Dan,

Its to tell K12 to bite the bullet if they had a bullet to bite. in schools It is not a matter of justifying anything, its a matter of the money just plain not being there to buy the software, or in many cases, the hardware, to bump everything up to OSX. i could easily justify that there be less than 3 yr old computers in the schools, with updated systems and apps, and all teachers paid a fair wage, but pigs will be flying from somewhere before this happens in our current culture. in the schools tech money is going away quickly when things get tight. teachers (and the few lab/tech folks left around) are happy to just keep things going as is (that means a whole mix of machines and operating systems). Getting the money and resources together to migrate all the systems to osx just aint gonna happen in most situations. what will happen in most cases is the current os9 machines will live on with os9 till they die (and its amazing to see how long some macs can hang on even in the war zone of a classroom or computer lab!). anything bought post osx will have osx on them, but then again upgrading them all to the latest and greatest or even a single standard OSX version wont usually happen. even in the labs where they get a big hunk of money to get a whole lab of computers at once, things start to age with OSs quickly and the money usually isn't there a few years later to bump things up.

I ran what was considered a very well funded high school lab in Monterey and we couldnt afford to bump all the computers up to the latest osx systems and the older computers couldn't run osx, but i needed them to have enough computers for a whole class at 1 student per computer. It was more a game of just getting things as best i could to run an optimal set of applications to cover as many bases as possible w/in the budget.

All my education applications will have to be delivered with OS9 apps for the next few years, its a fact i just cant get around. even the distributors want it since its still, and for the near future, a good chunk of their market they dont want to give up. its going to make for some tricky fiddling with rev in the future i expect. i hope that rev 261 can live on into the near future well enough to provide the OSX, OS9 and Win apps i need before i am forced to start in 261 o create the os9, then move up to a newer version to create OSX and other newer OS apps then end with a dual development path (ugh!)...

I agree we need to move on to better systems and drop the old ones, but it just means education gets the shaft yet again. And its a game of economics again since the education is the poorest retail section out there so of little concern to business, more the shame. It is, unfortunately, a very vicious circle and it just flushes the education market. Its funny since many of my students could have utilized the power of a newer computer better than most of the business folks i know!

I encourage all of you get out in your local school and talk to the teachers and tech folks (if they have any) and see what its like and how you might help out. You may be lucky and have a rich district or one that has put technology on the front burner, but in the average school its tight. They can also usually use your help. even if its just volunteering to help man the lab at lunch or after school, mentor a bright computer kid, even fix some broken or cranky machines, do some seminars for teachers and technology. Believe me you will get a new appreciation for the K-12 educational system and how hard things can be stacked against it in many ways. But a small amount of help and grease in the right places can make great things happen. Its also greatly rewarding and amazing when you see some of the things that the kids can create!

cheers,

Jeffrey Reynolds



On May 7, 2006, at 1:00 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Yes, I'm aware that some channels and users -- notably education -- haven't been able to justify upgrading hardware to run OS X, but as you say, it's
been four years. Time to bite the bullet, I say.

_______________________________________________
use-revolution mailing list
[email protected]
Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription 
preferences:
http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution

Reply via email to