This note is only tangentially a response to Peter Robinson's... Here's my thought process...
Computer technology can improve education for children. Collaboration (i.e. Sugar) and free software (i.e. Linux) is the best way to make this happen. The question is how do we get educators/schools to start using (or switch to) Sugar/Linux for children's educational computing. We can go down a route similar to OLPC. Tell them to buy new hardware (XOs), buy new server hardware (to run XS), reconfigure their networks (Xs controls all network access). (i.e. Convince people at the top of the organizations) Or we can put together software systems which disturb pre-existing technology as little as possible. Require as few new hardware purchases as possible. Not require schools to make either/or decisions. Instead let them use old AND new. This is probably a 'developed world' point of view. The original goal of OLPC was to bring technology to places/children who have no access at all. They did this through better/cheaper hardware. Sugar, however, is inherently software. There is nothing SugarLabs can do other then to try to support the widest range of hardware possible. However, widespread use in the developed world on old/cheap hardware isn't a bad thing. More real world usage will (hopefully) result in more contributors and make it a better system for all users. As a result, I think the second approach is fundamental to getting Sugar used and therefore improving education. I also believe that SoaS is fundamental to supporting old AND new environments and therefore is fundamental to changing children's education. Personally, I don't care what Linux distribution it is based on. (My personal desktop is Ubuntu, but I'm fine with SoaS being based on Fedora.) I also don't think we can leave Sugar LiveUSB to any distribution. My impression is that both LiveCD and LiveUSB Linux distributions are essentially gimmicks for all of them. Does anybody other then SoaS use (or hope to use) Live environments for regular operations for thousands if not millions of users? Given the above, I conclude that SoaS really needs to be something that SugarLabs supports. That doesn't mean that Sugar should be tied to SoaS, just that it really is a fundamental part of changing education. Bill Bogstad _______________________________________________ IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!) [email protected] http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep
