On 14/10/16 17:26, Rudolf wrote:
> I would recommend finding out who has the buying power at a local
> school, that's the person you're going to have to convince to deploy
> your system not to mention whoever runs IT at the school department.
>
That is the #1 task in any sales process
> From
I would recommend finding out who has the buying power at a local school,
that's the person you're going to have to convince to deploy your system
not to mention whoever runs IT at the school department.
>From my highschool days I remember we only ran Windows and they were locked
down to particula
I think our local schools in Melrose, Massachusetts are primarily Windows, with
some Chromebooks and iPads here and there for special purposes.
Many years ago I was chatting with a high school teacher at a GNU/Linux user's
group meeting. He said, "If you put students in front of computers in the
El 13 de octubre de 2016 00:18:37 GMT+01:00, Aaron E-J
escribió:
>I am developing a ready-out-of the-box, open source virtual remote
>desktop platform and would like to investigate its deployment in school
>systems. My assumption is that most schools are using proprietary
>technologies (Mac/PC)
Well, not my kids, but my very own school looks like this:All Mircosoft Windows
PCs, all "upgraded" to Windows 10.They all have free software solutions
pre-installed, like Libre-Office, but those are only used by me.The Computer
have the tendency to be very slow even though, they have good CPUs