I was at a seminar recently that Novell and IBM sponsored.  With Novell's
purchase of SuSE (Soo-SAY) linux this week, there was a discernable buzz
in the room.  Novell listed company after company that has, or is
converting to 100% desktop linux.  They said that the entire Novell
workforce will be - has been already -converting to linux desktop. 

The entire seminar was demo'd using Star Office's PPT, etc on SuSE.  Their
take was that it makes business sense to save $$ by getting a free OS and
a free office suite.  Then IBM talked of their big iron running linux. 
Maybe it's not what most schools run (mondo servers and mainframes), but
they again told of company after company that's going 100% linux.  Wow. 
It is no longer a groundswell, it seems.  Then VMWare (very cool product,
BTW) said the same. It began to appear that their message wasn't to buy
Novell or IBM, but that Linux is no longer fringe stuff, it is becoming
mainstream.  
-----
So I was left thinking about the big picture, particulary after hearing
the same thing in a converse way at the MSOffice System release seminar:
Whether Mac, Microsoft, or Linux, it is easier to manage a 100% homogenous
network.  But the reality is that most of us have heterogeneous nets.

"But," I'm asked, "is Linux appropriate for Education?" The more that apps
move to the web, the more appropriate, I'd say.  The education market is
not there yet, where all our apps and work is via the web, but in cases
where a user needs just email and office, we could get set them up for a
whole lot cheaper on SuSE than Microsoft... or Apple.  Consider the price
of a cheap Celeron whitebox - roughly $300.00 including monitor, OS and
Office free.  And as apps move to the web (I'm reminded here of how often
the elementary labs are using the Scholastic web site to do drill and
practice), the more appropriate yet. 

So, following the recent thread of downloads, here's the SuSE link to
download the i386 iso and burn to a CD.  It comes with Star Office.
http://www.suse.com/us/private/download/ftp/int_mirrors.html

Meantime, for those who follow the industry in general, here's Novell's
take on the SuSE acquisition...
http://www.novell.com/connectionmagazine/2003/12/bottom_line.html

Steve Scarbrough, Technology Coordinator
Storm Lake Community School District
419 Lake Avenue
Storm Lake, IA  50588
712.732.8100   fax:8101
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.storm-lake.k12.ia.us/~sscarbrough/

---
[This E-mail scanned for viruses by Declude Virus on the server aea8.k12.ia.us]

---------------------------------------------------------
Archived messages from this list can be found at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
---------------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to