Linux at the Library?
Dean Siren asks: "Has anyone put a copy of Linux at a public or school library, free to check out, copy, install, and return? It's legal, and for many people would be a more convenient way to get ahold of Linux than purchasing or downloading (by putting it in a school library, it's almost as much forced exposure as Channel 1). I'm still talking with my local librarians about it, and wondering if it's an effective way to get 'converts'." What an interesting thought. I may have to check on doing this at my local library and those of you interested in this can check in your neck of the woods, as well. It would be interesting to see how such an idea is received.
A few assorted thoughts as I wait for my compilation. . .
-"Zow"
1. I always ask the librarian if it is ok if I add CD-rom of linux to the unix and linux books in the library. So far, all of them have been enthusiastic that someone is interested in providing linux to the libraris (although im sure they dont know what it is exactly
..."
2. I carefully and fully label exactly what is on the Cd-RoM. I put say "Debian distribution of linux 2.2 revision3"
and also put "If you have any question, please email me at
I think the email idea is probably the best thing you can do if you provide linux CD's as if a person has questions they can contact you immediately!
I wish i had that when i started.
Thanks for reading
Sigs are dangerous coy things
The problem is keeping the CD up-to-date. It's too much trouble for your library. If you're going to pester your librarian with your ideas, its got to be something that's worth their money and time. "It'd be great!" is not a good enough reason.
- Get your LUG together and chip in enough money to buy permanant subscriptions for the library for a few distributions. You could pool enough money to buy them a 10 year CD subscription, subject to renewal if your LUG is around in 10 years.
- Do some serious fundraising and create a foundation. You basically need enough money that the annual interest is enough to pay for the CD subscription renewal, with enough left over to offset inflation. You'll also need a lawyer, a grant/proposal-writer, and some rich, gullible, er... generous friends.
- Simpler yet, communicate to the library what exactly free software means. If you do your job right, they'll see the CDs don't need to be checked out at all -- they can burn copies and charge enough to cover costs just like they do for photocopies of microfiche or other special services.
- Or give them something turnkey. Build and donate a computer system to mirror a few distributions over the internet with a simple menu to burn CDs for patrons on request. They could charge a reasonable price, say $3-$5 which might cover the media and bandwidth overhead.
Whatever you do, you're also going to have to make sure the CDs are freely liscenced materials or you could run into an administative snag with some official terrified that the library is going to be sued into oblivion for software piracy. It doesn't matter if the risk is real or not, but the perception of their being a risk will cause the library to turn down the proposal.
It'd be great to check out linux CDs from the library, but to be honest you already can, and you just didn't notice. Go to the computer books sections and find a book on Linux that says "CD enclosed!" and take it to the front desk. They'll bring you the CDs and check 'em out to you. So really, the only point of doing what you want to do is to do away with the need for the "Dummies" book to accompany the CD. The only reason to do that is if your Linux CDs in the library have some advantage to compensate for not being bundled with a book.
But there ARE advantages to be had. One, with a subscription or a mirror, the library always has a copy that is up-to-date, with no effort on the part of their staff. Two, the resource is digital and under non-restrictive license, so it can be copied perfectly, repeatedly, and inexpensively, all without fear of legal reprisals. The CD then stays in the library and is therefore always "checked in" -- no waiting lists, no missing copies, no interlibrary loan. One well-equipped library can provide the CDs or mirrors over the WAN/MAN to all the other libraries in the county or even the state!
Before you bother your local library with any poorly-research ideas (especially harvested from poorly edited or mispelled slashdot posts... case in point...), you should figure out how to provide the maximum service and utility to library patrons with minimal cost and maintenance for the library. Part of the problem with our library systems failure to move into the digital age is that people keep treating digital media like books. Software is different. There's no rational reason to "check out" CDs of software, especially free software, when unlimited copies can be made for $1 each.
RMS (rms@stallman.org) or anybody at the FSF (http://www.fsf.org) could probably give you better advice than I could.
Beware of Sig:
Democracy. Whiskey. Sexy. Pick any two.