John Landis,

A few things you will need to figure out in your traditional lab set up before 
using SoaS.

1. What size of USB will you use?  Last time I looked, Sugar Labs recommended 1 
GB.  We use 4GB.  Our Computer Science student wishes we had gone with 8GBs. We 
do get frozen computers when students open too many activities.  If they save 
video  items from Record, you will want more persistent space, and getting 
young kids to record poetry or songs will be a big hit!

2. Will your computers boot from USB?  At one school, kids hit F12 on start-up, 
that gives them a boot menu, and they choose the USB stick. At the other 
location, the IT staff changed the boot order on all the computers so the 
computers now look for the USB stick first, then the hard drive.  The later 
would probably be better with young kids.

That said, your lab may or may not allow you to access your boot order. We have 
run into a lot of home computers that do not allow students to access boot 
order.  Your IT people will obviously have a lot to say about how the sticks 
will be accessed.

3. Sticks will fail at a high rate.  As I mentioned in my first post, we have 
about a 20% failure rate on our sticks every sessions.  Yesterday, one student 
had to try 3 sticks before we got one that would work.  This means we always 
take a lot of back-ups.  We have been at this location for 7 weeks, one hour / 
week, and only one out of 10 students was still using the same stick we gave 
him on day one.  Most are on their second, and a few 3 or more.  We were able 
to figure out that one computer was the problem, not the sticks, so be prepared 
to be methodical in tracking the sticks and computers.

If you are hoping that students will use a stick all year and save their work, 
our experience is that most students will lose their work at some point (sooner 
rather than later) unless you can also back up to a server.  We don't have a 
server supporting our program, and our CS people are having a terrible time 
figuring out how to set up an XS server.  Gerald Ardito set one up for his 
school, I think, so it can be done!

If anyone has ideas for improving the success rates of our sticks, we would 
sure like to hear those ideas.

Good luck.  I know some faculty in Philly if you do want to reach out to higher 
ed.

Kevin
--
Kevin Brooks
Chair
Department of English
Dept 2320, Box 6050
Morrill 219A
North Dakota State University
Fargo ND 58108-6050
701-231-7147
http://english.ndsu.edu/faculty/kevin_brooks/


The computer's true function is to program and orchestrate terrestrial and 
galactic environments and energies in a harmonious way.  -- Marshall McLuhan

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