said, adding there is a "big black hole" when it comes to Linux in education.
"People are talking about it but are still way behind," he said. "Everyone's interested in teaching a word processor, but not interested in a political statement. The deep technology literacy issue is not even discussed."
Students using Linux at school is also having a flow-on effect outside campus with at least 12 using the operating system at home.
"The kids love their lab and have a lot of ownership. We take it seriously how they feel about lab, and they enjoy that it works," Rushton said. "The tinker value of Linux is brilliant and kids love to tinker so they organize their desktop in a way most people couldn't understand it."
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Realise Your VMware Vision: Storage Consolidation and Virtualization for Small to Medium Businesses
10:30 - 11am (EST, Sydney, Australia)
Wednesday, 4th June 2008
Screening live at your PC
Join Computerworld and our expert speakers:
- Jean-Marc Annonier, Research Manager, IT Spending, IDC
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to learn about the various virtualization technologies available today and what factors are driving it in small to medium businesses. Discover use cases and technologies that allow successful virtualization and storage consolidation for a more flexible IT infrastructure.
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Data Management Edition #10: Multi-Petascale Systems 02/05/2008 09:12:33
This week we look at sustainability and the development of multicore technologies to build multi-petascale systems. - +
IT Security Edition #11: How to poison the Storm botnet 01/05/2008 08:51:55
This week CW Live presents a case study on how to poison the notorious Storm botnet . Plus we take a look at Cisco's plans for Ironport. - +
IT Security Edition #10: Cyber-battles fought and won 24/04/2008 11:09:47
Vendors bow to end user pressure to improve product security, and we take a look at the latest concepts shaping the cyber-battlefield of the future. - +
Data Management Edition #9: Data centre makeover 24/04/2008 07:43:06
This week CW Live looks at the death of the old style data centre which is undergoing its first makeover in more than 30 years. - +
IT Security Edition #9: Inside the bug trade. 16/04/2008 09:08:12
This week guidelines are released for the mandatory reporting of security breaches and we go inside the black market bug trade.
F-Secure Represented On The International Advisory Board IMPACT 2008-05-16 13:42:00+10
Quantum announces General Availability of Industry's First Solution Designed to Match De-Duplication Functionality to Specific B 2008-05-16 10:44:00+10
Hansen Technologies Extends Contract With Tokyo Electric Power Company 2008-05-16 09:44:00+10
More Than 140 Higher Education Institutions Worldwide Use RightNow on Demand CRM 2008-05-15 18:06:00+10
DST International Names Rob Gould as Director of Business Development and Strategy for Australia 2008-05-15 15:40:00+10
SOA Governance: Rule your SOA
SOA Governance is no side issue, but rather the key factor to overall SOA and business success! Effective SOA Governance supports your IT organization, aligns business and IT, and provides the foundation for compliance management.








