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Maine School & Linux

Feztaa writes "This story talks about a private school in Maine that has introduced linux into their computer labs, with smashing success. Apparently, they spent less than half of the money that other schools spent on new computer labs, and got better hardware to boot."

2 of 414 comments (clear)

  1. More ways to save money. by mrsam · · Score: 5, Funny

    While reading the story, and looking at the photo which shows a bunch of fifth graders sitting behinds KDE workstations, with a huge Tux poster in the background, I had another idea how our government can save money.

    As we all know, nuclear tests have been banned for quite some time now. And government research labs all over the fruited plain spend enormous amounts of money on supercomputers that simulate nuclear explosions.

    Well, it should be much cheaper just to set up a bunch of cheap earthquake monitors in the northwest US; have someone print that picture from the story; mail it to Steve Ballmer's house; and carefully watch the monitors for the next couple of days.

    Seriously, if that article ever makes its way over to Redmond HQ, it's not going to get a warm reception. Given what I've observed about Microsoft's mentality, just the photo itself is good enough for a few ulcers. Seriously speaking, this is not a cheap yuck. That small picture clearly shows the biggest threat to the monopoly that Microsoft has spent the last decade building up. Stuff like this has to be a pepto-bismol moment for the MS bigwigs that read it.

  2. religious connotations of OS's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    About 500 years ago, a guy named Martin Luther decided to translate the Bible into German, thus was born the Protestant revolution. The point being, that before this, if you were German and could not read Latin, you had to have a priest translate the words of God AKA the Bible.

    A Brit named William Tyndale had the same idea, he printed 50 copies of the
    Bible *in English*, the establishment was that shocked at this idea, they burnt
    him at the stake. Probably because they thought the idea of the common people
    having direct access to the 'holy writ' would lead to them thinking for
    themselves and having dangerous ideas.

    How like the current debate between open source and closed source this all
    sounds. Just substitute operating system for Bible, money for God, the stock
    market for the Holy Roman Empire and Bill Gates as the Pope and it all lines up