David Van Assche wrote: > The politics are far more complicated, edubuntu used to be a thriving > community, which prompted Canonical to market the Educational side > more and use the Ubuntu branding rather than edubuntu. It caused some > confusion and the commun
In the UK the education market is almost sewn up with Microsoft. To break in, one is dealing with big institutionalised organisations. As I understand it, marketing into such an environment with apparently two products, Ubuntu for the office and admin and Edubuntu for the students side, was less persuasive than offering the concept of one product - Ubuntu - and simply using the add-on facility for Edubuntu features. This is my take from questions I have asked previously re Edubuntu. I know from my own experience very locally in the education scene that offering apparently two products rather than 'one' would have been a complicated marketing pitch. I was in a small group of linux users who had a meeting a few months ago with a UK Government minister on the subject of use of FOSS in government and education -- alan cocks Kubuntu user#10391 Linux user #360648 _______________________________________________ IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!) [email protected] http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep
