Hi all,

An article on the Nepali Times regarding the recent deployment of NepaLinux
2.0 (through LTSP) in Dailekh:

http://nepalitimes.com/issue/360/Nation/13814

---
Dailekh bridges the digital divide
Cost and language used to be barriers to computer use in Nepali schools. No
longer.
SHRISTEE GURUNG

The two factors restricting the spread of computers in Nepal are cost and
language. But a pilot scheme to test a Linux-based LAN system in schools in
Dailekh and Lalitpur have shown that accessibility and affordability needn't
be a problem anymore.

The digital divide doesn't just exist between rich and poor countries, but
also within countries like Nepal. More than 80 percent of the computers and
internet connections in Nepal are located inside Kathmandu's Ring Road.

The challenge is to encourage computer usage in Nepali language and also
equipment that would be cost-effective for the school management. Madan
Puraskar Pustakalaya's Linux Terminal Server Project (LTSP) is trying to
test initiative and see if it works. The idea is not to distribute laptops
to every school child, but set up a computer lab so students can learn basic
skills.

LTSP is a Linux add-on package where one powerful server is shared among
dumb terminals (also known as 'thin clients'). The server is a high-end
computer with a hard disk of 120 GB capacity, a powerful processor of
2.6GHz and 512 MB RAM. Although the cost of the server is 20 percent
higher
than a standard computer, the cheaper thin clients cut down overall cost of
the network. Because the dumb terminals don't need CD-ROMS and other
accessories they are 40 percent cheaper than standard computers.

This is an excellent way, for example, to recycle used CPUs from companies
and individuals in Kathmandu willing to donate them when they upgrade to
more powerful equipment. It can be up to 25 percent cheaper to install four
computers under LTSP compared to standard costs (see table).

At Dailekh's Kimugaon a pilot LTSP project was implemented at the Basanta
Madyamik Bidayala which has 400 students, most of whom have never seen a
computer before. So, the first computer they used had a Neplinux
2.0operating system so everything on the screen was in Nepali.

Grade Four student Laxmi Kumari Thapa couldn't hide her excitement. "I
hadn't even seen a television before this," she said, "I can't wait to tell
my parents that I used a computer."

Installing the computers in the school was also an exhilarating experience
for enginners Amit Aryal and Dayaram Budathoki who went to Dailekh to teach
teachers and students basic concepts of mouse, keyboard, monitor, writing
and saving files with Nepali text.

"It was my first encounter with the reality of Nepali schools in remote
areas and I was really moved, it was very rewarding," says Dayaram.

Basanta Madhyamik was the first school in Dailekh to ever have computers, so
there was excitement not just at the school but also among local government
officials, political parties and parents.

Says Amit: "In Kathmandu we've become so blasé about computers, and to see
the excitement in the faces of the students really made it worthwhile for
me."
Teachers are planning to make computer class compulsory for students of
grades two to eight. And since the desktop commands are all in Nepali there
won't be any barrier to use.

The LTSP project is already running successfully in Phulchoki Primary School
in Godavari south of Kathmandu, and Dailekh was the second pilot. Two more
schools in Dang and Bhaktapur are getting LTSP networks with a grant from
the Helap Nepal Network from the Nepali diaspora. Students from class one to
five can now use computers to play educational games, learn to type text
files, and send emails in Nepali.

More Nepali schools can benefit from this scheme because the computer
applications are accessible and also within the budget of most schools in
the country.

*Cheaper and better*


*Unit* *Price* *Cost LTSP* *Normal cost* Server 1 33,300 33,300
 Thin client 3 15,400 46,200
 Normal cost 4 26,400
106,000 *TOTAL*

*79,500* *106,000*

If a school were to install four computers under the prevailing costs, the
bill for four computers would come to Rs 106,000. But if the hardware was
networked through a server and three dumb terminals, it would be less than
Rs 80,000, saving more than Rs 26,000.
---

Cheers,
Subir

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