I think this is a great idea. My first distro was Redhat 5.0 which I
borrowed from the Library with the book "Learn Linux in 24 hours". What a
joke I'm still learning, but it did give me a good kickstart and help with
the initial steep learning curve.

Bjorn


-----Original Message-----
From: Yuri DeGroot [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, 1 November 2001 10:10 a.m.
To: 'lu'
Subject: Linux available in libraries


>>advertising and/or perhaps donations of linux distributions to
>>public libraries (such as the Wellington LUG appear to be doing
>>at the moment))
>
>What a bizarre thing to do...  It'd be a long shot that Linux
>would be used if donated to a library.  Libraries are part of
>councils, and councils by nature are slow moving, bureaucratic
>>beasts with ingrained culture.

Chris, not for libraries to use on their own systems, but to put
on their shelves for borrowers to take home, install, and return
the disks by the due date.

This would require a purely free distro (no proprietary pkgs).

If I could pick up the latest disks from the local library,
install them overnight, and bring them back for the next
borrower, I would have switched to linux much sooner than I did.

This is especially true for people who don't have the bandwidth
to download the ISOs.

My $0.02

Yuri





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