On Wednesday, March 28, 2007 10:49:44 am Scott Ledyard wrote: > Having followed this thread for a bit, I am interested in the context since > I've seen some pretty crazy things become of demos. I'd like to know what > would make for a *great* Edubuntu / LTSP demo. Maybe others can chip in > from their successes / failures like Uwe did.
Planning and Testing is the key. Always look out for Murphy's Law and don't do a public demo on an unfamiliar and untested machine, less you wanted to be like Bill Gates on the Conan O Brien show. Be very careful, and always do a last minute tests before presenting them to your audience. This would make or break Linux.... Remember that line: "First Impressions lasts!" > Another thing that Uwe alludes to to predict expectations. His audience had > positive responses that weren't ones I would have considered. (BTW, I'll > have to try that unplug / replug trick!) Regarding LTSP, the shock factor would always come from LTSP.... So where's the shock-factor? It's the "access your desktop anywhere" feature. Let them login to a PC and have them configure the desktop and urge them to download a file and save it on the desktop, then let them logout and ask them to log back in a computer in the other end of the room. Windows users are always surprised that their settings and files are still intact and can be accessed from anywhere within the network. They just can't get over the idea that even their desktop settings can be stored on a network. > I'm wondering what is it that you want to demonstrate? Is this > demonstration to decision makers and, if so, what are they looking for? > Speed? > Compatibility with MS systems? Student productivity? Security? Do they even > care if it's Linux? There's only one thing a businessman (Principal, Dean, President, or even a Janitor) would understand... money! If you show them a "cool" feature and top it off with a talk on how to get this feature and save lots and lots of money by reusing old computers instead of upgrading them to accomodate a newer and more expensive OS, a businessman would always buy it. It's their IT Dept. that you have to worry about, it's always the case, since they will be the ones who will resist (you can't help it, they're so used to Windows) and even get to the point of making up stories just so a company won't migrate to open source. Now, what really matters is how "not" to mess it all up. That is why planning and testing should always be on the top of your checklist. Hope this helps out. -- Dax Solomon Umaming http://knightlust.com [EMAIL PROTECTED] GPG Key: 0xEDE9C473
pgpwfdnZsZxpS.pgp
Description: PGP signature
-- edubuntu-users mailing list [email protected] Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/edubuntu-users
