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Apple's School Days are Numbered

prostoalex writes "Business Week describes the current situation in the educational market, suggesting that Apple will lose its share among the high school teachers and students. The worst enemies, according to Business Week, are school superintendents. "We want a single platform," one of them said. "We're trying to get there using the carrot, or blackmail, or rewards, or whatever you call it.""

674 comments

  1. an apple for the teacher by SKPhoton · · Score: 0, Funny

    An Apple for the teacher? Not anymore! Now they get oranges and bananas.

    1. Re:an apple for the teacher by holt_rpi · · Score: 4, Insightful
      A decade ago, most workplaces were a mess of different models, few of which could work together, let alone speak to one another.
      Which workplaces is he talking about? Even 10 years ago, I don't think things were THAT bad...

      I hate to make the usual Apple enthusiast party-line complaint about the article, but it just seems like a whole lot of assumptions and FUD based on no real facts. Even the comments about the Maine program fail to mention the general budgetary hard times that have fallen on the states (who have to choose between cutting educational computer programs or healthcare, or raising taxes).

      Is there anything to this other than more "Apple's about to go under!" talk that we've been hearing since 1984?
    2. Re:an apple for the teacher by Kethinov · · Score: 1

      lol man that's hillarious. Apparantly the mods don't think so though.

      --
      You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    3. Re:an apple for the teacher by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hah! If you had actually read the whole article, you would see that the writer was lamenting the fact that the Apples were not chosen and is an advocate of Apple!

      FUD indeed.

    4. Re:an apple for the teacher by holt_rpi · · Score: 1

      I did RTFA, and my point is that there's nothing behind his assertions that Apple is losing market share in education. Aside from a whiny "long live Apple" slant, the article really doesn't say much.

      I guess my criticism was more of the lack of any basis in real data as opposed to a vague reference to "market researcher Quality Education Data" and a few anecdotal comments by people in the educational field.

      Show me some data to back it up, along with taking other facts into account, like the fact that there are probably more computers in schools now than there ever have been before - and I'll be satisfied with the article.

      My big question right now is: so what?

    5. Re:an apple for the teacher by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      The company is beleaguered, you know.

  2. Re:LIES!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wow if I knew i was gonna git me a FP i woulda put a troll in there.

  3. Hmm by SilentEchos · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Apple was making a lot of money from the education, I don`t think they will lose it though. I know they are losing a lot of ground but in retrospect they have not been as actively persuing it as they have other markets. Perhaps Apple has a trick up its sleeve for schools. I know where I used to work there was a couple of die hard Apple fans in the tech departement that will now allow the school to be taken over by PCs. :D

    1. Re:Hmm by RTPMatt · · Score: 1

      its not exactly dominant in the home or business world, why teach kids on it?

    2. Re:Hmm by SilentEchos · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because, there are few classes where they actually teach the students the OS?

      You can teach them to use photoshop or a number of other things on a Mac and they can go home and use their windows machine and still function in photoshop with no problem.

    3. Re:Hmm by scrod · · Score: 5, Funny
      its not exactly dominant in the home or business world, why teach kids on it?

      If your kids can't figure out how to use a different operating system because its widgets are on the right side of the window, then they're pretty fucking stupid.
    4. Re:Hmm by advocate_one · · Score: 5, Funny
      If you want to really confuse an ms-windows user... drag their taskbar up to the top of the window... :)

      A fair percentage (like most of them) don't even know you can do little things like that. And if you really really want to be nasty... drag the top edge of the task bar so as to turn it into one that's only a few pixels thick as well...

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    5. Re:Hmm by Xrikcus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      because teaching children at that age how to use a particular platform is quite the opposite of what they should be doing. If they can't teach on any platform (that has the basic software support) then there's something wrong with the teaching.

    6. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I went to school, Windows 3.11 was the norm. When I came out, it was Windows 95. Think about it: Which one is more like a Mac?

    7. Re:Hmm by jejones · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Better still, rather than teaching kids the computer equivalent of rote formula plugging, how about actually teaching them about computing so that they aren't tied to a particular system?

    8. Re:Hmm by grahamtriggs · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "its not exactly dominant in the home or business world, why teach kids on it?"

      Dominance in the home market is largely irrelevant - people get to choose what they have in their home (although I can understand why a parent may want a child to use their current computer rather than purchase a new one).

      As for dominance in business, there are many arguments for and against. Yes, an employer may prefer you to have direct experience of the software / platform they use. But you spend somewhere in the region of ten years being educated. 10 years ago I was using Dos / WFW3.11 etc. Now we're using Windows XP / Office XP... I had learnt BASIC at school, C in my first job, C++ in my second, and I'm now doing Java... things change - what you start off learning you almost certainly won't be (that) relevant by the time you finish your education, what you learn at the end will be out of date fairly quickly...

      So what is important? That the schools spend a significant IT budget on keeping up with the latest business trends? Or that they learn the fundamental skills that will be useful regardless of future developments? That the children have the right tools that allow them to efficiently learn languages, maths, etc.? That the total cost of ownership doesn't suck funds away from all the other things that are needed?

      There are *far* more important concerns to teaching children than the exact applications / OS that businesses are currently using. Besides, are we teaching these kids to be corporate secrateries, or to be any number of things? Would you rather your child was an employee, or an employer?

    9. Re:Hmm by SlamMan · · Score: 1

      Right. And just how pertinent are the details of the OS you used on the computers when you were in school to what you do now?

      Do you really think wether you school had an Apple IIe or a 286 makes a bit of difference? Anything specific to an OS kids learn now will be long out of date by the time they get to the real world.

      --
      Mod point free since 2001
    10. Re:Hmm by digitalsushi · · Score: 1

      *looks at the blood stained splotch on keyboard burried between the windows and alt keys and the giant callus on 14 year old cousin's thumbs* nopedontthinkso

      --
      slashdot: where everyone yells sarcastic metaphors to themselves to understand the issue
    11. Re:Hmm by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      " If they can't teach on any platform (that has the basic software support) then there's something wrong with the teaching. "

      Bit of an oversimplification, dontcha think?

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    12. Re:Hmm by Jason_says · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is exactly true. Come on People kids are pretty smart when it comes to tech. "Hey little Johnny go help your mother plugin the VCR". Im sure they will be fine. Its not like its hard to figure out how to type a Word document, and if they don't know, it wont take but a few minutes to show them. The hiring process will not include questions out previous knowledge in operating systems, so it will not be an issue. Besides what happens if they DO go to a buisness that has macs?

    13. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      its not exactly dominant in the home or business world, why teach kids on it?

      They aren't teaching computing, they are teaching Math and Geography and English. The Mac platform -- media savvy, easy to use, and cheap and easy to network and maintain, is perfect for this 'consumer' style of computing.

    14. Re:Hmm by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      When I was in school, apple was always throwing computers at schools trying to get students to get familiar with them and get one for home.

      The result is that us geeks would never touch a mac. Using them had the same connotation as admitting to an inadequate endowment. It wasn't just the immature need to feel superior either. Macs couldn't play the majority of good games, they weren't half as configurable as our PCs, and they cost a lot more. By and large we were also those with the good grades and better study habits (read: not getting any). It's no surprise then that after leaving school, we became the technical force in society; from engineers to IT admins.

      The portion that used the Macs were usually not the types that were interested enough in computing to buy one for home. Nor were they particularly technically inclined (read: they were getting plenty, and had little time to click their mice). These people later got jobs that involved someone from the IT department putting a computer on their desk. Those people would usually buy a computer for home that was compatible with what they had at work. They're not the kind of people that get all worked up over a computer.

      Before the flames begin, I know of exceptions to all cases. But I did have the advantage of having moved a LOT; I believe 9 schools from K-12. The same pattern was evident in all locations. You don't have to like what I say, but it was true as far as I was able to see.

      I no longer hate Macs like I used to, they've come a long way. The OS has transformed from a toy into something very useful, still lacking the software base of a PC perhaps, but at least not offensive to use. Much better than Windows and more viable than Linux on the desktop.

      However, I have 2 issues, one moral one practcial. First, Apple the company is every bit as evil as Microsoft. Thwarting MS for Apple is a bad choice. I remember when Apple was king, they were impossible. I could probably make a good argument that the improvements I've noticed in the OS is based on Apple's need to try harder since their fall. Second, and perhaps more importantly, Macs cost entirely too much money. I know this MUST be true without comparing numbers, simply because Apple has a monopoly over computer equipment. I know it IS true by just looking online and pricing comparable machines.

      For both these reasons, it does not make sense for me to support Apple with religious furvor until their systems are open. This means each facet of the hardware is completely and thoroughly documented. Said documentation is freely available to anyone who wants it. Multiple (more than 5) Hardware vendors are capable of supplying components for a Mac, royalty free. This will have the effect of both cutting the cost of the system, and nerfing Apple's ability to monopolize the industry.

      It's not perfect, it doesn't solve the "installed software base" issue. I'll still have to buy all new software to run on my mac. That's a solveable problem too, but I don't think Apple can necessarily fix it.

    15. Re:Hmm by momus_radar · · Score: 1

      For both these reasons, it does not make sense for me to support Apple with religious furvor until their systems are open. This means each facet of the hardware is completely and thoroughly documented. Said documentation is freely available to anyone who wants it. Multiple (more than 5) Hardware vendors are capable of supplying components for a Mac, royalty free. This will have the effect of both cutting the cost of the system, and nerfing Apple's ability to monopolize the industry.

      Keep in mind that Apple is a hardware company. Sure they make a nice OS, but it is designed to compliment their hardware and make users interaction with it consistant and simple. Making each facet of the hardware completely and thoroughly documented would simply kill Apple.

    16. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple is losing the education market because most elementary school teachers--with precious few exceptions--are complete and utter dipshits. Like many/most dipshits, they're inclined to go with the herd, which is what they've done: They can't articulate why, but somehow they just wound up buying a Windows box, even if it just sits in the corner of their basement collecting dust. Their administration wants to teach on Windows, and goddammit, that's what they'll get if it means they'll get a raise or tenure.

      Many elementary school teachers aren't exactly free-thinkers; most went to some armpit community college and got some type of cereal box diploma, and their math, english, and overall teaching skills are atrocious. It's no wonder they'll vigorously pedal whatever party line their administrations adopt.

    17. Re:Hmm by RockBob · · Score: 1

      Besides, if students are learning how to use an OS by rote then everything they know will be useless as soon as MS releases a new version of windows. TMTOWTDI indeed. I wish MS could decide...

      --
      I know, I know... I need to learn a little English.
    18. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I write this answer on an IBM Thinkpad running Suse 8.2. The OS was free, the computer was around 500 $ more than the latest G4 Powerbook.
      For more than 7 hours I tried to mount an external FAT32 USB disk to this notebook without being successful. I get 800 $ a day if I work for clients. And my Power management still doesn't work. And my dual display doesn't work either. And my modem etc.

      So, who tells me Apple is expensive? Or more expensive than X86 PCs?
      Maybe the sucker that buys the 500 $ box who does not care when it breaks down and he has to spend some hours to fix it.

      In business (also IT-business) you need reliable machines. And after 20 years of home computing I want some basic things working.
      They don't most of the time on PCs. They do on Macs.
      PCs always bomb me back into the early 80s because I have to solve the same problems that I solved then. Macs don't.

    19. Re:Hmm by neuroticia · · Score: 1

      Heh. It's actually more about the tech staff and cost of operation than it is about teaching kids on a standardized platform to alleviate the burden on the teacher. I don't think the teachers really give a damn (unless they fall into the categories of wintel or apple fanatics who would sooner burn alive on a stake than use a machine that's NOT THEIR PLATFORM)

      It's generally cheaper and easier to standardize on a platform- one tech department, one head of tech department, one OS to test new employees on. Single large purchase of machines and software (bulk, high numberes) instead of trying to maintain smaller numbers of multiple machines spanning different platforms. hard disk imaging to copy what needs to be on each computer, and to restore after the kids have messed it up. It's just easier when a particular platform is being used, rather than multiple platforms.

      So. Education aside, it does make sense to standardize. And. Like you said- teaching children at that age how to use a particular platform is the opposite of what they should be doing, and if they can't teach on any platform, then there's something wrong. No need to have multiple platforms.

      And it's far easier for a school to migrate completly to Windows than it is for a school to migrate completely to Macs. Unfortunately. Both Mr. Monopoly and the ability to clone comes into play. People believe that more software runs on Windows just because they haven't heard of the Mac before. And you can purchase a large number of whiteboxes or Dells for far less than you can purchase a lot of apples. Are they of equal/better quality? Perhaps not. But what the schools care about is cost. Apple just isn't cost effective for education these days. Damned shame. I grew up learning on Macs, and think they're great for the educational market interface-wise.

      -Sara

    20. Re:Hmm by Xrikcus · · Score: 1

      Certainly it makes sense to standardize financially. Perfectly understandable, I wasn't arguing with that, I was arguing with the suggestion that there's no point teaching macs because they aren't what's used, when as you say, it shouldn't matter. Teach ON windows, fine, but don't teach windows itself. I just feel it's also important to make sure the children understand that there are alternatives, and if there's any way to show them one or two, then do so.

  4. Diversity is a survival factor by El · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "We want a single platform." == "We want EVERY machine to be effected by any virus or worm that's going around." How 'bout doing some research first to see if supporting multiple platforms really does cost more?

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    1. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by zangdesign · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But in education, diversity costs more. Not necessarily for the hardware or the software, but for the training necessary to teach students to work in it. Since Apple charges a premium price for their systems (worth it, IMHO), they automatically are shut out by cheaper Windows and Linux software solutions. And since the rest of the non-technical world has standardized on Windows (more or less), Linux is not a viable option either.

      That's reality. It's not necessarily right and good, but it is what is. You can fight to change it all you want, but the money's going to have to come from somewhere and I don't see a lot of extra tax dollars being burned on schools here in Texas. Hiring qualified teachers is a bitch down here, since the payscale is so low, compared to the work required.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    2. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Malcontent · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or better yet why not see if standardising on all apple costs less. Apple might have a lower TCO.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    3. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by jkitchel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I can tell you from first hand experience (withouth doing some research), that supporting multiple platforms in an arena (education) in which information technology is a high priority and the amount of workers/$ paid to workers is inversely proportional, that supporting multiple platforms on top of multiple hardware configurations really, really racks up the man hours thus driving up the cost.

    4. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I always thought preparing students for a diverse world was the point of modern education. Silly me. At least we can expect to have a never ending supply of cheap drones. Not that we need many of them -- their jobs get outsourced to countries with even cheaper workers anyway...

    5. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Artana+Niveus+Corvum · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think it goes further than that. Many schools I've either gone to or visited for one reason or another DO have a single platform. Apple.
      More than that, by far the most virii and worms are "available for" (pardon that) the Microsoft platform. I know there are bgillions of Linux zealots that are gonna say "but even fewer are for Linux than are for Apple." This is true. However, as much as I use (and enjoy using) Linux on both my desktops and my servers, there are some very real benefits to using the Apple platform. The obvious (and possibly hotly debated) one is ease-of-use. In the school of interface design and usability, Mac wins. They've pretty much always won. If you take a person who has never used a computer before and sit them in front of Gnome, KDE, or Microsoft's latest offering, they're going to choke. (I know it has been pounded into the ground, but who would honestly think "I should click 'start' in order to shut down my computer"?) I've seen it. Take that same person and stick them in front of a Mac, they'll be intimidated for a few moments perhaps, but when things act as they expect them to act, they'll be relieved and comforted. No right clicks, no middle clicks... (yes I know MacOS supports these functions, but it doesn't need them, especially for what a brand new user wants). Simple baby steps.
      Yes, I know there have been "studies" done comparing these interfaces. Unfortunately none of these that I have seen has been done by a person who has never used a computer before. I'd be interested to see one, but I imagine I know what the result would be.
      Another thing to think about when comparing OSX to XFree86: uniformity. I know that you like to customize your widgets and this and that so that they're just the way you want them under whatever your window manager of choice is. I know this because it's something that I often want too. It's just not so for Joe Blow-I've-never-used-a-computer-before or his cousin Jane Doe-I've-used-a-computer-twice-in-my-life. They generally just want one thing as far as interface design goes: Everything to look the same. Uniformity. They don't want to mess with the differences between things that use gtk or qt or any number of other similar things. They want it to look the same in their word processor as it does in their web browser as it does in their instant messaging client, etc.
      Another thing about MacOS: it tends to scale with the user. If the user's skill level advances over time, MacOS (X especially) tends to grow a bit with the user. They discover what it is that that "shell thingy" that their geek friends talk about can do, for example. The dos promptish thing under Windows XP just can't compare. Linux has a great many things under the hood for the curious user, but the competence level to just get your work done is a great deal higher than either of the other OSes mentioned. Yes, I know you can make X act almost however you want but the key here is that most people don't want to know how to do this because they don't care, they just want it to work
      Anyway, I hope I've made some sort of point anyway. Believe what you will. Hurray for {insert OS of your choice here}.

      --
      -----------------------------------------
      Remove the Greed which plagues mankind.
    6. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by styxlord · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "But in education, diversity costs more."

      lmao. Why is education different from any other industry? Do you than that Dell/MS will be giving out educational discounts if there's no competition?

    7. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by kramer2718 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree that Diversity in platforms at schools is important, but not for the reasons of stability and security.

      Rather, I think it's extremely important that students have the opportunity to use more than one platform. It gives them the idea that the is something beyand Windows. It also makes them much more adaptable to different environments and thus makes them more marketable and trainable.

      I was an adjunct faculty member at a very small University. One of the classes that I taught was How to Use MS Excel (that wasn't the actual title, but that's what the material consisted of). Anyway, I thought it was a crying shame that that was all the computer training most of them would get in their college careers, so I took some liberties (various internet based projects). There was an extra day, so I thought that I would teach them to log in to a Unix server through telnet. They were clueless. They tried to follow what I said, but they had no concept of figuring things out on their own.

      If there had been Macs (with OSX) in their high schools, most would probably have been more confident using a shell and in general not so stuck in a Windows frame of mind. If anything, I think high schools should use more Macs. Now that they are BSD based, they are more compatible with real OSs while at the same time being fairly easy for a novice.

      I know, I know it's hard to have much of an IT budget as a public school, and that's sad. Schools should certainly get more money. It will certainly help the future of the US more than lining oil barons' pockets or dropping bombs on brown people.

    8. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      I do believe that the Mac (especially MacOS 7.1 and earlier) were designed around usability to the point that they are sufficiently n00b-friendly. (BTW, my first taste of GUIs was GS/OS 3.0 on a 512K Apple IIgs, and I thought it was very simple. That is the same OS as the Mac, externally - but internally it is a 16-bit version of ProDOS, the Apple //e and /// OS.)

      All it ever needed was a simple command line, which OS X offers.

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    9. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because Aqua is better, doesn't mean Linux doesn't have a place. IF FACT:

      Linux combined with Apples ROCK. Since OS X is mostly underneath the hood a Unix OS, Linux gets along very well with it.

      Plus if you get a experianced Unix/Linux guru together with a Mac guru and they are given free reign over the systems you can expect very good things to happen.

      THe thing that sucks about multiple platforms is the fact that multiple platforms usually involve WINDOWS. MS intentionally makes it's products non-compatable with others. This makes it easier to create the OS, since instead of working out the bugs and keeping to standards it is simple easier to make it not work at all and then don't tell anybody. Then when you find these gaps in compatability it's your fault, or the other OS's fault and it's your job to figure out how to make it work.

      SO go ahead and learn how to set up NFS and such, buy the Mac desktops and spend a couple grand on decent x86 hardware for a server down at your local computer hobby store. Once you get all network set up and get all the checks in place you can expect it to work well for a long time.

      The great thing is that if you know what your doing you can make it completely transparent to the user. Any student can sit down to any Mac, type in his password and username, his desktop pops up with all his saved files were he left them. Since all the desktop settings are stored in the home folder and you can make that network transparent everything is exactly as the student left it as far they are concerned irregardless which mac they use.

      Windows=easy and cheap to set up, but it is labor entensive and difficult to keep running well. Linux/Unix = hard(you have to know what your doing/be willing to do research and some testing) to set up, but work for a long time with basic mantainance.

      There is a reason why it takes one Unix Guru to do the same work as 6 or so of his Windows counterpart in the same amount of time.

    10. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by mnmn · · Score: 2, Informative

      Apple as the sole platform in a school will require a superintendent who uses a carrot or stick or both to push Apple there. I know at our college there were too many who were used to their Outlook and MS Office and the general GUI too much to accept learning a new platform. Many software that were bought.. accounting, payroll etc all ran on win32 only.

      Switching to entirely an Apple solution quickly would be too expensive. That would mean liquidating a great number of new x86 hardware and software. To be efficient, they need to balance the use of Apple and wintel machines, while planning for a singular platform by buying as many new Apple machines as possible, and the same for software. I've seen a great number of office and institutional software available for Sun workstations, surely running more reliably and at a less cost.

      The administration of a school generally listens to their tech departments, and it is always up to the tech department to suggest whatever is in the best interest of the school. They are not doing their job when they push for an all-win32 solution in an attempt to avoid maintenance of platforms they dont understand, and in the long run they get stung.

      --
      "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
    11. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by hamster+foo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Standardizing on Apple's in schools is not really a responsible decision regardless of a lower TCO. If your going to be sending someone into a market where probably in excess of 80% of the computers they'll come in contact with are Microsoft based, you owe it to them to at least include some of those computers in their educational experience.

      The best solution would be to expose children to multiple platforms during their schooling, so they will have experience to work with any system they might encounter in the work place or in college as the case may be. If supporting a multiple platform network is indeed more expensive, then it might not be economically feasible for schools to offer multiple platforms, in which case, standardizing on the least common platform doesn't make a lot of sense.

      --
      - b
    12. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Pharmboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The best solution would be to expose children to multiple platforms during their schooling, so they will have experience to work with any system they might encounter in the work place or in college as the case may be. If supporting a multiple platform network is indeed more expensive, then it might not be economically feasible for schools to offer multiple platforms, in which case, standardizing on the least common platform doesn't make a lot of sense.

      This would also be the responsible thing to do since using only Windows systems is practically an endorcement of them, considering there are reasonable and affordable alternatives. IMHO, this is akin to have "Pepsi: the official softdrink of Wake University" which they may be considering anyway. 10 Years from now, Microsoft may not be the 97% gorilla it is now, and it is irresponsible for a college to only support this one company.

      Last I checked, the goal of higher education was to expose students to a variety of opinions and situations, to prepare them for later life. If you want an institution that ONLY gives you a singular experience on ONE thing, from one perspective, then perhaps a trade school is a better way to go.

      My first instict is: follow the money. Is Microsoft offering sweetheat deals if universities kill Linux and Mac support?

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    13. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Spoing · · Score: 1
      Yes, I know there have been "studies" done comparing these interfaces. Unfortunately none of these that I have seen has been done by a person who has never used a computer before. I'd be interested to see one, but I imagine I know what the result would be.

      Non-computer users; a steadily vanishing group.

      Even if that group remained large, a shallow learning curve doesn't mean the tool is the most practical in the long run.

      Everything is or will be computerized. The only way to avoid using computers is to not buy anything and die soon.

      Yes, I know about novices. I've done time in tech support, and as 'a computer guy' for friends and family.

      At work, it's rarely necessary to teach people the basics. Most of the time, I deal with deployment issues, some programming (Access can go die), with the goal of heading on to another project soon.

      Normally when I have to explain things, I'm animated and use simple analogies with a spattering of technical details to keep it out of fantasy land. Brief, to the point, people get it.

      Two days ago, there was an exception that made it practical to switch into the role of a trainer. For 2 hours I taught someone how to use folders/directories and what drag-and-drop does so that she would stop destroying files specific important files and how to back them up by dropping a copy into a backup directory. How to use a mouse was part of the training too.

      She had used the company's customized applications for about 5 years -- much of it to process files that came in on floppies and tape. Not counting her computer skills, to say this person is a moron is an insult to morons. She didn't understand why it was a bad thing to change the only copy of legal documents or that she could have the program automatically process much of the data for her instead of spending hours picking through each line of data. I asked her leading questions on both points, she smiled and agreed, then went back to her old behavior immediately. (This is truely the sort of person who can be replaced with a small shell script and she doesn't know it.)

      1. If this person had a Mac, they would not have been any more -- or less -- confused!
      Nobody else on the floor -- a low wage key entry operator farm -- required this kind of hand-holding. From 70 year old to teen, from long-time employee to short term temp, the rest of them got it.
      --
      A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
    14. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If your going to be sending someone into a market where probably in excess of 80% of the computers they'll come in contact with are Microsoft based, you owe it to them to at least include some of those computers in their educational experience.

      Actually, you would serve the students best by putting them on computers that are a little bit ahead of the curve. If two kids went to two different schools in the early 1990's, one used Macs and the other used DOS and Win3.1, the Mac kid would probably be much better prepared for Win98 and NT4, the dominant players by the time they both graduated from college or tech school.

      Let's face it, OS X is pretty much what the Windows of 2008 will look like. (...and the KDE of 2012.) If you want to get a kid ready for it, start him or her on a Mac right now.

    15. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by binner1 · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that if it's too expensive to switch from one product to any other that we should just give in, and turn an 80% monopoly into a 100% monopoly?

      'Geez, that Hitler guy is looking pretty tough these days, we'd better rush out and join the Nazi party!'

      Spending a little bit of extra money on education is never a bad thing...

      This applies to more than just education too. If we just start giving up whenever a critical mass is reached, we'll never get anywhere. Imagine if square wheels had reached an 80% majority before round ones came along.

      -Ben

    16. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      "We want a single platform." == "We want EVERY machine to be effected by any virus or worm that's going around." How 'bout doing some research first to see if supporting multiple platforms really does cost more?

      Multiple platforms is definitely NOT a good way to stop viruses and worms. Educated administrators, auto-updated antivirus software, firewalls and common sense are.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    17. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by PrimeEnd · · Score: 1
      I know it has been pounded into the ground, but who would honestly think "I should click 'start' in order to shut down my computer"?

      Yes, and who would honestly think, "I should click 'special' in order to shut down my computer?"

    18. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to OS X, the realm of no 'special' menu. Now it's done with the cute little blue apple icon in the top left, all the time.

    19. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by dirk · · Score: 1

      If there had been Macs (with OSX) in their high schools, most would probably have been more confident using a shell and in general not so stuck in a Windows frame of mind. If anything, I think high schools should use more Macs. Now that they are BSD based, they are more compatible with real OSs while at the same time being fairly easy for a novice.

      If they haven't used the command line in Windows, what makes you think they would use the shell in OSX (which if it is a standard Unix shell is more difficult to learn because of the abbreviations)? The fact is people treat computers like they treat cars. They want them to do what they want and they don't want to have to understand how they do it. The problem is that computers haven't reached the level where this is entirely possible.

      --

      "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
    20. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by hamster+foo · · Score: 1

      As far as I can tell we're in agreement, and colleges generally don't have to make the same financial choices that high schools and elementary schools have to make. I may not have read the article correctly, but it as least seemed to be mostly referring to those schools and not colleges/universities. Most university labs I've been in have had both Macs and Windows machines along with some including a few Unix systems.

      This unfortunately comes down to responsibility having two branches. There is a responbility to your students to expose them to as broad an educational base as possible and a responsibility to fit that education within a budget. If those two don't meet, then you have to find a compromise, which depending on the costs of running mixed platform networks, may point to a single platform solution. In that case, the most prevalent platform in the market place becomes to the most responsible choice to make.

      --
      - b
    21. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by russellh · · Score: 1
      Standardizing on Apple's in schools is not really a responsible decision regardless of a lower TCO. If your going to be sending someone into a market where probably in excess of 80% of the computers they'll come in contact with are Microsoft based, you owe it to them to at least include some of those computers in their educational experience.

      Baloney. The computers that schools can afford generally are old enough that the delta between what they encounter in the workplace and their experience is great enough that platform doesn't matter.

      --
      must... stay... awake...
    22. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Unregistered · · Score: 1

      I know there are bgillions of Linux zealots that are gonna say "but even fewer are for Linux than are for Apple." This is true.

      Unless things have changed recently, it's actually not true.

    23. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming that a student is supposed to run some specific software, I would assume it would be easiest for the user if those icons for those respective programs were on the desktop - which would make the OS point irrelevent. At that point the software comes in, which is sort of what someone should be looking at in the first place.

    24. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Yes, and who would honestly think, "I should click 'special' in order to shut down my computer?"

      Or that you put a CD or floppy in the Trash to eject? And now it has the action of burning files to a CDR! -- what kind of metaphor is that? Not everything is "intuitive" on a Mac.

    25. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Np18 · · Score: 1

      Exactly, lets make sure a swiss cheese OS is our only hope for teaching kids. When it works. I have a feeling blue is going to be everyones least favorite color.

    26. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't go from the gui to the command line in a day. The basics of the command line are really simple: [command] [parameter], but what command are you supposed to type? Once you know what 'cd' does, where are you supposed to go? What program do you use to edit something? What's it's name? Most of this is just beyond the general user, especially if they don't particularly care.

      If you're going to introduce someone to Unix, PLEASE do it through a gui if they're used to using a gui. Many people end up with the impression that Unix is basically like DOS - it only does that "text stuff". My friend still thinks that Linux is all text, which is sad because KDE can look much nicer than XP (which looks like ass IMHO but whatever).

    27. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      The Trash icon changes to to an eject icon or a burn icon when you "grab" the CD/disk image/firewire drive with your mouse.

      You can also access those functions from the "file" menu in the Finder if you didn't know about the click and drag method.

    28. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by hamster+foo · · Score: 1

      Unless those computers are running Windows 3.1, the interfaces with anything newer than that are very much relatable to the newest versions of Windows. Given what i perceive as a rather huge gap between Mac OS versions previous to 10, your argument might be accurate. But I am by no means an experienced Mac user, so my perception of the differences might be inaccurate.

      If a school can't afford systems that can run above Windows 3.1, then I'd say they have much larger problems to deal with than considering which platform to run.

      --
      - b
    29. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      The Trash icon changes...

      Wel, it didn't in Mac OS. And even now, it seeems not just obscure, but perverse, to use the same action that deletes a file to burn one -- ie, make a copy.

      Back in OS7 days, I once tried to explain that to eject the floppy you moved it to Trash. The user just refused to believe me, and said that would delete her files, so continued to use the instant eject key (Command E, I think), though it screwed up any open files on the desktop.

    30. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by bigdavex · · Score: 1
      The obvious (and possibly hotly debated) one is ease-of-use. In the school of interface design and usability, Mac wins. They've pretty much always won. If you take a person who has never used a computer before and sit them in front of Gnome, KDE, or Microsoft's latest offering, they're going to choke. (I know it has been pounded into the ground, but who would honestly think "I should click 'start' in order to shut down my computer"?) I've seen it. Take that same person and stick them in front of a Mac, they'll be intimidated for a few moments perhaps, but when things act as they expect them to act, they'll be relieved and comforted. No right clicks, no middle clicks... (yes I know MacOS supports these functions, but it doesn't need them, especially for what a brand new user wants). Simple baby steps.
      Yes, I know there have been "studies" done comparing these interfaces. Unfortunately none of these that I have seen has been done by a person who has never used a computer before. I'd be interested to see one, but I imagine I know what the result would be.

      I would be interesting in the results of this too, from an academic perspective. But from a practical standpoint, there aren't that many people out there like that. I suspect that's why the studies are done including people who have used windows at least a little before -- they represent a very large demographic.
      --
      -Dave
    31. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Gropo · · Score: 1
      If your going to be sending someone into a market where probably in excess of 80% of the computers they'll come in contact with are Microsoft based, you owe it to them to at least include some of those computers in their educational experience.
      Or, the most sensible solution would be to supply a sufficient amount of network licenses for VirtualPC/Windows to give kids said 'exposure'. That way, when the next Worm/Virus/Trojan comes along, all your Windows OS's are nicely encapsulated within emulation environments and the actual productivity machines they're running on top of will never suffer from "UPDATE SYMANTEC DEFINITIONS NOW!" downtimes etc. etc. etc.

      So many small-minded school district administrators in this world, so few rational, foresighted ones. I think this issue has alot more to do with the Hegemonic "Apple's days are numbered" FUD of the last 10 years rather than actual tangible arguments like the above.

      --
      I hate Grammar Nazi's
    32. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      Good post, just five years too late. The child entering school without any computer experience is increasingly rare where I live. Most of the kids I know mastered desktop navigation by age three and handled the transition from 9.x to 2k/xp better than their parents.

    33. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      but who would honestly think "I should click 'start' in order to shut down my computer?"

      Who would think to drag a floppy icon to the TRASHCAN in order to eject it? Every OS has its weird counter-intuitive parts.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    34. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by CableModemSniper · · Score: 1

      The fact is people treat computers like they treat cars. They want them to do what they want and they don't want to have to understand how they do it.
      Heard it said before.

      The problem is that computers haven't reached the level where this is entirely possible.
      But this, is great. It describes the biggest problem with the prior statement. I've never seen someone put it so succintly before.

      --
      Why not fork?
    35. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      I agree that is was something of a strange thing to do, but it fit with all the other icons on the desktop - if you didn't want them any more you pulled them down to the trash and they were done with.

      Command + Y was "put away" which did the same thing as dragging a disk to the trash, and it would prompt you to save any open files. Force eject is somewhat extreme for regular removal of disks!

      It seems to me that the user was too set in her ways to learn the commands and proper eject procedures for the OS (even if they were a bit unconventional).

      I don't think any OS has nailed the User Experience yet, they all have their weaknesses. I don't like the fact that the "arrange by name/kind/date" functions in OS X's Finder can only be accessed by the menu and don't have any keyboard shortcuts for example.

    36. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by russellh · · Score: 1
      If a school can't afford systems that can run above Windows 3.1, then I'd say they have much larger problems to deal with than considering which platform to run.

      True. But a) 12 years of school is a long time to attempt any kind of standard preservation, and b) it is economically infeasible to replace all the old stuff at once. Therefore, the kids will experience evolution - such as from windows 3.1 to XP and will always have a mix of everything. Not to mention the fact that the user interface experience is basically converging - the competing platforms have never been more similar in their details and the prominence and cross-platform nature of the popular applications.

      I won't even get into the argument about whether schools are to educate or provide vocational training. Or just keep the under 17 crowd off the streets from 7am - 3pm. (thank you Matt Groening)

      --
      must... stay... awake...
    37. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      If those two don't meet, then you have to find a compromise, which depending on the costs of running mixed platform networks, may point to a single platform solution. In that case, the most prevalent platform in the market place becomes to the most responsible choice to make.

      The sad thing is for public schools, they can recycle older computers by creating small Linux labs (for free) and expose them to the world of unix, which would apply to OSX and even SCO (heaven forbid!).

      Me thinketh that MS politics is more at play, even with local schools. If I was MS and had no ethics, I would buy those old computers up from the schools as trade in for my software, just to keep them from using Linux.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    38. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Artana+Niveus+Corvum · · Score: 1

      They aren't as common as they once were, I'll admit. However, at my old job there were something like 250 computer users, 143 of which claimed on a survey to have never used a computer before their current job and to not have a computer at home. Maybe it was a location thing, maybe it was a cultural thing (nearly all of the employees at my previous job were Native American).
      All I'm saying here is that it is a classification that at least still exists. If the adults don't have computers at home and the elementary schools in the are have Apple IIes if that, then I think that my point is still valid. Again, I could be wrong I suppose.

      --
      -----------------------------------------
      Remove the Greed which plagues mankind.
    39. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily for the hardware or the software, but for the training necessary to teach students to work in it.

      It is much harder to teach the faculty how to do something. When I have done work in schools, many, if not most teachers have one particular student whom they would ask me to teach a particular task to so that the student could perform it and later instruct the teacher. Kids are fast learners. Faculty members are the ones who are set in their ways.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    40. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      " Standardizing on Apple's in schools is not really a responsible decision regardless of a lower TCO. If your going to be sending someone into a market where probably in excess of 80% of the computers they'll come in contact with are Microsoft based, you owe it to them to at least include some of those computers in their educational experience."

      Most students will get exposed to windows at home or someplace else. It's impossible to avoid a monopoly. Schools should teach kids knowledge they are not likely to get elsewhere.

      Also since most Unix admins get paid more then windows admins schools should teach unix because it will lead to higher paychecks.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    41. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was wondering why you were writing such stupid bullshit things. Then I read the "here in Texas" part and that explains everything. Texas is full of idiots.

    42. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      My first instict is: follow the money. Is Microsoft offering sweetheat deals if universities kill Linux and Mac support?

      Can't do it -- MS has some NDA shit in their college contracts so various colleges won't have any way to tell if they're getting a sweetheart deal or a turn in the barrel.

    43. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Jonner · · Score: 1

      Most of the things we use computers to do are so different from the things they replace that there is no way of making them intuitive to complete neophytes. What is ejecting a floppy disk like anyway? It's somewhat like ejecting a cassette tape, which has traditionally required pushing a physical button. I guess PCs win on that count, since they have such a button.

      It probably doesn't matter that much any more in the US, since there are fewer and fewer complete neophytes. The main gist of the article is that schools are switching to Wintel because that's what people are used to. Sadly, Apple might have to start emulating M$ to survive, an extremely sad and ironic state of affairs.

    44. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      heh. If my iBook has to crash three times a day and plague me with gator and comet cursor just so Apple can get market share back in EducationI will be pissed off!

    45. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Jonner · · Score: 1

      As smart as those Apple guys are, I'm sure they can manage to make Windoze users comfortable without opening things up to typical abuses. OS X is a real operating system and they are good at designing GUIs. They could provide an optional Winders look and feel if they wanted. I wasn't talking about bug for bug compatability.

    46. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Ignorant+Aardvark · · Score: 1

      This would also be the responsible thing to do since using only Windows systems is practically an endorcement of them, considering there are reasonable and affordable alternatives. IMHO, this is akin to have "Pepsi: the official softdrink of Wake University" which they may be considering anyway. 10 Years from now, Microsoft may not be the 97% gorilla it is now, and it is irresponsible for a college to only support this one company.

      The high school that I just graduated from was sponsored by Pepsi. As in, "Montgomery Blair High School, brought to you by Perpsi." No Coca-Cola products were sold anywhere on-campus. The school principal signed a 10-year, $600,000 contract with Pepsi. And you know what? Maybe it was worth it. There are severe budget shortfalls affecting all of us now, and the school really needed that extra money for textbooks and such.

    47. Re:Diversity is a survival factor by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      The high school that I just graduated from was sponsored by Pepsi. As in, "Montgomery Blair High School, brought to you by Perpsi." No Coca-Cola products were sold anywhere on-campus. The school principal signed a 10-year, $600,000 contract with Pepsi. And you know what? Maybe it was worth it. There are severe budget shortfalls affecting all of us now, and the school really needed that extra money for textbooks and such.

      I guess I will have to just chalk this up as "the choice of a new generation"......

      [rimshot]

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  5. Education moves slow by Gherald · · Score: 0, Funny

    For a long time I've been predicting they would move away from Apple.

    It just doesn't make logical sense to use Apple to educate kids for a Wintel world.

    1. Re:Education moves slow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well whaddaya know, i have a SPARC.

    2. Re:Education moves slow by SubjunctiveSam · · Score: 1

      It's still a Wintel world.

    3. Re:Education moves slow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      But it does make sense to use Apple/BSD to educate kids for a Linux world. ;)

      Seriously, education platform doesn't really matter. All of what 95% of what kids learn is how to type and use a word processor, and that'll easily translate to any platform.

      The other 5% are smart enough to learn other platforms as they go.

      Also, and this really ticks me off, education shouldn't be about memorizing facts, but about learning how to learn. That'll really prepare you for the world and do you good for the rest of your life, unlike learning how to use Windows to make iron-on transfers of american flags.

    4. Re:Education moves slow by Hatta · · Score: 1

      I doubt it harms them much at all. Keep in mind we're not training administrators here. If you can launch word in OS X, you can launch word in windows. Just click around till you see that blue W. I actually think this is better for students. If you see more than one way of doing something, you're more likely to think about why you do it one way or the other, what the real differences are and how they're similar. Hopefully this will lead to building a conceptual model, instead of just performing tasks by rote.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    5. Re:Education moves slow by Gherald · · Score: 1

      Having just finished HS myself several months ago, I can tell you, its a pain in the ass.

      All personal anti-Apple bias aside, I have observed multiple platforms just make life difficult for students. The vast majority prefer Windows.

    6. Re:Education moves slow by FryGuy1013 · · Score: 1

      I hate to have to ask this, but why do people call computers with Windows on them "wintels." Should macs be called MIBMS? Should linux be called lamds?

      Windows has very little to do with Intel.

      --
      bananas like monkeys.
    7. Re:Education moves slow by Gherald · · Score: 1

      Wintel is short for "Windows running on Intel."

    8. Re:Education moves slow by grahamtriggs · · Score: 1

      For the same reason that PC's are called IBM-compatibles...

      No, you don't have to use Intel chips to run Windows, but Windows only runs on the x86 architecture - as defined by Intel.

      And there are still many people / businesses that refuse to use anything other than Intel (when running Windows), because of that very fact.

      (if you aren't running Windows, then it isn't a Wintel!)

    9. Re:Education moves slow by revividus · · Score: 1
      I agree with you. I believe it was originally coined as a pejorative. See http://unix1.ccac.edu/~wpauli/cit115/industry.htm.

  6. Re:LIES!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hahahahah hehehe your not made of stone.... ehhehee....

  7. Duh by grendel_x86 · · Score: 0, Troll

    I think we all knew this.

    --
    Im glad /. isnt the real world, that would really suck..
    1. Re:Duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This from someone getting a degree in web design that might have got them a job five years ago.

    2. Re:Duh by Gherald · · Score: 1

      > I think we all knew this.

      Perhaps, but I don't think anyone is expecting an unbiased opinion from someone with "x86" in their name.

    3. Re:Duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your website is fucking terrible.

      As are all flash-only websites.

      What really makes yours stand out is your stunning inability to wrap text, causing the text in several boxes to get cut off mid-sentence and not carry over onto the next line!

      What stunning design!!!!!!!

    4. Re:Duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sorry, dont feel like signing in... mmm lazy...

      anyway, the x86 is left over from a long time ago, i still keep it though. I have been working w/ apple quite a lot over the past several years, and think they have come a long way, just not long enough.

      In the same time that Apple has come a good amount, Linux has come twice as far. Actually, i think if anything linux on apple will kill OS X, as it far out performs it on servers(dont feel like looking on the article, but check penguinppc.com). I think once this happens, that apple may open the hardware up, to be made by more people, as they make little profit off of the hardware, especially now since they just gather components, and make NOTHING themselves anymore. They only showed the profit they did this past quarter because of their software, something they DO make.

      Apple will be a far more viable company, if they go the way of IBM (in reference to the PC), make the PPC system open to cloning again, and make the software that runs on it.

      Just my opinion of what is to come, not that it matters, or anyone is still reading this thread

    5. Re:Duh by Gherald · · Score: 1

      I think its far to late in the game for Apple to be opening up their hardware. Intel/AMD are way cheaper. If you are running Linux, why run it on expensive, non-standard hardware?

      The only reason to buy Apple is if you like running OS X

    6. Re:Duh by grendel_x86 · · Score: 1

      Sorry to hear that, but your views are in the minority.

      Inabliity to wrap text? you mean on the zoomed in screenshots of apps ive made? If you want to see the full thing, click on the links to view the app.

      Most of my test users figured that out.

      --
      Im glad /. isnt the real world, that would really suck..
  8. Re:first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > my first first?

    No, but a close second ;)

  9. It's all because... by TheFlamingoKing · · Score: 0, Redundant
    Apple is too easy to use.

    School administrations can't do anything anymore that isn't difficult.

  10. YOU FAIL IT!! ON TEH SPOKE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  11. Re:LIES!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you might as well kill yourself now. youve reached your maximum potential

  12. The Mac advantage by ickoonite · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Much is made of the Mac's durability, reliability, low TCO (when everything is factored in). Doesn't this have any appeal any more in education?

    Quoth the article:
    It all comes back to what I call the lemming effect -- the willingness of people to follow blindly along, never questioning as they march in step with everyone else.

    Ah, the age old problem. One might say Mac zealots are a similar breed, but I'd have thought that for education, a computer as damn simple as a Mac would be an enormous boon, especially when you think of the savings on support.

    And they're so purdy... :P Of course, IT managers don't care about purdy, and I do feel inclined to, once again, make a comment about IT managers recommending what they know and what will keep them in a job...

    Oh well, guess it's all downhill hereon. Still, he shoulda called Apple beleaguered... :P

    iqu :s

    1. Re:The Mac advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The lemming effect! So the people want more games and the windows platform is the only one that has them! I see now!

    2. Re:The Mac advantage by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 2, Funny
      I started at Drexel when they were and All-mac school. 1994, the Power Mac just came out, I had one of the first models. 2 years later Drexel suddenly announced that we were all going PC. Of course all of the courseware on campus was Macintosh. All of the network infrastructure was Macintosh. All of the students were still paying the credit card bills from the purchase of their machintosh.

      They ditched their working mainframe software that handled billing and scheduling for an NT based system. I'll be kind, there were problems. No fuck that, the system was braindead. By 2000 the system was still screwing things up.

      At some point in this giant clown circus one of their computer systems sent back one of my federal loans. A $6000 balance balooned to $10,000. After spending 2 years camped out at the billing office to straighten the matter out, I still couldn't enroll for non-payment, nor get a loan because I wasn't enrolled. I finally had to take a personal loan, which I needed to start paying back immediately, at which point I said fsck it and got a real job.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    3. Re:The Mac advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, that's quite a story.

      I went to Drexel, as well. I would have been a member of the class of '96-- except one day while sitting in a 90+ degree lecture hall in July of 1993 (God damned fall/winter co-op), I said fsck it and got a real job. :-)

      Did their curriculum still suck ass when you were there? I was a Comp Sci major. Amazingly, none of the stuff in the armloads of Calc, Chem and Physics classes I avoided by leaving has ever come up in my career (highly-paid Mac & Windows consultant). But the basic knowledge I had from using a DOS machine for six years until getting my Drexel-mandated first Mac in 1991, well, that stuff has been indispensable practically every day.

    4. Re:The Mac advantage by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      I'm a network engineer by trade. I was going for computer engineering, but Drexel's answer was to make you go through Electrical engineering and learn computers as a special case of control systems.

      All of the training for my present vocation was learned in my spare time or on the job. I'm not making a ton of money, but networking is a pretty stable field as far as employment goes. If you have an organization by their operational balls, their hearts and minds will follow.

      That said, picking up C in high school was probably the best preparation to be had for being a future Unix admin. I do have to give Drexel's coop program some credit. For 2 coops I worked at a semiconductor manufacturer coding in TCL. That scripting experience I'm still using to this day.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    5. Re:The Mac advantage by instantnoodles · · Score: 1

      I'd say Dell and HP products are just as reliable and durable as Apple's. There wouldn't be much savings on support.

      And of course, Windows can run a vastly larger amount of software. That allows schools more choices in the long run.

    6. Re:The Mac advantage by ickoonite · · Score: 1

      Durability: Dell's computers - yes; HP's computers, no. Though the latter's printers are first class.

      Reliability-wise: from a hardware point of view, again, the former excels in the computer department, but all the machines are running Windows, so that's where the support costs come in. No critique at all of the computers - I have ... oooh, three Dells at home here - they are superb, but you have to think of the whole equation. We had hordes of Dells at school - they were fine, Windows sucked.

      True, Windows has more software - the statement is inarguable. However, if the Mac runs the requisite software then there is no problem. And, as the past week has taught us, more software includes viri.

      iqu :)

  13. Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by jkitchel · · Score: 5, Informative


    I've worked in an educational setting this whole summer and I can vouch for the administrators' (both educational and technical) point of view. Now throw in another point briefly mentioned in the article:

    Gee, a $100-$150 (at most) educational discount on a $1700 IMac (~$1600 total) or a $500 Dell?

    Granted, that's not entirely comparing apples to apples (pun intended purely as an afterthought), but that's how most educators, teachers, and students will see it. What would you want to work on or buy if you were a cash strapped student?

    1. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by Malcontent · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As Microsoft is so fond of saying. There is more to TCO then the initial purchase price. Microsoft insists that windows has a lower TCO despite the fact that Linux is free. It seems to me apple would save enough on admin costs alone to make up the difference.

      Of course there is also the fact that you are educating the kids to learn a unix operating system. As Microsoft is so fond of pointing out Unix sysadmins get paid more then Windows sysadmins. Why educate your kids to get lower paid positions?

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    2. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
      Gee, a $100-$150 (at most) educational discount on a $1700 IMac (~$1600 total) or a $500 Dell?

      Hm, I'll take the $799 (oops, make that $699 educational institution price) eMac.

      e for Education, see.

      You're probably exaggerating the Dell price too, but I can't bear the thought of going to their site to check.

    3. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by jkitchel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sounds like someone woke up on the wrong side of the Microsoft bed today. I don't care what kids get educated on, as long as they are learning.

      What I was trying to portray in my post is that 99.97% of the educators out there would get a glazed over look when it comes to Linux, Unix, etc. I'm sad to say that all they want is that "cool, black Dell" and to be sent packing so that they can surf the web and check their email.

      Besides, the whole idea of TCO in the world of information technology would baffle administrators who also want that "cool, black Dell" and to be sent packing so that they can surf the web and check their email. As long as it's initial purchase price is CHEAPER than everything else.

      Sad to say, but true.

    4. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by jkitchel · · Score: 1

      Either way, $699 > $500. How do you think a school administrator makes his decisions? They are based on money and trying to please everyone in the whole school corporation on top of spending the money in the proscribed government way (because the gov't controls the purse strings).

    5. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by jkitchel · · Score: 1

      Oops, I forgot to mention the cool factor. See this post . It exists as a result of one teacher's jealously over the existance of a new computer in the classroom next door. Does this really happen? The answer is an astounding "yes".

    6. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Either way, $699 > $500. How do you think a school administrator makes his decisions?

      Oh, I know. I wasn't trying to secretly convince you that schools are all filled with Macs. I'm just saying that there are a plethora of valid arguments to justify an extra $200/head. Mentioning a delta of $1000+ made it sound like they were making the right decision as is. ;)

    7. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      " Sounds like someone woke up on the wrong side of the Microsoft bed today. I don't care what kids get educated on, as long as they are learning."

      If that's the case then why not teach them a skill that pays more?

      "I'm sad to say that all they want is that "cool, black Dell" and to be sent packing so that they can surf the web and check their email. "

      Those kids would be much more likely to say "cool a new g5" and surf the web. After a while once they lean (they are there to learn right?) they will be adept at administering unix. A very valuable and high paying skill.

      " Besides, the whole idea of TCO in the world of information technology would baffle administrators who also want that "cool, black Dell" and to be sent packing so that they can surf the web and check their email. As long as it's initial purchase price is CHEAPER than everything else. "

      Apparently you have a very low opinion of IT managers. Although they are often not the brightest bulb in the pack they do make their decisions on factors other then the color. If they are so stupid as to make their entire buying decision on looks then they can't go wrong with apple can they?

      I don't think school IT administrators are as stupid as you say they are. I know it's fashionable to insult teachers and administrators these days but I know some personally and they are quite bright. On the whole I find them to be brighter then their compatriots in the commercial world.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    8. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does $500 include a monitor?

    9. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by Meowing · · Score: 2, Insightful
      As Microsoft is so fond of pointing out Unix sysadmins get paid more then Windows sysadmins. Why educate your kids to get lower paid positions?
      There aren't a heck of a lot of system administration courses in the K12 offerings. On the other hand, I don't see much evidence that writing or arithmetic are being taught any more either, so maybe IT grunt training would be better than nothing.
    10. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by lewp · · Score: 1

      That's beautiful. Brought a tear to my eye.

      --
      Game... blouses.
    11. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by tage · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh, come on! A $1700 iMac? Why coulnd't you bother to check the prices first? Apple Store sells iMacs starting at $1299 and eMacs starting at $799. For schools, that would be $1199 and $699 respectively, possibly less with a volume discount. And maybe not buying direct from Apple will lower the price further. And this includes a monitor, does the $500 Dell include this?

      Btw, the cheapest Dell (with a monitor) I managed to find for a K12 institution in PA was $666. This model didn't have a modem (wich probably doesn't matter, though) or FireWire (probably more interesting).

    12. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by tage · · Score: 1

      Scratch that -- The Optiplex GX60 SFF without a modem is $650 for a K12 in PA. But then it only has a 15" screen as compared to the Dimension 4200 i found before, which had a 17" screen. The eMac has a 17" CRT and the iMac a 15" LCD (which in most peoples opinions is a lot nicer than a 15" CRT).

    13. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by Graymalkin · · Score: 3, Informative

      While $699 may indeed be more money than $500 up front, that doesn't really address the price issue as a whole. When you buy as an institution you have to gauge the system's TCO, not merely the up front cost.

      I've seen a number of PC computer labs in the past couple years, Gateways, Dells, and HPs have been most prevelent. In most of the labs I'd say a good 5% of the machines were down at any given time from hardware failure. Each of those failures required one of the lab adminstrators to at the very least diagnose if not fix. A suprising number of times I've seen entire computer labs entirely screwed over by the latest Windows VotW (Virus of the Week).

      The several Mac labs I've either administered or have seen have been run by fewer admins and have seen far less downtime. Both OS9 and 10 are relatively simple to manage, even in a large lab environment. OSX works very well with Windows and Unix network shares meaning no third party software to provide such support. OSX Server is very well priced per client than Windows Server 2003 or 2000 Server. The OSX Server can also provide services for Linux, Unix, and Windows systems as well as Macs.

      Each down system or per seat cost of a supporting server OS raises the TCO of any purchase. The adminstration costs of a Windows lab will quickly raise the price of the lab over that of an equivilent Mac lab. Say you've got a district with a need for 1000 computers. Admins say are running $50k a year. Per hundred computers you need two MCSEs. Per three hundred eMacs you might only need two admins.

      The first year your eMac lab will cost the district $799,000 just in administration and upfront purchasing. The PC lab will cost you $800,000 or so. By virtue of the PCs just needing more care you've eliminated any price advantage they had in the first year. Subsequent years the problem is exacerbated even more, the PC admins are going to suck down $300k a year. The Mac admins only $100k. Over five years the PCs are going to suck two million dollars out of the district coffers. The Macs will cost the district eight hundred thousand dollars less than the PCs despite the higher up front price.

      Any institution looking only at the initial system price for computers is foolish and should be removed from their position promptly.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    14. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      I don't think school IT administrators are as stupid as you say they are. I know it's fashionable to insult teachers and administrators these days but I know some personally and they are quite bright. On the whole I find them to be brighter then their compatriots in the commercial world.

      How can you make such a blanket dismissal of what is an otherwise common observance. I have seen, firsthand, the kind of stupidity and pettiness that makes the BOHF look saintly. I have also seen some folks that should be doing my job.

      In either case, you can't argue with someone else's first hand observation.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    15. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1

      Good luck finding Firewire standard on a Dell. They have sold their soul to USB 2.0.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    16. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by GlassUser · · Score: 1

      I adminned a dozen Inspiron systems, and every single one of them had firewire. So's my mother's inspiron 2650. Works for me.

    17. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by AbbyNormal · · Score: 1

      True, I priced a Dell for $20 less for a VA school, but it came with 2x the amount of memory than the eMac and tons more features (floppy drive for old software,2.66 ghz which is not really a feature..still, 24/7 tech support for 3 years, 3 year on site service, network card as modems are fairly for a school).

      Actually, if it were up to me, considering the amount of software available and preparation of students for the business world, I would go with Dell in a heartbeat. Its a matter of $$$ and cents for low budget public schools.

      --
      Sig it.
    18. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1

      I went to their little "road tour". All the new laptops and desktops have USB 2. They have said as much. I admin a heap of Optiplexes (200), we have to buy and add-on firewire card for them.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    19. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by coso · · Score: 2, Informative

      FWIW, I just bought a Mac laptop instead of a Dell of education and it was $150 CHEAPER... The lemmings thing is the problem. People fear and shun what they do not understand.

    20. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by Unregistered · · Score: 1

      Ever heard of an eMac? It's like $700 with monitor. Cheaper than the dells and a much less shitty computer. We buy $1000 dells. They suck. I kept using the 3 yr old gateways whenever i had the chance. Of course now, thouse gateways have been relaced by dells, so i guess i'll learn to love the bluescreen.

    21. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      O.k., how about $100-$150 of a $799 eMac? That would bring it more in line with the $500 dell, right?

    22. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by fupeg · · Score: 1

      If you look at that Dell it does not come with any productivity software. Add on ~$200 bucks for that. An eMac comes with AppleWorks (word processing, desktop publishing, spreadsheet, etc.) and iLife (iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie.) The eMac's hard drive is twice as big as the Dell's. The eMac can be upgraded to have the same amount of memory as the Dell for $50, and to have the same support as the Dell for $169.

      So there is NO price advantage for the Dell, even when comparing a specially negotiated package unique to the Virginia vs. the standard offering from Apple for any school anywhere.

      Read before you think. Think before you post.

    23. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1


      Here's a TCO issue... suppose I want to manage my new computers? SMS from Microsoft lists at $1,779 with 25 client licenses. For each additional 25 client license I have to pay another $899. And the whole thing won't run without SQL server, so I need to buy a license for that at $1500-$10,000. I couldn't find any information about educational discounts. Apple Remote Desktop for unlimited clients is $499 list, $299 for educational customers.

      I took the MS numbers and info off MS's web site and the Yahoo store (SQL Server).

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
    24. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      "How can you make such a blanket dismissal of what is an otherwise common observance."

      Common to who? Not to me.

      "In either case, you can't argue with someone else's first hand observation."

      Huh? On what planet? How is it that your first hand experience with a extremely limited sample is somehow representitive of the whole world. Maybe you ought to go back to school and study statistics.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    25. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by sootman · · Score: 1

      I'm not taking sides, just pointing out: dell.com/tv, get a 2.4 GHz P4 for $499 after rebate, and that's *with* a 15" flat panel--free upgrade special this week.

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    26. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by tage · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes. There it is, the elusive $500 Dell PC. Still no FireWire and this system comes with XP Home edition (instead of Professional ed.). More importantly, there is a limit of 5 systems per customer.

      Still, one may get close to this price if Dell offers volume discounts on the prices they give to K12 institutions. But the price advantage for PCs still isn't $1200, like the grandparent's parent claimed. If there is and advantage, maybe it is $50-$150, and not even this is certain if you need FireWire on your computers.

    27. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by GlassUser · · Score: 1

      I believe you're right about the optiplexes not having firewire (the only card I can find at Dell costs $75 also). But I know the laptops had it.

    28. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by AbbyNormal · · Score: 1

      What about Open Office? (-$200).
      Cost of upgrading Mac? $219?

      There is one advantage.

      Your last comment: "Read before you think. Think before you post." was ironic.

      --
      Sig it.
    29. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by fupeg · · Score: 1

      I have OpenOffice installed on my PC, and I would only recommend it to people who have a lot of computer experience. There's no way I could imagine kids or even teachers using it. Plus wasn't one of your points that kids could gain experience with programs that they would actually use in real world businesses on a Windows machine? How does OpenOffice fit into that?

    30. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by AbbyNormal · · Score: 1

      Real world businesses? Right, but you don't need the exact software to do so...Concepts also work fairly well.

      --
      Sig it.
    31. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by fupeg · · Score: 1

      The whole point of this thread was that Apple's decline in the education market had little to do with price. There is very little price advantage in going the Wintel route over the eMac route. I thought that point of your post was that there was indeed a price advantage and you used the Dell/VA deal as an example. Now I don't know what kind of productivity software they are installing on those cheap Dells in VA, but I would be absolutely shocked if it was OpenOffice. In fact I am sure that there would have already been multiple stories run on Slashdot if that was the case. So the difference in the VA-only Dell vs. anywhere-eMac was software vs. service. The Dell gave extra service but no software, the eMac comes with productivity software, but only a year of service as opposed to three. The Dell had more memory, the eMac a bigger hard drive, etc. My point was that this was not evidence of any kind of significant price advantage over Apple (especially if you are not in Virginia.)

    32. Re:Educational discounts aren't much of a discount by sootman · · Score: 1

      The limit is, well, a limitation :-) but a firewire card is $30 and the upgrade to XP Pro is $70. I know this isn't quite the way things are in the Read World (tm) but I would think that it shouldn't be *that* hard to get your Dell rep to sell you a bunch of systems for a price *somewhere* near what they sell to consumers-on-the-street. After all, everything else being equal, they'd rather sell 100 machines at a time than 1--all that profit (!) with one phone call/invoice/etc. than 100. OTOH, if they're taking a loss on those, then I could see why they wouldn't offer them in quantity. Alternately, organize your PTA--have every parent orde 1 machine, then reimburse them! :-) (I know, not practical or realistic, just a pie-eyed thought.)

      But I feel your pain. If you're arguing with your superiors for Macs, feel free *not* to pass along that dell.com/tv URL. :-)

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
  14. Am i the only one that finds this disturbing? by Eudial · · Score: 5, Interesting

    http://w1.901.telia.com/~u90121759/ahem.JPG

    Look cloesely at the "sponsorship announcement" next to the article.

    --
    GAAH! MY PRINTER IS ON FIRE!!! PUT IT OUT! PUT IT OUT!
    1. Re:Am i the only one that finds this disturbing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's funny, I see a Microsoft ad on this page too, but no one's accusing Slashdot of being pro-Microsoft.

    2. Re:Am i the only one that finds this disturbing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am.

    3. Re:Am i the only one that finds this disturbing? by puckhead · · Score: 1

      Moderately ironic, yes. That you find it disturbing is more disturbing then the placement of a M$ ad in a computer publication.

      --
      Watching Cowboy Bebop in my jammies, eating a bowl of Shreddies.
  15. Redundant Troll? by devphaeton · · Score: 4, Insightful

    haven't we been doing the "Apple is dying" thing since the days before /.? Before teh Intarweb even? :oP

    --


    do() || do_not(); // try();
    1. Re:Redundant Troll? by Flingles · · Score: 0

      If we used the prefix ped in pedophile literally it would mean "foot lover" but it seems that is not the case. So technophile could mean anything at all :)

      --
      Karma: -2^0.5 . Mainly due to the imbibing of dihydrogen monoxide
    2. Re:Redundant Troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A podiatrist is a foot doctor, a pediatrist is a children's doctor. Pod ~= Foot.

  16. Re:Slashdot's school days are numbered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My companies firewall blocks that site. Can someone post the rest of the article?

  17. operating under flawed assumptions by BWJones · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So, the deal is that the school IT folks have been sold down the river on the concept that a single platform will save them money. Furthermore, they have been sold on the concept that Windows will save them money.

    The reality is quite different. For example, a good friend of mine's wife is a grade school teacher. Their school last year had a bunch of LCIII's and IIsi's that they wanted to replace with new Macs. The district IT said no, and they would be replaced with Wintel based machines. So, not only did the Macs work with only a single teacher administering them for over ten years on his own time, they now have a staff of four administering the Wintel machines, their costs have gone up 600% for administration alone and the district tells them the machines will be replaced in four years.

    I ask you. How has this scenario saved the district, the school or the taxpayer any money? Administration costs have skyrocketed and the computers will have to be replaced more often. Rather as Cringley and others have stated, it sounds like a consipiracy to maintain IT jobs and expand their budget.

    --
    Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
    1. Re:operating under flawed assumptions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I guess no one gets fired for using Wintel machines, I mean what choice do you have really!?

      Administration has a lot to do with justifing its own existance...

    2. Re:operating under flawed assumptions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      this is not a logical argument. you are comparing the cost of administrating a bunch of lcIIIs to the cost of administrating a bunch of new machines. you can not surf the internet with lcIIIs, much less do video editing. you should be comparing the cost of emacs vs. pcs, and i think that windows would prove to be cheaper in this case (atleast in the initial purchase, administration might be a bit more expensive).

    3. Re:operating under flawed assumptions by bedouin · · Score: 4, Informative

      you can not surf the internet with lcIIIs, much less do . . .

      Yes you can, actually. Up until a few years ago a 68k Mac could handle basic internet tasks quite well.

    4. Re:operating under flawed assumptions by silentbozo · · Score: 1

      My gateway NAT box is a 68k mac (granted, not as ancient as an LCIII). My main workstation is a Radius 81/110 with a G3 upgrade card. I also have a set of Win2k workstations for 3d work and programming, and a bunch of linux boxes running as fileservers (put atalk and samba on the same box, and you can have pre OSX macs talking to Windows boxes via the fileserver, no problem.)

      I think one problem is where these IT people are coming from. You get them from major universities, and they'll be more open to mac and linux/unix systems (because they'll have had experience with them.) You get them from government (ie, city, county, state, federal) and they'll be drones who will recommend what they're familiar with.

      The key, of course, is to make sure you're serving your customer with the best solution to their problem. What do schools need? I haven't stepped in a k-12 classroom since I left high school almost a decade ago (jeez, where did the time go???) Back then, the only computer lab we had used computers as glorified replacements for typewriters (ie word processing.) Unless you need to run specialized software that requires Windows, I'd set up a set of linux workstations with donated equipment - just sanitize them, standardize them, and boot off of a IDE->flash interface. Force students to save onto a central fileserver and just use the workstations as thin clients.

      For applications that require windows, I have no problem with purchasing windows workstations... provided that they fund enough staff hours to keep those machines patched and disinfected on a regular basis!

    5. Re:operating under flawed assumptions by pelorus · · Score: 1

      Rather as Cringley and others have stated, it sounds like a consipiracy to maintain IT jobs and expand their budget.

      So, what Crinkley-man is saying and what we all agree with is that the "Macs out, UNIX out" refrain of the corporates in the late 90s is just being repeated in the schoolhouse now?

      Sure we all knew Education was 5 years behind in progress.

    6. Re:operating under flawed assumptions by MourningBlade · · Score: 1

      Where I work there are some people who are getting their old Macs replaced (old, old Macs. They have to really stretch to run 8.6, 9 is just baaaarely workable). They want Windows machines. Why?

      This is the crazy part. They go and talk with one of the other secretaries and see their computer, and golly gee it has such neat things and is so fast. They certainly don't want another Mac, since "they're so slow" and all.

      The IT guy for that and a few other labs is buying a few iMacs to loan people for a little while, to see what they think. He's overworked as it is dealing with Windows computers, and doesn't fancy adding a few more to the fray.

      My lab, on the other hand, is run by a Mac-using PI and has a few Mac-using people. I've been asked by PC users a few times about rigging up one of our older Macs so that that they can use it for a little while --- to see if they want to go over permanently.

      It's funny. One of our nurses used a PC for years. Has always hated it, and has usually not even named them (how sad) except to provide expletives in its direction.

      She got a Mac laptop for her remote work, and within two weeks she ordered internet service for home and uses the thing all the time. Loves it.

      I'm lucky, though, I work in a place where they believe in using the right tool for the job. I also work in a place where all the labs are independent and have to secure their own funding and survive on their own --- scientific failure[1] results in a long, slow, moneyless death.

      Funny, that most of the PIs tend to let people use whatever they want that will make them happy and let them get their work done, rather than obsessing over "unification" and pissing contests.

      [1] - Scientific failure meaning not publishing or continuous, uneventful retread of old material. Failed experiments are normal.

    7. Re:operating under flawed assumptions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Peope prefer PC's because they can install pirated shit on them with ease, and rarely PAY for their actions if caught.

      In any shop with 'standard' pc's with one master 'image'. Within 6 weeks, half of those boxes will not be 'standard' anymore. Re-imaging costs $$$.

      If I had one dollar for everytime a machine was imaged, I would be a rich man. If the supers had a dollar deducted from their personal bonuses for each reimage, the wind would blow differently

    8. Re:operating under flawed assumptions by Empiric · · Score: 1

      I'll go ahead and comment on this "conspiracy" notion.

      It's hardly unusual for people to argue for what they perceive to be in their best interests, where they feel their interests intersect with their client/employer/customer.

      If Walmart argues that they have the best products at the lowest prices, is that a "conspiracy"? Is there anyone in business that actively argues against what they are in business for?

      From an ethical standpoint, where such possible conflicts seem to exist, one might consider the idea that "I am not obligated to argue against myself."

      To put it more directly, I've known tech people who see their institutions as basically wrappers around their technology. Forming a corporation is not difficult. Deciding to sell widget X (or teach subject Y) is not difficult. What is difficult, and what the competitive differentiator is for any given company, is the development and support of their products and services, and that centers around their technical competence. Techies should not feel guilty because their argument has won over some PHB's; they should see it as a competitive reality.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    9. Re:operating under flawed assumptions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but you see, the administration is now bigger, which means that they can get themselves a bigger budget and still spend very little on the actual classrooms. It's a win-win for the administration. You decide what it is for everyone else.

    10. Re:operating under flawed assumptions by pHDNgell · · Score: 1

      The very first mac I ever used for any length of time was a Mac II. Just a plain Mac II (1987). This was about 1995. It was *huge*. It had ethernet, 24-bit video, running the latest MacOS at the time, and was on our IP network. It was running Netscape, photoshop, an X server, etc... I watched it boot off of a magneto-optical drive we borrowed from a local TV station to upgrade it. We also booted it off of a CD-ROM (I never knew you could do that at all before I saw this machine).

      I was imagining what a PC from 1987 would be like on this network. That's when I started thinking that the Mac platform was something I should take a look at.

      Then OS X came out... :)

      --
      -- The world is watching America, and America is watching TV.
  18. kids like windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    being a highschool student myself, i think that the switch to windows is a good thing for schools. highschool students prefer windows, because that is what they use at home and know how to use. it is a really big pain for everyone to have to use one OS at home and a different one at school.

    1. Re:kids like windows by soimless · · Score: 1

      but isnt it good to learn a new os? and i have pleanty of mac pepole that hate skool becuse they have to use a windows machine that crashes left and right on them

    2. Re:kids like windows by zors · · Score: 2, Insightful

      i disagree, for years i used windows at school, and apple at home (i have my own PC now, oh the joys of counter strike! :D). If anything, it was a good thing, it taught me how to use both systems, to an extent. And i think that some ofmy moronic classmates could use that. Besides, since when does what kids want matter? If it saves money, go for it. A 700 dollar eMac minus (i think) 150 dollars in educational discount, plus fewer staff requirements, and less network downtime, is a far better arguement than,"kids like windows." Also, i think userfriendlyness is important, because i cant tell you how many dumb questions i've had to answer from teachers. F*ck kids.

    3. Re:kids like windows by Dawang · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Is it really that difficult for you to understand both Windows and Macintosh?

      Sure, it's a bit more of a challenge if you have to be a sysadmin for both systems (like me), but if you're an end-user, what's the big deal?

      IMNSHO, the knowledge you learn about the specific operating system (be it Windows, Mac OS, or *nix) is far less important than understanding how a computer functions. Once you have the concepts of computing down (again, I'm just talking about using them, not administering), you should be able to apply those skills to any computer, any platform.

      As a university IT administrator, I can tell you with 100% certainty that other IT admins put PCs in because it's what they know, not because it's what is "best". There are indeed instances where a Windows-based system is the "best", but there are plenty of times where Windows is used for the admin's comfort when a Mac- or *nix-based computer would be a better choice.

      Here's another question: does the sysadmin comfort with Wintel come from simple laziness, or is it that they're over-burdened with having to keep up with all the MS patches and system configuration madness that they're too exhausted to learn anything else? Hmmm.

    4. Re:kids like windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " There are indeed instances where a Windows-based system is the "best"".

      Name one?

    5. Re:kids like windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If that were indeed the argument. There isn't any reason to believe that anything in your argument is, in fact, true though. Can you provide evidence for the fewer staff requirements, less network downtime, and $550 price?

      Who said what the kids wanted was even being considered? What was mentioned was what the parents wanted. The parents are, after all, both the customers and the bill-payers. It used to be that the parents bought what the kids were being taught in schools. Now they've wised up.

  19. Uniformity is for the ignorant by GreatDrok · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As an employer I looked for people who had a range of experience. These people would be able to cope when changes and challenges presented themselves. I remember even twenty years back putting someone one a computer to do some work and they said that they had only be taught how to use another software package and they were completely stumped by what I was asking them to do.

    The same is true today. People trained to use MS Office and Windows are frequently hopeless when put in front of another OS. Someone who has learned how to use computers rather than a particular OS and package are much more flexible and know how to read a manual. They will be more productive in the long run than these MS trained drones.

    For this reason I would encourage schools to look for less uniformity not more. Mac, UNIX, Linux, Windows, Be, even VMS, it's all good and the diversity helps stem the tide of malware. Whatever happened to the network being the computer? The client shouldn't matter, mix 'em up and we'll have more rounded students entering the workforce.

    --
    "I have the attention span of a strobe lit goldfish, please get to the point quickly!"
    1. Re:Uniformity is for the ignorant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      For this reason I would encourage schools to look for less uniformity not more. Mac, UNIX, Linux, Windows, Be, even VMS, it's all good and the diversity helps stem the tide of malware. Whatever happened to the network being the computer? The client shouldn't matter, mix 'em up and we'll have more rounded students entering the workforce.

      Nah, they'll be too busy fighting over who gets to use the VAXen.

    2. Re:Uniformity is for the ignorant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      People trained to use MS Office and Windows are frequently hopeless when put in front of another OS.

      And this is why, I hate to tell you, 99% of these decisions are made. There is an executive somewhere who has the ultimate power to make the decision. He knows only Windows. He doesn't want to learn to use anything else. He's never going to make a decision that forces him, personally, to use something else. End of story. In fact, if it helps him understand the network a little better -- even if that isn't really part of his job and he's never going to use most of these computers himself -- that's enough to reason to make him switch.

    3. Re:Uniformity is for the ignorant by rendermaniac · · Score: 0, Troll

      Except if this article was about a school switching entirely over to Linux then we wouldn't get this sort of comment. Slashdot is obviously very bias to start with, but most people in education are not growing up to be computer techies and will be using Windows with Office. Forcing an open source philosphy down someone's throat is not going to help them if it won't be any use later. And how many businesses do get a few unix boxes just to avoid uniformity? No they use them because they are productive. Uniformity mean maintaining one set of support contracts, one set of software, one set of patches for when things go wrong and there are less obscure bugs (there may still be bugs ;) getting machines to talk to each other. And saying that you can only do video editting on a Mac in this day and age is simply not true. Only publishing remains a bastion of Apple and that's because it's what they are used to. (the usual argument given against Windows).

    4. Re:Uniformity is for the ignorant by Night+Goat · · Score: 1

      I like that you made the distinction between "trained" and "learned." People who learn to use computers can apply the concepts they learn to other OSes. People trained to use their computer seem to only know exactly what they need to know in order to do their job. If a small problem comes up, where they see something that is a little skewed, they're helpless. Not that I'm blaming these people- they're doing OK at their job, so what the hell.

    5. Re:Uniformity is for the ignorant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I remember even twenty years back putting someone one a computer to do some work and they said that they had only be taught how to use another software package and they were completely stumped by what I was asking them to do."

      What the fuck are you talking about? Maybe that's because you couldn't string together a coherent sentence--the poor sod was probably horrified that you hired him.

      Jesus fucking christ.

  20. at my skool by soimless · · Score: 1

    all they have is what they use and what they have is oldsh os 9 and windows 95 and 98. and becuse of it i think that our good old macs are not dead becuse the video and graphics use them and the skools are trying what they can to fix them. but a lot of times the skool adims are controled buy pepole that dont know what the hell they are doing and thus cant do a damned thing about it

    1. Re:at my skool by syrinx · · Score: 1

      all they have is what they use and what they have is oldsh os 9 and windows 95 and 98. and becuse of it i think that our good old macs are not dead becuse the video and graphics use them and the skools are trying what they can to fix them. but a lot of times the skool adims are controled buy pepole that dont know what the hell they are doing and thus cant do a damned thing about it

      There's a joke about the quality of the school and the quality of the OS here, but I'll try to resist making it.

      --
      Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
  21. What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    O.K.
    Lets See:
    I'm a pure MACs lover.
    AND THIS is all fault of SCO, 9-11-01, Duke Nukem Forever, Cowboy Neal, and YOU (with a finger pointing on YOUU)
    Nuff Said.

  22. Or herring! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, the teacher enjoys a belly full of fresh herring.

  23. It just isn't true. by randyest · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Anyone else tired of this oft-touted, but plainly false claim about Apple pricing?:

    Today, PCs have little price advantage over Macs. Apple's eMac, designed as a low-cost model for school systems, costs $50 more, at most, than a comparable low-end PC.

    The cheapest eMac I could find is $799.00. That includes: 800MHz PowerPC G4, 128MB SDRAM, 40GB Ultra ATA drive. CD-ROM drive.

    I could get equivalent PC power for under $200, I am sure, but it is hard to find such a slow CPU to compare that to. Even a 2GHz AMD system, with more than the above, can be had at Best Buy for under $550 with a 2" larger monitor (under $500 with a 17" like the eMac). (Model: T2341 is $399, add a 19" monitor for $149, 17" for $100).

    It's OK to love mac, and OSX makes me like them also, but don't lie and say they are $50 more. It just isn't true.

    --
    everything in moderation
    1. Re:It just isn't true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Of course that money they saved will be spent on removing the first worm or two.

    2. Re:It just isn't true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Where to start. The 800 MHz G4 is faster than a 2GHz AMD processor. In certain tests it even beats a 4GHz Pentium4 (hence the name: G4). The Mac also has superior software which uses the 128MB much more efficiently than a Windows PC would. The memory efficiency is about 1:5, so you'd have to have more than 512MB in your Windows PC to keep up. The same goes for the harddisk: have you seen how well Quicktime compresses media data? Makes the 40GB harddisk look like infinite storage. And don't get me started on monitor sizes. The horrible Windows interface wastes screen real estate it's not even funny anymore. Two inch is about as much screen space as the Windows taskbar alone wastes compared to the sexy MacOSX dock. Really, get your facts together before you start comparing prices. It's not just about raw numbers, efficiency matters.

    3. Re:It just isn't true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      try posting with a name and you might get the response you deserve, though it would certainly crush your macobsession and cause irrepreable harm to your weak psyche. i guess it's better you stay AC then, fuckwit.

    4. Re:It just isn't true. by raptor21 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      To make your best buy emachine comparable you would have to add a 32 MB radeon for $129.50 and a flat CRT 17" like the emachines eview monitor 17F/17F2 for $209.99

      Emachines PC $399.99
      32MB Radeon $129.99
      17" Flat CRT $209.99
      Total $ 739.48

      Cheapest emac $799

      Difference is $59.50

      Ok so $9.50 more than $50, You win!!!

      I think to really make it more comparable Windows XP home should be replaced with XP pro to match MacOS X's networking features. And also the iApps. So there goes the difference in proce. The mac looks better even with a slower CPU.

    5. Re:It just isn't true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ah, but take a closer look at your eMachines' specs:

      "System Bus: Not provided"

      ;)

      BTW, the education discount on an eMac is $100. And if you really can't invest $700 in a computer, I pity you. My firewall cost more than that.

    6. Re:It just isn't true. by martissimo · · Score: 1

      Where to start. The 800 MHz G4 is faster than a 2GHz AMD processor. In certain tests it even beats a 4GHz Pentium4

      So where do we find these mythical 4 GHz P4's? I could really use a few more points in my system benchmarks, but no matter how hard I try, I keep failing to locate them so far ;)

    7. Re:It just isn't true. by zinkem · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because of Mac hardware architecture, the system specs compared to a PC are misleading. It's really not fair to compare based on megahertz alone because there are still things a 733 mac will do better than a 2ghz pentium.
      In about 2 minutes of searching on google I was able to find this, which compared a 733 mac to a 1.8ghz PC and the Mac came out on top in a couple of the tests. http://www.techtv.com/products/hardware/story/0,23 008,3339307,00.html

      I don't know a whole lot about Macs but I do know that when you're used to using PCs, Mac system specs can be misleading. So it is very possible that truly comparable macs and PCs differ by about $50 in price.

      --
      I can't think of a good sig...
    8. Re:It just isn't true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      This individual's Mac Zealot authorization has been revoked. We sincerely apologize for the nonsensical gibberish he/she has spouted. Please rest assured that we have never and will never tolerate exaggerated claims such as these.

      Thank you,
      Friends of Steve

    9. Re:It just isn't true. by jmelloy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Now, I am a mac guy. And every time an article comes up, someone says they are cheaper, they aren't cheaper.

      First off, we'll assume that a school is going to buy a computer from a manufacturer. We'll use Dell to compare.

      The cheapest eMac isn't $800, it's $700. (Did you actually check the education store, since we are shopping for a school?)
      It has an 800 Mhz G4, which is pretty respectable for a mac.
      Comes with 128 MB RAM, 40 GB HD, a CD-ROM, 2 Firewire ports, 5 USB ports, built-in ethernet, 17-inch display and a Radeon 7500.

      Heading over to Dell's education site, I found a Dimension 2400 for $689.90. It's got a 2.2 Ghz processor, 128 MB RAM, a 40 GB HD, CD-ROM, 6 USB ports, built-in ethernet, a 17-inch display, integrated video, 17-inch display and no speakers.

      Both come with a mouse & keyboard, although the Dell does spring for an extra button.

      I would say $10 is pretty close for about the same system. I was actually expecting the Dell to win by more, but have something silly like no network card. If you are buying machines without monitors, the Dell low-end trounces Apple; there isn't anything without a monitor at Apple for less that $1200.

    10. Re:It just isn't true. by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      Why are those features needed in an educational market at all? For a lab of word processing/basic app machines, like 99% of the k-12 computers are, you don't need anything more than the integrated video chipset to handle display. The monitor's a non-issue because a flat picture tube is only (marginally) beneficial to people who are using it day in and day out. You don't need the networking features of XP pro because once again, you're in an environment where you just need to crank out texts. The iApps are similarly worthless for a great deal of the market we're talking about, and aren't a great added value. So, you're still left with spending several hundred dollars more for a comparable emac. Add to the fact that the PC's non-integrated monitor leads to cost savings down the road as one doesn't have to replace the monitor at the same time as the rest of the system, and the PC is clearly a better deal.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    11. Re:It just isn't true. by nempo · · Score: 1

      Then why don't you point us too these 'certain tests' and a source for all your other BS you seem too be full off.

      --
      --- No, english is not my mother tongue.
    12. Re:It just isn't true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'm not sure what shocks me more, that my zealotry license has been revoked or that my comment was modded "informative"...

    13. Re:It just isn't true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bahahahahhahahahahaha...

      You actually got 50% informative.

      Thanks for the laughs :)_

    14. Re:It just isn't true. by Llywelyn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > For a lab of word processing/basic app machines, like
      >99% of the k-12 computers are

      Stop.

      You are assuming word processing/basic app machines, this is not necessarily a valid assumption--I've known schools that do digital video work or teach programs like Photoshop or even use programs such as Lightwave or Maya. These are *not* all that uncommon uses.

      Also, on another note, macs now have Quartz Extreme and in 2005 Windows will offer "tiered" user experiences and offload the user interface to the graphics card, an integrated chipset is (likely) not going to fare as well with Longhorn.

      >The monitor's a non-issue because a flat picture tube is
      >only (marginally) beneficial to people who are using it day
      >in and day out.

      1) It is better. Whether it is worth paying for is in question, but it is better.

      2) If you find another CRT, make sure the quality is good, I've seen monitors in some HS's which were so low-quality they hurt they eyes to even glance at.

      >You don't need the networking features of XP pro because
      >once again, you're in an environment where you just need
      >to crank out texts.

      XP Pro is also useful to programmers et al. Programming tools are free with the mac, they are not with the PC, so if you teach AP (or even basic) computer science you are going to need to fork over more for the PC.

      You are also looking at Windows 2003 Server, which costs a hell of a lot more. MacOS X's unlimited client license is your friend.

      > The iApps are similarly worthless for a great deal of the
      >market we're talking about, and aren't a great added
      >value.

      They still present an added value that (especially with iMovie/iDVD) I can certainly see schools being willing to pick up on.

      iPhoto+iTunes, which can be used to create image slide shows and set them to music, also have a good bit of classroom utility.

      >So, you're still left with spending several hundred dollars
      >more for a comparable emac.

      Non-comparable emac, you mean. The school may not see the additional utility as being worth it, or they may, but that is their concern.

      >Add to the fact that the PC's non-integrated monitor
      >leads to cost savings down the road as one doesn't have
      >to replace the monitor at the same time as the rest of the
      >system, and the PC is clearly a better deal.

      If you are going to factor this in you might as well factor in as well that the Mac is going to cost less to support.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    15. Re:It just isn't true. by ocelotbob · · Score: 1
      You are assuming word processing/basic app machines, this is not necessarily a valid assumption--I've known schools that do digital video work or teach programs like Photoshop or even use programs such as Lightwave or Maya. These are *not* all that uncommon uses.

      For the vast majority of systems, it is, though. On those systems that the extra video card is needed, throw it in. To get to the emac's level of video display wouldn't be more than $50-$60.

      Also, on another note, macs now have Quartz Extreme and in 2005 Windows will offer "tiered" user experiences and offload the user interface to the graphics card, an integrated chipset is (likely) not going to fare as well with Longhorn.

      Or, it'll be just like windows XP, where you can turn off the new GUI eye candy and use the traditional UI with no problem.

      1) It is better. Whether it is worth paying for is in question, but it is better.

      2) If you find another CRT, make sure the quality is good, I've seen monitors in some HS's which were so low-quality they hurt they eyes to even glance at.

      Depends on the needs. Most labs could do just fine with a good 15" monitor -- the emac's 17" would be overkill. If we're talking about a homogeneous computer lab, than chances are, you can easily go cheaper, especially when buying in bulk.

      XP Pro is also useful to programmers et al. Programming tools are free with the mac, they are not with the PC, so if you teach AP (or even basic) computer science you are going to need to fork over more for the PC.

      Ever hear of cygwin or mingw? They're free too, ya know. And they run under XP Home.

      You are also looking at Windows 2003 Server, which costs a hell of a lot more. MacOS X's unlimited client license is your friend.

      Or you run a Linux server, and admin it through a tool such as webmin and save yourself some money on a server. Unlimited clients there, too.

      If you are going to factor this in you might as well factor in as well that the Mac is going to cost less to support.

      Depends on the IT department. I'd be willing to wager that a good IT policy, and proactive maintenance steps could bring PC and mac support costs to near equity.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    16. Re:It just isn't true. by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      "For the vast majority of systems, it is, though. On those systems that the extra video card is needed, throw it in. To get to the emac's level of video display wouldn't be more than $50-$60. "

      Not if I'm pricing video cards correctly...

      "Or, it'll be just like windows XP, where you can turn off the new GUI eye candy and use the traditional UI with no problem. "

      We aren't talking eye candy or even user experience, we are talking about whether it will even be able to support longhorn at a reasonable speed.

      "Depends on the needs. Most labs could do just fine with a good 15" monitor"

      This is where I roll my eyes.

      You are undercutting to an almost desperate degree--anything to get a cheaper deal and saying "they can just upgrade for those handful of systems that need it".

      This isn't normally how systems are purchased and, what's more, undercutting and saying "they don't need that" is not a good policy overall. I remember one high school in the area doing that in 1996--they ended up with computers that were incapable of running Windows 95. There is a limit to how far you can do that and cuts like "they don't need 17" monitors" may or may not be valid depending on the circumstances.

      "Ever hear of cygwin or mingw? They're free too, ya know. And they run under XP Home. "

      Yes, I know quite a few people who use them. They do not compare--even slightly--to tools like ProjectBuilder, OpenGL Shader Builder, MallocDebug, and MONster; having a unix shell with the full tools in the right locations; etc.

      In the end, that MacOS X is a Unix operating system wins this.

      "Or you run a Linux server, and admin it through a tool such as webmin and save yourself some money on a server. Unlimited clients there, too. "

      Again, you are undercutting. If you wanted to spend your admin's time setting up a linux server, by all means. You could spend that same time on a MacOS X box.

      Also, have you ever used MacOS X server? You are paying for the admin tools--things that let you configure ldap servers, or having a top-of-the-line workgroup manager.

      "Depends on the IT department. I'd be willing to wager that a good IT policy, and proactive maintenance steps could bring PC and mac support costs to near equity."

      Point to one study which has shown that to be the case. I've seen numerous ones which indicate the opposite. You go ahead and wager--your suppositions are irrelevant unless you can back them up.

      Also, we are talking about schools, a "good IT policy" and "high school" are generally an oxymoron.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    17. Re:It just isn't true. by alienw · · Score: 1

      How much crack did you smoke before posting this? A 32MB radeon costs about $30, not $129. I don't think they even make those anymore. And let's see, I don't think a cheap eMac has a 17-inch LCD display. More like a 17-inch CRT. So, let's do the calculations with the proper figures:
      Emachines PC $399.99
      32MB Radeon upgrade (not sure why) $30
      17" CRT $80
      Total = $510, which is about $300 cheaper than the eMac. In fact, for the price of two eMacs you can 3 eMachines computers and still have money left over. Not to mention that the eMacs probably won't last very long -- when the monitor dies, the computer dies. So you would have to replace them more often. And I bet the eMachines have a faster processor than the eMac's anemic 800MHz.

      The iApps are the first thing that would get deleted from the eMac. Schools neither need nor want students to be able to download MP3s, use chat, et cetera. And the video editing stuff is completely worthless since most schools don't own DV camcorders.

      BTW, XP home works very well as a client. Schools usually have dedicated servers running the network. No need for xp professional.

    18. Re:It just isn't true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Insightful? More like redundant...

    19. Re:It just isn't true. by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      >How much crack did you smoke before posting this?

      Obviously not as much as you were...

      >32MB Radeon upgrade (not sure why) $30

      It is a Radeon 7500 with 32 MB of RAM: we're talking between $60 and $90.

      Not as much as the original poster, but 2-3 times your price.

      >And let's see, I don't think a cheap eMac has a 17-inch
      >LCD display. More like a 17-inch CRT.

      The original poster doesn't claim that it does--he claims a flat-screen CRT. There *is* a difference, you know?

      Looking at warehouse.com's prices, flat-screen 17" monitors start at around $130 and go up to $700 (and up, and up). One that supports 1280 by 960 pixels at 75Hz is also a little more pricy (about $30-50). I don't know what you were smoking wrt an $80 version.

      You also *still* aren't up to parity (FireWire, et al).

      "Not to mention that the eMacs probably won't last very long -- when the monitor dies, the computer dies."

      You can stop trolling and post statistics any time now. I've seen a lot of people posting that the emac purchase will last longer because the monitor will outlast the machine. Which is it?

      How long do emacs last in the wild? Versus emachines (which are known to burn out thanks to their power supplies)?

      >And I bet the eMachines have a faster processor than the
      >eMac's anemic 800MHz.

      As I said, you can stop trolling any time now...

      >The iApps are the first thing that would get deleted from
      >the eMac.

      Wrong. I can see a good deal of use in a school environment for an mp3 player (think about it) or something that generates slide shows and sets them to music (class project? leadership perhaps?)

      iChat, while it has limited utility as an educational app, *would* have good potential as a way to get kids using the computers.

      > And the video editing stuff is completely worthless since
      >most schools don't own DV camcorders.

      I know many schools that have a class which could make use of one though and it is fairly common for them to have a video camera on hand, regardless of whether it is DV. Give it time and they'll be happy to have iMove and iDVD.

      >BTW, XP home works very well as a client. Schools usually
      >have dedicated servers running the network. No need for
      >xp professional.

      Unless you have an international userbase, which in a school environment is entirely possible (albeit unlikely in HS).

      As I mentioned elsewhere: many people are also going to want to use Windows 2003 Server or MacOS X Server. There the winner in price should be clear.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    20. Re:It just isn't true. by alienw · · Score: 1

      It is a Radeon 7500 with 32 MB of RAM: we're talking between $60 and $90.

      Maybe at Apple stores we are. Apparently, you don't have a clue. here is a 7500 card with twice the RAM for $43 and free fedex shipping. I wasn't even able to find a 7500 with 32megs, they aren't manufactured anymore. The card is like 3 generations old.

      The original poster doesn't claim that it does--he claims a flat-screen CRT. There *is* a difference, you know?

      I don't think a public school with a small budget would want to buy a deluxe, flat screen monitor when any other would work equally well. With emachines, you have a choice. With apple, you don't.

      Besides, Sam's club has Samsung 17" flat screen CRT monitors for $120. I'm sure they are cheaper elsewhere, especially when you buy in bulk. I think the $80 figure is reasonable for a decent flat CRT monitor.

      You also *still* aren't up to parity (FireWire, et al).

      Firewire? What the hell for? In a public high school?

      I've seen a lot of people posting that the emac purchase will last longer because the monitor will outlast the machine.

      That's purely anecdotal evidence. Any sysadmin will tell you that even quality monitors fail quite often, especially when you have hundreds of them. They won't ALL fail, but some of them will. Repairing them is usually not worth it, so the eMac becomes a throwaway item. Instead of an $80 replacement monitor, you have an $800 replacement computer.

      Wrong. I can see a good deal of use in a school environment for an mp3 player (think about it) or something that generates slide shows and sets them to music (class project? leadership perhaps?)

      It's good for getting the district's ass sued off, really. Those MP3s would probably be ripped from CDs and pile up on the hard drive, thus violating copyrights. Furthermore, other students would likely copy them to CDs, floppies, or Zip disks and take them home. Guess what happens when a disgruntled employee calls the RIAA?

      Also, have you ever heard of powerpoint? It does roughly the same thing WRT slides.

      iChat, while it has limited utility as an educational app, *would* have good potential as a way to get kids using the computers.

      Ever hear of CIPA? That's another good way to get the district's ass sued off. In my school, you got suspended for a week if you used chat.

      I know many schools that have a class which could make use of one though and it is fairly common for them to have a video camera on hand, regardless of whether it is DV. Give it time and they'll be happy to have iMove and iDVD.

      Good luck working with video on an 800MHz emac with a puny 40 gig hard drive. You will be able to encode about 3 minutes of video in a standard class period. Besides, we are talking about general purpose computer labs. Those classes usually keep a couple of powermacs around to do their stuff.

      As I mentioned elsewhere: many people are also going to want to use Windows 2003 Server or MacOS X Server. There the winner in price should be clear.

      Of course, especially considering that I would trust Win2003 Server much more than MacOS X Server. Apple never had any experience whatsoever with server platforms. Microsoft's platform sucks, but it's common enough that using it is only semi-problematic. How much do OS X Server administrators cost and where can you find one? And why not use, say, Linux for servers -- it likely costs less to administer than OS X Server, and works fine with both Windows and Macs. Please don't tell me it doesn't cost anything to administer Mac hardware because it's so easy to use. That's utter bullshit -- any semi-large computer system requires dedicated admins.

    21. Re:It just isn't true. by ainsoph · · Score: 1

      And every time an article comes up, someone says they are cheaper, they aren't cheaper.

      Apple computers are a better buy, only in the collective LSD flashback universe that Jobs and all of his minions live in.

      Macs and OS X *NOW* are cool, neat, fun, etc.. But the price point will never ever ever beat the Wintel world. Apple simply cannot afford it.

      It has an 800 Mhz G4, which is pretty respectable for a mac.

      Yeah, its pretty resepectable for a PC too. Three years ago. Go Apple!

    22. Re:It just isn't true. by raptor21 · · Score: 1

      You gave me bestbuy prices I gave you best buy prices. Go to Bestbuy.com and look at the prices your self all the prices I gave are from bestbuy.com. schools won;'t go to 10 different locations to get components, they want one vendor.

      You fail to also look at other factors favoring the emac.

      1. One single piece means space saving. A biggie when real estate is scarce. Like in school lab where you need to put many computers in a room.

      2. Power consumption and heat decipation. The emac is going to consume much less power than the emachines destop tower + monitor. Since the G4s run really cool you have less heat, less cooling costs (Air conditioning). Incase of the emachines you have the monitor generating heat as well as the tower. The emac has only one major heat source the CRT part. A biggie for school districts, whose budgets are already pretty restrictive, saving on thier electric bill is a good thing.

      3. Less noise, quieter labs. AFAIK the emacs and the imacs have no fans. Have you ever heard and Athlon XP /P4 based pc (I have one in my room and it is LOUD) you have 5 fans minimum (cpu,chipset,gpu, power supply, 1-2 case). Now put 12-24 of these PCs in a room.

      AS for iApps. Schools give home work, like papers, presentations and such. Students can get creative with thier work if those tools are present. And the schools save money buy not having to buy licenses for 3rd party apps for XP.

      Add to XP antivirus software licenses. The cost of the hardware is often offest by the software licenses when you go for a windows solution.

      One more thing, the education market never pays retail. Apple offers good discounts. The emac with 384 megs of RAM can be had for $789 with educational pricing. Emachines is already on very low margins I am not sure discounting thier products more will still keep them profitable.

  24. Price was never an issue by evn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Most students could easily complete everything up to a highschool level education using any computing platform: Windows, Linux, or Mac OS. Windows is self-perpetuating: we teach Windows because it's popular, it's popular because it's what people know. It's a shame it's gotten to this state of affairs. Even if a single platform is more cost effective to maintain than a mixed environment moving to Linux or BSD on the existing x86 hardware in a school would be cheaper than sticking with Windows licensing for Windows, Office, NT Server and on the next hardware upgrade cycle moving to Macintosh systems (if that's deamed to be the best move) or upgrading the x86 systems already there. I think a two major reasons for the standardization on Windows has to do with the administrators trying to secure their employment (weekly patches = overtime) and the fear of maintaining something they aren't familar with.

    1. Re:Price was never an issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, I thought most students could complete everything up to a high school level, and beyond, without even using computers at all. And they did so for years and years and years...

  25. Re:L.o.g.i.c. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how come this is modded -1 but it doesn't say flamebait or troll or one of those things next to it?

  26. Who needs the truth when you've got a Mac? by User+956 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Haddad writes about Macs in K-12 education, but he seems to be a little too anxious to make his point.

    Haddad said: "Hear what Art Rainwater, superintendent of the Madison (Wis) school district, told the local Capital Times. He conceded that Macs outperform PCs, but he didn't care. "We want a single platform," he said. "We're trying to get there using the carrot, or blackmail, or rewards, or whatever you call it."

    Not quite. Here's what the Capital Times printed:

    Superintendent Art Rainwater acknowledged that in some cases, Macintosh computers outperform their competitors.

    Slight difference there?

    Haddad continued his imaginitive use of quotes further on: "Drama teacher Rebecca Jallings at Madison West High School, for one, is fighting Rainwater's effort to strip her classroom of Macs. She told the Capital Times that she finds them the best machines by far for editing video, an important tool in her acting class."

    Jallings may have told the Capital Times that, but it never published it, at least in the version that appears on the Capital Times web archives.

    As an aside, Jallings records the students on video and then puts it on the Mac. The Capital Times reports "Rebecca Jallings, a theater teacher at Madison West High School, shoots video of her students as they learn to act. If they're "doing that swaying thing again" during their monologue, she said, she rolls the footage on her Macintosh computer and can prove it to the student immediately."

    Quite how that's superior to using a video camera alone is beyond me.

    --
    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
    1. Re:Who needs the truth when you've got a Mac? by randyest · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Anxious is a polite way to put it. He's not only vociferously wrong, his zealotry is annoying.

      Why haven't steep price cuts stemmed Apple's market fall?

      Because they didn't happen, at least not compared to wintel boxes. Proof.

      It all comes back to what I call the lemming effect -- the willingness of people to follow blindly along, never questioning as they march in step with everyone else.


      Riight. You don't like it, so everyone doing it is a lemming. If everyone we buying macs on the other hand, they would definitely not be lemmings.

      Don't get me wrong: Conformity isn't all bad, especially when it comes to computers. A decade ago, most workplaces were a mess of different models, few of which could work together, let alone speak to one another.


      Huh? Usually, when you use the construct "few could A, let alone B", B is harder than A. In this case, A = work together (doesn't that imply "speaking" to one another?), B = speak to one another. I don't get it. This reversal of sense is disturbing.

      The whole article is disturbing, in fact, and I'm sorry I read it.

      --
      everything in moderation
    2. Re:Who needs the truth when you've got a Mac? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      This is not insightful. It is spiteful innuendo and character assassination based upon 17 minutes of half-assed research

      Who's the bigger idiot, the writer, or the moderators?

    3. Re:Who needs the truth when you've got a Mac? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Way to rebut his points. There's no innuendo (I don't think you know what that means), and I really doubt it's spiteful. I'm assuming you're just too zealous to accept reality.

    4. Re:Who needs the truth when you've got a Mac? by delong · · Score: 1

      Hey! It's Maureen Dowd! Maybe even Krugman! Sure that wasn't the NY Times?

      Derek

    5. Re:Who needs the truth when you've got a Mac? by MasonMcD · · Score: 1

      Haddad said: "Hear what Art Rainwater, superintendent of the Madison (Wis) school district, told the local Capital Times. He conceded that Macs outperform PCs, but he didn't care. "We want a single platform," he said. "We're trying to get there using the carrot, or blackmail, or rewards, or whatever you call it."

      Not quite. Here's what the Capital Times printed:

      Superintendent Art Rainwater acknowledged that in some cases, Macintosh computers outperform their competitors.


      Now the NYT may make stuff up, but I suspect Business Week's Haddad, rather than re-releasing a newspaper article, may have actually been required to get his own quotes from the primary sources.

      But maybe not.

    6. Re:Who needs the truth when you've got a Mac? by brauwerman · · Score: 0, Troll

      Hi troll,

      Here's what the Capital Times printed:

      "We want a single platform," he said, referring to having all one type of computer in the network. "We've never made any secret about that."
      -and-
      "We're trying to get there using the carrot, or blackmail, or rewards or whatever you call it," Rainwater said.

    7. Re:Who needs the truth when you've got a Mac? by Night+Goat · · Score: 1

      Using a comment that you yourself posted is really shitty proof.

    8. Re:Who needs the truth when you've got a Mac? by ragecgi · · Score: 1

      I totally agree.

      This group of threads I've read so far has been turned into another win/mac debate, rather than a debate as to the validity of the writing/brainpower/opinion that this "writer" claims to have.

      His babblings are so full of holes it makes me want to smother it with mustard and slap it on a sandwich:) hehe...

      Quote:
      Why should my child work on a Mac in class when most people use PCs at home and in the office? I've heard this lament time and again in my son's schools over the years.
      Um, maybe it's just me, but it sounds like your son is trying to communicate with you, but you simply don't care because, among many other reasons I'm sure, you just can't face facts.

      Today, PCs have little price advantage over Macs. Apple's eMac, designed as a low-cost model for school systems, costs $50 more, at most, than a comparable low-end PC.
      Don't even get me started on that one. ...too late.
      My nephews go to the same schools that I went to way back,(VERY large puplic schools), and the admins there are my daily buds.
      NOT ONE of them reccommends a store-bought machine for daily use by teachers and students.
      EVERY one of the machines in the district I live in have been hand-built for pennies compared to the emac trash that Apple is trying to pass off.
      Networking is a dream, and they have not had a single Win-related crash in over 5 years.
      Heck, currently, the machines that the art departments use are the same build that I use for my Maya and video editing work here at home.
      (P4 2.4 gig 800mgzFSB, 512MB PC3200 Dual Channel DDR, 52x24x52 burner (could go without), and an asus mobo. As of last week, all for less than $550 bucks! (sans specialized vid card, but still!) http://www.nanosys1.com

      It's all vaguely reminiscent of those Apple ads from the 1980s, depicting human drones in shades of gray marching together, watching Big Brother on the big screen -- until one hurls a hammer at the screen.
      Yes it is, isn't it:)
      Only folks are finaly realizing the truth.
      First that ad was in 1984 (during the super bowl) and was shown only ONCE.
      And folks are waking up to the fact that that "hammer-throwing-big-boobed-chick" is old as hell now, and her big boobs are saggin' like crazy!
      But, if you want to be a "human-drone", you go ahead buddy.
      I for one am embracing the NOW.
      (even if that means Longhorn, and Palladium.)

      Nor is Apple shy about slashing prices. In July, it announced another round of cuts to schools and colleges, shaving the cost of some models by up to 15%.
      WOW!!! Did you say a WHOLE 15%????
      (see my price quotes above)

      Edited by B. Kite ...sounds like a loose anigram for Kbyte.

      Anyhoo, BW needs "corespondents" with humor like this anyway....

  27. Show them what's out there by Adair · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Why should my child work on a Mac in class when most people use PCs at home and in the office?"

    To show them that there are other options besides Windows. What kids really learn on computers at school is how to use applications more than the OS itself... word processors, spreadshee software, video editing... all these things translate fairly easily between OSes. At least having kids "grow up" and learn on a Mac shows them that there are other choices out there for Operating Systems once they leave the nest. The fact that OSX is now BSD-based makes me all the more in favor of it... might get a few more kids interested in *nix/open-source development. If only the decision-makers had a broader vision of the future the say they're trying to make the best of.

    1. Re:Show them what's out there by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      Because schools can teach *nix much cheaper on an x86 system than on a mac. Why spend $800+ on the lowest-end mac when you can spend $500-$600 on an x86 machine that can easily be set up to boot into a *nix environment. Either use dual booting or vmware when you want to teach unix, and you're still ahead of the game. Yeah, show them different operating systems, but take advantage of the lower costs of PC-based hardware, too.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    2. Re:Show them what's out there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      To show them that there are other options besides Windows.

      True, though there are some who don't want their kids to learn the Metric system or talk to those 'other' people (immigrants, people not their own race (I'm not singling out European descendants here)). Pluralism and diversity are *bad* things to some people -- on technical and non-technical issues.

    3. Re:Show them what's out there by dirk · · Score: 1

      To show them that there are other options besides Windows.

      Except that schools are there to push people's pet causes (or at least shouldn't be). They are there to teach kids useful skills they will use in life. I can understanding pushing for diversified computers. Having some Macs, some Windows, some Linux, etc. That would teach diversity. But having all Macs doesn;t teach diversity anymore than having all WinXP machines would.

      --

      "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
    4. Re:Show them what's out there by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      What kids really learn on computers at school is how to use applications

      In this one sentence, I think you have caught exactly what is wrong with IT teaching in schools at present. Teaching applications is just as bad as teaching operating systems, since they are equally likely to be out of date, and may well depend on UI paradigms that are obselete by the time that people leave school.

      The best computing teaching I have had (pre-degree) was aged 7, where the concepts of computing were explained. From that teaching (one lesson a week for a term) I learned enough to be able to get everything else I needed to know about programming and using applications from reading documentation and experimenting. I am constantly amazed by people who have been taught in the recipe manner (`click-on-the-file-menu-then-click-on-the...') rather than having the ideas behind the interface explained to them who seem unable to transfer skills from one application to another similar application.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    5. Re:Show them what's out there by Shefwed82 · · Score: 1

      If it the applications that really matter, and not the underlying operating system, then is doesn't matter whether they use Windows or Macintosh or Linux or whatever, right? So that being said, does any of this really matter? If they really are all just the same...

    6. Re:Show them what's out there by blibbleblobble · · Score: 1

      "Why should my child work on a Mac in class when most people use PCs at home and in the office?"

      Why should my child read French and German in class when most people use English at home and in the office?

      Schools have slight differences to the office. Is that a problem?

    7. Re:Show them what's out there by evilviper · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      "Why should my child work on a Mac in class when most people use PCs at home and in the office?"

      To show them that there are other options besides Windows.

      I don't think anybody is thinking about this the right way at all... Teaching students how to use a computer should not be a goal, in and of itself.

      Teachers should teach their students how to create a spreadsheet, the fact that they are doing it with Excel should just be a footnote, and even the fact that they are using a computer to do it should not be a primary focus at all.

      A better example. The goal of teaching students how to use iMovie should be to teach them how to edit movies, the software that they use to do it matters very little, the operating system matters very little, and even the fact that it is being done with a computer shouldn't matter much at all... With that said, if teaching students how to edit video, create a spreadsheet, etc., is easier on a Mac than a PC, then why should a PC even be considered?

      Learning Excel for the sake of learning Excel is the equivalent of high-tech masturbation. It's like your goal in life is to have a goal in life...
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    8. Re:Show them what's out there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why should my child work on a Mac in class when most people use PCs at home and in the office?"

      Because then they'd actually think of looking at issues from all sides, and then they wouldn't be good little students/workers/capitalists/Americans.

  28. High Linux learning curve could 'force' education. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Children and teaching racking their brains to figure
    out how to install a simple third party program could
    help them develop problem solving skills.

  29. So many ways of looking at it... by Pingsmoth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I believe the New York Times had a piece on this last spring also. At any rate, it's too bad that Apple is slowly losing this battle too. I believe that they have had the suprerior product for years, but when only a fraction of homes have Macs, it doesn't make a lot of sense for the students to have to learn to use a Mac at school.

    Case in point: I go to the University of Nebraska. They used to have Macs all over the school, but now they are all but phased out by PCs. Despite the fact that many of my classmates still have problems with papers getting lost of their floppies (floppies!) and have their computers "break down" on them, they continue to use PCs at home and at school. Just last Thursday I was at a workshop where we were all given iBooks to access a web page. The setup could not have been simpler, for the dock contained exactly three items: the finder, the applications folder, and the trash. And yet people still couldn't figure it out. Their home PCs were familiar and therefore simpler to use. And from their perspective, why should they have to use a computer at school that does not take their floppy disks and is different from their home PCs.

    From an administrative standpoint, it is a lot cheaper (in the short run) to get a truckload of Dells for $400. They will break more often, they will be attacked by more worms, and they will continue to reinforce the age-old reliance on floppy disks, but the up-front cost is half that of an eMac, so it's a better solution.

    I wish Apple still controlled the education market, and to a large degree, they still do. Schools keep their computers for years, but the new generation of educational PCs won't be stamped with my much-beloved Apple logo. For now Apple is still riding out their honeymoon with schools, but shortsighted thinking and short-term economics may make that a thing of the past.

    --
    http://www.walkingtaco.com
    1. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The setup could not have been simpler, for the dock contained exactly three items: the finder, the applications folder, and the trash. And yet people still couldn't figure it out."

      Maybe the admins should have added "grassy knoll" wallpaper.

    2. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by ocelotbob · · Score: 1
      Your "insight" on the PC seems to be based more on ignorance and outdated facts than anything else. Worms and viruses, in a well-maintained datacenter, are a non-issue, even in the windows world. Performing duties such as having a virus scanner, using multiuser settings properly, and keeping up-to-date with security patches is easy, and should be a no-brainer for anyone with PC experience. Additionally, I'd dare say that a PC-based lab can be easier to keep maintained than a lab of macs, if the sysadmin performs actions such as having all the drives in removable bays so that if a student does circumvent security procedures, downtime can be measured in the time it takes to swap out the old drive and putting in a clean drive.

      Additionally, I fail to see why you dislike floppies so much. They're a cheap, easy way to transfer small files between computers for most users. Why bother with the process of setting up a webmail account just so to email file attachments back and forth between the home systems and the school systems? I'd personally prefer a USB keychain, but if the file's only a few hundred k, a floppy's still tough to beat.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    3. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      it's too bad that Apple is slowly losing this battle too.

      Well done! You did not fail it.

    4. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

      You've really got to be joking. I've yet to run across a Mac lab of any size administered by more than five people. I've yet to see a large installation of Windows systems require fewer than ten adminstrators.

      The times I've been in charge of a large number of Macs I've made bootable OS discs. If something goes wrong I simply put the CD in the drive, run Disk Utility to erase the drive, and drag over the System folder. I can have a Mac running in the time it takes to copy the files off a CD. With Charles Srstka's BootCD I can even do that with OSX. Try making a bootable Windows CD sometime, I guarantee is makes for an entertaining experience.

      As for worms and viruses, no data center can be 100% immune from Windows' inherent security problems. A decent firewall can keep protected systems from being exposed to random search worm attacks, a virus scanner can remove infected files, but no one can protect computers from dumb users. Opening viral e-mail attachments will be a problem on Windows for quite a while yet. Viral e-mail attachments that can propogate via network connections can take down even a properly administered datacenter or lab. Look at the problems Melissa caused and all it did was e-mail itself to people.

      I also don't understand your "defense" of floppies. They are horrendously slow and markedly unreliable. The failure rate of a box of floppies is pretty horrible. Sometimes the slightest bend or push will damage a floppy's disc or door mechanism. The floppy drives themselves are also of horrible quality. On my PC I've had horrible problems with floppies written by other computers. Work floppies when home mysteriously become unformatted and useless sometimes. It will be a nice day when PCs can finally manage to move away from the floppy entirely.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    5. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by ocelotbob · · Score: 1
      Once again, most of the issues you discussed are due to poor IT policy. They make virus scanners for mail servers, which will cut down on the vast majority of the viruses transmitted through that vector. Add a good security policy -- firewalling out webmail servers, not allowing users to install arbitrary software, etc, and you've got yourself protection against nearly every windows virus out there. Additionally, why would datacenter equipment have any sort of email program running on it? Admins whose servers were compromised by melissa were idiots who should have known better than to let a vector for untrusted code anywhere near the servers.

      As far as reimaging goes, a bootable CD is not needed. Period. Programs like ghost will create a complete drive image, and a removable drive holder means that repairing a hosed config is a simple matter of pulling out the old drive, putting in the fresh drive, and having the user go on their merry way. Reimage the drive back at the IT department, and that's that. The only real inconvenience to the user is the time it takes to head down to their system to plug the new drive in.

      I guess you've angred the floppy gods if you've had that much trouble with disks. I'm pretty harsh on my disks, and aside from some bad sectors from half-decade old floppies, I seem to have pretty good luck transferring real small files back and forth between computers on a regular basis. Now, like I said, most of the time, there are other means of transferring files that are a lot better, but at the same time, when you're darting a few small files back and forth between work, a floppy drive still Just Works. Am I saying that a floppy is useful for everything? No. At the same time though, I do think that apple is a bit loopy for ditching a transfer means when it is still useful in emergency applications.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    6. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by Graymalkin · · Score: 1

      The specific details of "securing" a Windows lab against viruses and worms is really irrelevant. You only need one person connecting to their ISP's e-mail server or one file from an outside computer to infect a whole network. A datacenter might be a different beast but we're talking offices and labs where users need to actually interact with computers, not just leech services off them.

      Reimaging is fine and dandy but it costs you extra cash to use Ghost or some other imaging system at your site. Bootable backups of OS9 or X are free with a CD-R. Again you're concerning yourself more with specific patches to Windows' problems. The general issue at hand is the Windows systems are inherently insecure and require much administration and money to keep working properly. The cost of admins for a large lab or office can very easily drive the price of PCs far beyond that of a Mac lab.

      As for floppies, they became all but useless with the iMac and all later Macs. Open Firmware does all the things better that a DOS boot disk will do. You can boot off a network, CD, or Firewire drive to get into a live OS to fix problems. I'm sorry but floppies need to get gone.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    7. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1

      Having used Ghost, the experience is nowhere near comparable. Mac OS fits on a CDR, installed. Windows balloons out to a Gig or two. The Mac recovery technique operates at the speed of the IDE bus. Ghost operates at the mercy of your network. Ghosting takes HOURS. Rebuilding a Mac minutes. And the mac doesn't slow down the network.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    8. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by Pingsmoth · · Score: 1


      Worms and viruses, in a well-maintained datacenter, are a non-issue, even in the windows world.

      I agree, but if that's the case, why are worms and viruses, especially in the windows world, such a problem? You're right though, that many of the issues of maintaing a Windows network could be solved with competent administrators. But in my experience, at least in the last four years of college, that is hardly ever the case. Many of the lab "administrators" are regular students looking for a few extra bucks on the side. Something wrong with your PC? Try restarting it. Something wrong with your Mac? Try using the PC.

      I used to use Floppies a lot, but even their low failure rate is too often when you have stuff that you just don't want to disappear. When I'm writing a ten-page paper I don't want to put it on a floppy when the odds of it failing are much greater than the odds of my FTP server failing. They are cheap and easy, but I hear about students around me losing papers due to bad floppies almost on a daily basis.

      Since I got an iMac and was forced to find ways of transferring files without a floppy, I haven't lost one single paper or report. It's way less convenient to mess with FTP transfers and emailing things to myself, but I don't mind when I know I will get my data for sure.

      --
      http://www.walkingtaco.com
    9. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by evilviper · · Score: 1
      The Mac recovery technique operates at the speed of the IDE bus. [...] And the mac doesn't slow down the network.

      You can span Ghost images across multiple CD-Rs if needed.

      Ghost operates at the mercy of your network. Ghosting takes HOURS.

      Well, with a ghost server, you can multicast a single image to as many machines as you like. that will still take an hour or so, but you will get ALL your machines done in that time. However, even without it, any decent network won't be slowed much, since a switch can easilly isolate each system, or subnet.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    10. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      Why do you think I said to put the hard drives in removable bays? For one or two systems, just swap out the drive with a freshy imaged drive and do the ghost work on a physical machine in the IT department. No need for networking, and you get the system working in less user downtime than copying the CD over.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    11. Re:So many ways of looking at it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell that to me, who works at a school who's network consists entirely (and I shit you not) of 10 mbit hubs!

      Nah...we have to use the old boot floppy/spare hard drive method.

  30. real reason by SHEENmaster · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The techs at most public schools are dumbasses. It's sad but true. (I apologize if you are a tech at a school that doesn't follow this trend. Keep up the good work.)

    My entire school's network accesses the web over one of two T1 lines. Rather than a load-balancing Linux server, they have two 80486 systems with 32mb apiece running illegally purchased copies of NT4, with only service pack 2.

    The school's techs worked for 3 damn weeks trying to get an iMac G4 on the school network. Every printer in the school is shared, while none of them have passwords. Every teacher's computer is shared, while none of them have passwords. Hell, the records server's Administrator password is the initials of the school!

    In the middle of a budget crisis(we'll go broke Oct 1), the school bought 40+ Athlon computers.

    Macs are going out of schools. It's not because OS X is any harder to use (perfect blend of idiot friendliness and power), but rather because idiot-proofing is now being winshit compatible.

    Apple computers will always be used in video editing classes, and PCs have wormed their way into the rest of the school years ago. Apple lost the battle during System 7, it's time to move on and accept that the world at large can't be steered by a better product. If they focus on the informed consumers and professionals, they'll survive and flourish.

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
    1. Re:real reason by narkotix · · Score: 1

      What sort of level do the school techs usually have? All the techs i have worked with have excellent skills and have alot of initiative....granted our networks are predominantly NT based but i can honestly say there are a bunch of very good tech's! Mac's used to be the big thing at our region but now its predominately w2k/nt plus a mix of linux servers handling proxy/firewall/webservices. I honestly dont know much about mac's myself (being predominately an expert in nt and AIX/Solaris), but we had a teacher recently join and me n the tech struggled to get this thing connected (we worked it out after an hour). This powerbook was running os9 and we found that we couldnt join a domain and let it run normally like any other wintel machines (It probably can but apple help/call centre were of no use and we just happen to know someone who gave us a couple of hints!). Maybe its possible on OSX but until apple's can join a domain like one can in windows/linux environments. (if there is a way to join a domain would someone please direct me to the appropriate documentation!)

      --
      We played dungeons and dragons for 3 hours.....then i was slain by an elf
    2. Re:real reason by AvantLegion · · Score: 2, Funny
      Hell, the records server's Administrator password is the initials of the school!

      What school is this?

      *concocts a plan to get failing students to help fund a G5 tower purchase*

    3. Re:real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Let me get this straight. You can't put Macs on your network because they won't connect to an inferior, insecure, proprietary system. It sounds like you'd be better off using open standards that work not only with Macs and Linux, but also with Microsoft's OS.

      This is what I just don't get about these arguments people have in this area. If you used open standards, they still work with MS's stuff for the most part, but you're not locked in to MS's stuff. This is the argument people used to give against Macs, but now that Macs implement pretty much open standards for most of their services, suddenly people are giving the opposite reasons for not buying them. It's actually funny.

    4. Re:real reason by clifyt · · Score: 2, Informative

      "This powerbook was running os9 and we found that we couldnt join a domain and let it run normally like any other wintel machines"

      Thats such a Windows POV...this is like saying I Can't Find Any AntiVirus Software for Macs...mainly because you don't need it.

      Ok, you want to connect one OS to another's proprietary services. You can either, A) Install Mac Services on your servers -- takes 3 minutes and a reboot (everything takes a reboot on NT)...or B) Go To Microsoft and download the Windows File Sharing software stuff for the Mac -- I forget the name but its located on the Mactopia site Microsoft runs. Its again a 3 minute procedure and will allow you not to screw with your servers.

      Past that, if you want single login domain, you will need to upgrade to 2K Servers, set up ADS and make sure its using LDAP instead of the regular BS -- you will need to do this if you are wanting to use any sort of single domain login stuff with mixed OSes because it really wants to revert back to proprietary Windows BS with the focus on Only Windows Works Here.

      The problem I find most techs have with Macs are the same thing I see they have with Linux and other 'minor' OSes...they are dumbasses that have only ever had to deal with one OS their entire life discarding every other machine out there. Instead of learning how to use an operating system, they learn how to use Windows by rote. Well you ALWAYS do blah by blahing it. No sense of learning how to do something or figuring it out on their own. Problem solving is not something that most PC / Windows users are good at.

    5. Re:real reason by Dzregnon · · Score: 1

      My university is phasing in OSX this summer. I've been there watching the endeavour, and its interesting to me. With OS9 they used macadmin, which authenticated to its own password server that sourced from the domain server. Now, everything is LDAP based, which is much easier to configure. The problem is that LDAP is all clear text. So, as I understand it, they had to use kerberos to encode and decode the passwords as they travel around the network. It was a pain in the ass to get working, but in the end it all sources from the same server, and unlike macadin, they dont have to unintstall the password setup to install more software.

    6. Re:real reason by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      I work in the Media department, looking after our suite of Macs.

      The rest of the school runs windows machines and is looked after by a network admin who asked me "What's Apache?"

      I thought he was kidding. He wasn't.

    7. Re:real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      the school bought 40+ Athlon computers

      Wow, athlon 40+! Those had to be very old models, I have a 1800+...
    8. Re:real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You go to DeVry, don't you?

    9. Re:real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The best way to prepare students to use Windows when they graduate is to teach them how to use a Mac today. Almost every gui feature of Windows is something copied from MacOs. For example, someone that learned Mac System 7 & 8 in the late 80's and early 90's would have been better able to understand the 'new' features of Windows 95 than someone that was used to Windows 3.1. If this trend continues, Windows will be implementing the features of Panther right around the time that current high school students are ready to enter the work force.

    10. Re:real reason by JoeShmoe950 · · Score: 1

      I don't see why all these people say Macs are easier too use. PC's got better Dual Xeon benchmakrs then Dual G5 benchmarks with the unbiased Nasa test if I remember. If you install Linux, its just as stable as OS X, and if you have it installed with Mandrake linux, its just as easy to use. Gnome should be easy enough for people. It costs less(free OS), and has better performance. Teachers keep confusing the terms PC and Windows. My computer teacher isn't very smart either somtimes. Always talking about how unstable PC's are.

    11. Re:real reason by corkhead0 · · Score: 0
      The techs at most public schools are dumbasses.
      I whole-heartedly agree. I can still remember back in grade 9 when all the computers where running windows 98! We caused so many headaches for that poor SOB. All you needed to do to be untraceable is push the cancel button at the login screen. Nevermind the complete lack of a file server, all documents were saved on the local hard drive.

      The year after they switched to NT4. Not sure what they had for file servers. I managed to get a shortcut to a command prompt from a file->open in paint. When they figured that out, I just opened word, typed and saved a batch file. I wound up making a 120K file filled with "NET SEND * Hello world". You've never laughed until you've heard about 40 built-in speakers in a lab all beeping for about 3 minutes.

      Top that off with the system clocks never being even close to the real time, and all the computers being old 166 MHz machines with turbo buttons, and you've got one giant mess.
  31. The problem... by incom · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Schools can only afford low end tech salaries, and thus they mostly get one of the flood of ignorant MSCE sheep. And it doen't take much experience to realize how fanatical they are about Microsoft.

    --
    True genius is grasping a situation like a peice of fruit, and peircing it just right so that it drains dry.
    1. Re:The problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If no one else quotes you besides yourself, you SUCK! -me

  32. Why not both? by yukster · · Score: 1

    Schools should have Apples and oran.. er, PCs... and the PCs should be dual-boot with windows and linux...

    Then again, schools can't afford that... guess havin' edumacated kids ain't important...

  33. BAWHAHAHAHAHA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    at my skool

    we are sooo coool, dat we dont spel proper

    too cool for skool

  34. Not a problem by veg_all · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When I went to high school, we used TRS-80's. At home, I used an Apple II In college, the net was VAX . Later, I used the product of a company that will go unnamed and unlinked. Recently (and for the past half-decade) I used linux because what I learned was the idea, not the platform. Don't underestimate the curiosity and inquisitiveness of young humans. They are amazing creatures.

    --
    grammar-lesson free since 1999. (rescinded - 2005)
  35. Not much of a surprice... by WegianWarrior · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...at least not when you consider what ought to be the primary focus of any schoolsystem: to give the children knowledge and prepare them for a life in the real world. A school is not a place you keep your kids until they are old enought to move out, it's supposed to be a place your kids are prepared to become a contributing member of society.

    One may or may not like it, but for most kinds of work out there, the Wintel-platform is what it is all about. Working with office-apps? Chances are that you're not using a Mac. Accessing a database? I'll guess ten to one that the clientend is a windowsapp.

    As long as the subject matter isn't one where the Mac dominate in the real world, schools shouldn't "miseducate" (sorry, I couldn't think of a word that fitted better) the pupils by using machines from Apple - weither or not they are better / cheaper to maintain / has more fancy colours than a wintel machine. If they do, they are not doing our children any favours.

    Towards the end of school, say the last couple of years before people graduate, I think it would be wise to have a "general OS" class, teaching the pupils the basic of not just the wintel or the MacOS, but also divers flavours of Linux, BDS, Contiki and whatnot. Show the pupils that there are many more operatingsystems out there, each with a distinct set of pros and cons, and make them make up their own mind what they will use at home; because when they start working they will have to use whatever the company has decided on.

    PS: the line 'Here and there you'll still find an original Mac -- not to mention a few Apple IIs -- hard at work in classrooms' isn't really saying anything about the longvity of the mac - but it does say a whole lot about the lack of proper funding of the schools.

    --
    Everything in the world is controlled by a small, evil group to which, unfortunately, no one you know belongs.
    1. Re:Not much of a surprice... by DuSTman31 · · Score: 1

      I always thought that the real virtue of computers over older ways of doing things was flexibility - the way you can expand and alter what a computer will do for you simply by adding new programs..

      This, to me, hints at the direction we should be taking in training computer users - Knowing how to use one application very well (such as word) is not really the point. True computer skill is, I think, the ability to work out how software works easily.

      This skill can be taught just as easily on macs and acorn archimedeses than on the Windows platform. In fact, using a different OS may actually help this process, as students are less likely to be familiar with the school OS and therefore would have to use that intuition more, thus honing it.

    2. Re:Not much of a surprice... by xagon7 · · Score: 1

      Damn straight.

    3. Re:Not much of a surprice... by pHDNgell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This argument is sad. I've got a kid in 3rd grade and a kid in Kindergarten. That pretty much gives me a minimum of about 10 years before they're likely to be using computers in the work place.

      You'd have to be completely ignorant of any history of computers to assume that the computers these kids will be using in ten years will be anything like the computers they're using today.

      If you want to teach the kids spreadsheets, any random spreadsheet will be fine. There's nothing particularly special about MS' spreadsheet that any school kid should care about. If they have to learn how to use a different app when they get out in the world, who cares? If they learned anything during school, the new app shouldn't be a challenge.

      There's certainly no advantage to teaching kids how to use Microsoft products as if K-12 is some kind of vocational school. Give them squeak. Give them Linux. Give them whatever tool happens to help them learn whatever you're trying to teach them. Just don't hold ``computer'' classes where you teach them today's popular business programs and hope nothing changes in the industry in the next ten or twenty years.

      --
      -- The world is watching America, and America is watching TV.
    4. Re:Not much of a surprice... by noewun · · Score: 1
      ...at least not when you consider what ought to be the primary focus of any schoolsystem: to give the children knowledge and prepare them for a life in the real world.

      I thought the goal of education was to give the student the ability to think for him/herself. It would make sense to expose the students to as much as possible and let them make up their own minds.

      --
      I am a believer of momentum and curves.
    5. Re:Not much of a surprice... by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      Others have addressed that you have to be ignorant to think that computers will be the same in 10 years as they are today.

      Some other points.

      >Working with office-apps? Chances are that you're not
      >using a Mac.

      No, but chances are good that skills you pick up with "Office Apps" on a mac are going to transfer very cleanly if you should ever have to use them under windows--MS Office on OS X isn't all that removed from MS Office under XP.

      If you are training with OpenOffice (which I know that no-one does, but hey...) then it runs *exactly the same* between platforms.

      >Accessing a database? I'll guess ten to one that the
      >clientend is a windowsapp.

      Funny, are you thinking access? You do realize that there is more to life than SQLServer?

      On the server end, of course, there is also a great deal of additional variance. Oracle, mySQL, postgreSQL...

      > weither or not they are better / cheaper to maintain / has
      >more fancy colours than a wintel machine.

      Excuse me? They should use the /Best tool for the job/.

      One of the first things you are told in computer science is that if you are not adaptable, you will die in the market. I know a variety of different programming languages, I still need to learn new ones depending on what I get hired to do.

      Last summer, I was taken into a modeling project. I needed to:

      *Learn Java
      *Learn the Ascape library
      *Refresh my memory on graphics in LaTeX (it had been awhile).
      *Learn new presentation software.

      The market is ever changing, you need to give them the ability to adapt, not make them specialists with one piece of software run only on one platform.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    6. Re:Not much of a surprice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I thought the goal of education was to give
      > the student the ability to think for
      > him/herself.

      Here, here! A recent trend (well, it has been going on for some time) has been to confuse technical colleges and trade schools with honest *educational institutions*. Yes, education should give people knowledge that will benefit them for the world. However, education should *not* prepare them based upon what they need for the "real world".

      Think about it: if the only thing people receive during their education is information on how to cope with the status quo, how are we ever to transcend it?

    7. Re:Not much of a surprice... by setag · · Score: 1
      You know, you are part of the problem. Sorry, couldn't think of a better phrase than that.

      ...at least not when you consider what ought to be the primary focus of any schoolsystem: to give the children knowledge and prepare them for a life in the real world.

      Yeah, and we all know that the real world only runs Windows and will forever. And ever. And ever.

      Sheesh. What will Johnny do when he runs into a Unix(R) box or a Mac in the "real world"?

      Todays kids will leave school and be easy money for the anti-virus companies out there.

    8. Re:Not much of a surprice... by setag · · Score: 1

      Nicely said!

      Can I get a witness? Where are all the other people like you in the real world?

    9. Re:Not much of a surprice... by Chaset · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Indeed! I can't believe reasonably intelligent people can still possibly believe this myth. Even a minute of thought will reveal that fallacy of "teach kids Windows because that's what's in the workforce".

      As stated by the parent poster, they can't possibly expect applications and OS's to be the same 10 years down the road. (well, maybe if MS gets its way and gets a 100% monopoly, they will. . .)

      As an example, when I was in high school, they taught keyboarding on WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS because that was the "business standard". By the time I was out of college and joining the workforce, all the various F-key shortcuts and commands for WP5.1 were COMPLETELY useless. However, the keyboarding/touch typing skills were generally applicable and still helps me every day. In fact, any Macintosh word processors of that time far more closely resemble modern word processors than WP ever did.

      Another example: I took computer drafting in high school on AutoCAD release 10 for DOS. Again, the application-specific skills were completely useless by the time I got out of college. The paper drafting class I took, on the other hand, taught me geometry and construction skills that are still useful for making sketches and visualization.

      Kids should be taught how to use computers to solve problems, do research, and help them think. Any reasonably modern computer is capable of this.

      Teaching "Windows", "Word", or "Excel" as such is extremely poor use of classroom and teacher time. It really makes my blood boil to see people spew this nonsense, especially when it's patently obvious how wrong it is if they give it just a moment of thought.

      --
      -- "This world is a comedy to those who think, a tragedy to those who feel."
    10. Re:Not much of a surprice... by daniel2000 · · Score: 1

      Well, when i was at school there were very different systems than what are used now, Apple IIe, microbee, Dos etc.

      The fundamentals were the same though...

      Pretty much certain that when the current group of kids leave school whatever they used at school will be long gone.

      So it comes down to the fundamentals. Learn the fundamentals.

      It doesn't matter what system you choose to do this (within reason).

      I hope school isn't just about vocational task oriented learning...

    11. Re:Not much of a surprice... by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      Excel is really usefull if you know how to use it. In my last AI class we were shown how to use it to solve complex perceptron problems. (IE writing a perceptron in Excel and having it iterate many thousands of times.)

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    12. Re:Not much of a surprice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are so right. About ten years ago at school we had some computer classes where we had to learn wordperfect/win3.11 and the like. I never believed it would be any good learning these programs since that when I would need computers for work related stuff all the computer programms would have changed - and they have! (I had an excuse not to follow these classes which i promptly used.) That was 10 years ago and I'm still not out of school (university) what good would Wordperfect skills be to me know?

      It's the general principles that matter, not the programs. (Although some programs are retarded and I hope to never have to use them.)

    13. Re:Not much of a surprice... by tgibbs · · Score: 1
      One may or may not like it, but for most kinds of work out there, the Wintel-platform is what it is all about. Working with office-apps? Chances are that you're not using a Mac. Accessing a database? I'll guess ten to one that the clientend is a windowsapp.
      Keep in mind that these are kids who won't be entering the workplace for quite a few years. What will be the favored user interface at that time? Perhaps it will be Windows, but various flavors of Unix (of which OS X is one) are on the rise. And even Windows will probably be significantly different by the time they graduate. So locking them into the details of a particular OS is a fool's game. They need training that is sufficiently general that they'll be able to adapt to whatever is out there by the time they graduate. It's not that big a deal, anyway. Kids are adaptable, and they quickly figure out that it is basically the same thing, with some stuff moved around here and there.
  36. Not a good way to educate by thelandp · · Score: 1
    "We want a single platform," one of them said. "We're trying to get there using the carrot, or blackmail, or rewards, or whatever you call it.""

    Their methods sound similar to Microsoft's methods for increasing their Market share in the first place.

    If they achieve this, they will be teaching kids to conform more, and don't exercise individual choice so much. Is this what we want in our education? It's almost like the OS equivalent of school uniforms.

    Standards are important to computing, but if there is one place where it's safe to spend time playing with a variety of standards, it's in the sandbox of education.

    --

    -- the only thing we have to fear is really scary things
    1. Re:Not a good way to educate by rnash · · Score: 1
      If they achieve this, they will be teaching kids to conform more, and don't exercise individual choice so much.
      Come on!
      Yes I know my enemies
      They're the teachers who taught me to fight me
      Compromise, conformity, assimilation, submission
      Ignorance, hypocrisy, brutality, the elite
      All of which are American dreams (8 times) .

      The whole (RATM) song here
  37. From a HS teacher... by cleverhandle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I teach in one of the largest public school districts in the states, and in my experience this article is both irrelevant and incorrect.

    First off, as others have pointed out, the price difference is far from inconsequential. Even under a Preferred Purchasing agreement for Wintel that, IMO, is a slimy ripoff, we would still pay $200+ more for a low end Mac.

    Second, Macs are used in precisely the places the article points out as strengths - video editing and multimedia. While my district in general and my school in particular are pretty crude technologically, we do have two small labs of Macs for Graphic Design and Publishing courses.

    As for losing other opportunities in the building, Apple's got no one to blame for themselves. As behind as I think we are, we've still got attendance and other functions running on an NT domain. Why? Not because we're close-minded and bought-out (well, maybe we are, but not in this context). But because Apple all but abandoned the educational market years ago. We had the NT domain long before we moved critical functions to it. If Apple had halfway reasonable pricing and a larger educational program four years ago, running those functions on NT might not have been as simple a choice. The argument that "we've got to teach MS because that's what's out there" is powerful, though not as much so as some Slashdotters may suspect. But combine that with a preexisting NT network assembled during years of Apple's educational neglect, and it makes buying Macs for the classroom foolish.

    1. Re:From a HS teacher... by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      Let us not forget the legions of Red-Headed stepchild models Apple had before the current I-mac/Gx line. I'm still salty about spending $3000 on a PowerMac 7100 that 6 month later sold for half what I paid for it, came with more ram, ran at 80Mhz instead of 66, and a bigger hard drive (2 gb instead of 250mb.)

      I ended up running Linux on it my Junior year of college because it wouldn't run any newer releases of MacOs.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    2. Re:From a HS teacher... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      We had the NT domain long before we moved critical functions to it. If Apple had halfway reasonable pricing and a larger educational program four years ago, running those functions on NT might not have been as simple a choice.

      This is the one thing I don't get about NT servers: how did this legacy ever get started? I'm not advocating the Mac, but there was never any point in history where it responsible or made sense to deploy NT servers. A few years ago, the no-brainer obvious choice switched from Netware to the Free Unixes. The existing NT domain is an illegitimate legacy, and the "simple choice" that someone made, was simply wrong.

    3. Re:From a HS teacher... by b1t+r0t · · Score: 1
      I'm lucky I got a good deal on a closeout Power Computing box, because it got me to sell off the 4400 that I had recently bought. That was probably the worst computer Apple ever made, with fun things like DIMMS that no other computer on this planet ever used. The 8.0 that came with it would lock up randomly.

      The 61xx series were close behind. The most fun problem of that era is that when the CMOS battery dies, the video stops working! You can get it back with command-option-P-R, but who's going to know that unless they've seen this problem before? Then there was the 8100, with its extremely stupid case design that required you to almost completely disassemble it to install RAM. (And I've heard that the 8500 kept this stupid design, too.)

      I think the crappiness of the 61xx series, followed by Apple's retreat from caring about educational market (ensuring that schools have 6100s lying around to this day, giving a wonderfully crappy image of Macs) is a main reason why Apple has such a bad time in the education market right now.

      --

      --
      "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
      "Open source is evil." - Microsoft
    4. Re:From a HS teacher... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So now you have a choice, if you want to upgrade your windows clients, you will need to move to AD. AD will cost you much more because it is liscensed per computer or per user. Why not buy a couple of X Serves and replace your aging NT domain with Open Directory. It can function as a PDC and also manage Mac OS X environments from the same user account. This means your students can log in with the same login/password from a Mac or PC, have thier environment setup/locked down by the directory server on both platforms, and have thier homedirectory mounted the same on each.

      Sounds like a pretty compelling solution? Two birds with one stone.

      -Save money by not moving to AD.
      -Leave your options open to support (well) both platforms.

      Panther server is sounding pretty good to me.

  38. Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Anyone know if parents are really complaining?

    It would sound stupid, even for a non-technie daddy to throw a fit because there is a PC at home, but Macs at school

    I hate Macs, BUT like many people in their early 20's now, my first exposure to computers were Apple II E's, IIGS's, and Mac's in elementary school...

    My issue here is that I think it's stupid for parents to complain that kids are getting both systems...I think it's good, and on top of that, I think kids should get linux exposure too...if we really want our kids to be computer-savvy, shouldn't they be exposed to the various things people use as home computers? (Macs, PC (Windows), PC (Linux), PC (BSD), etc, etc)

    1. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      who the hell uses BSD?

    2. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by usotsuki · · Score: 2, Informative

      Anyone who uses MacOS X (Darwin).

      Anyone who is interested in real security (OpenBSD).

      Yahoo (FreeBSD).

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    3. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They use it a lot in hospitals for the terminally ill. It's actually very important.

    4. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by JeffTL · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Much agreed; the word here is diversity. The young folks should be taught the basics of all operating systems, so their resumes will look better if nothing else. Supposing a university library needs to choose between two student worker candidates, both with 4.0 GPA, same gender and ethnicity, and generally all variables are the same except that one can only use Windows and the other one can use a Macintosh. The school has some Macs, as many academic institutions do. Who do you think will be hired?

    5. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by BJZQ8 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'm one of those "IT Directors" that they talk about...and I can tell you that there's no real complaining. But I will tell you who is talking...the administrators and superintendents that don't have a Mac at home and don't see why we should buy overpriced ones at school either. Yes, I said overpriced. I recently bought a boatload of those cheap Microtel computers from Walmart...for $199 each. I didn't need to buy a new monitor for each one...unlike the iMacs that litter the districts. They are 1200 MHz Durons, have 128 megabytes of RAM, and do their job admirably...and wads faster than the iMacs or eMacs...and right on par with the smattering of dual-processor G4's that we have. They completely blow away the older tower-style G3's and G4's...FOR TASKS THAT WE USE THEM FOR. I noticed how the article talked about "video editing" in school projects...basically we have an art teacher that does it...and that's it. So the biggest advantage (as far as people think) of a Mac is hardly used. Easier to use? Hmmm...Try converting a lifetime OS7-8-9 user to OSX. I can tell you they are lost. Where's my chooser? They ask. More reliable? Double HA! I have seen more iMacs eat network boards and hard drives than a whole fleet of chincey old Compaq's and HP's from 1992. OS9 network protocols are laughably slow at talking to my Linux servers...and printing? No. I'm not trolling here...and not flamebating. I'm just stating what I see in my school district. There IS one neighboring district that is buying Macs like there's no tomorrow...and that's because their IT Director is a former Mac salesman. When he retires (or is fired for mismanagement) they, too, will switch over to PC-only. I look forward to the day when I can rid my own district of them, personally. Mod this what you want, but this is what is going on in the world of education.

    6. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by Surlyboi · · Score: 0, Troll

      There IS one neighboring district that is buying Macs like there's no tomorrow...and that's because their IT Director is a former Mac salesman. When he retires (or is fired for mismanagement) they, too, will switch over to PC-only. I look forward to the day when I can rid my own district of them, personally. Mod this what you want, but this is what is going on in the world of education.

      Not gonna mod, gonna reply, because you asked for it...

      It's not what's going on in the world of
      education, it's what's going on in your
      world. Big difference. You've got an obvious beef
      against Macs and you actually take pride in it.
      Your opinion isn't backed up by hard, reliable
      facts, just your anecdotal evidence. I'm sure,
      should you get that job you're gunning for, there
      will be someone below you with a differnt view
      hoping you get fired for mismanagement as well.

      Also, your constant cries of, "I'm not trolling",
      and, "this is not flamebaiting", seem to help
      your argument even less. If you weren't trolling,
      your argument would stand up on its own merits and
      not need the protestaions of "mod me what you like".

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine...
    7. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by JCMay · · Score: 3, Insightful
      First of all, full disclosure: I am against computers in schools. The major problem is that people today do not understand the role of education. Education is not to make that child grow up into a good worker bee; it's to make that child become a better person. There's too little time already spent on actual *learning* and too much time wasted on things like:
      • Slowing down for children that have been "mainstreamed" into classes they don't belong
      • Watching movies based on literature instead of reading the literature
      • Worrying about hurting students' feelings with poor grades, missing the point that self esteem is gained by overcoming adversity, not opening presents
      • Undisciplined students that come from negligent parents and have no respect for authority or social conventions

      The best place for a computer in a primary school is nowhere. Perhaps in the office to automate cumbersome clerical duties.

      The Anonymous Coward writes:
      I hate Macs, BUT like many people in their early 20's now, my first exposure to computers were Apple II E's, IIGS's, and Mac's in elementary school...

      You're in your early 20s and used either an Apple ][e or Apple ][gs in elementary school? Wow. Those machines are as old as you are! I'm ten years older than you and could say the same thing.
    8. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by BJZQ8 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Okay...since you obviously have a beef AGAINST anything but Macs, I will tell you why I think this is good for my school district...and other ones in my region. Let me look at a few places I've worked, and where others from my school might work. First one on my list was an automotive shop...they had a PC doing their shop manuals...they had a PC doing their inventory tracking...they had a PC doing their accounting. So in that job, it's PC:1, Mac:0. Second place...Signmaking shop that used CNC machines to mill them...the design was done on a PC, the CNC machine was run by a PC, and their accounting, inventory, and typesetting was done on a PC. I will admit that their order tracking was done on some old grimy IBM machine, though...still, PC:2, Mac:0. Third place...Architectural Firm. They did AutoCAD on a PC...specificaitons were done on a PC...accounting was done on a PC...correspondence and such was done on a PC. Score: PC:3, Mac:0. Next place would be some freelance work I did for a grocery store chain...everything, from accounting to payroll to e-mail, was done on a PC. I have stopped keeping score because I am done trying to get anyone to see my point with this method. Every place I have ever worked at had PC's exclusively. I am preparing these kids for the future in this region of the country, and it looks to me that they're all PC. This is not even mentioning some other local "big" employers that are PC-only...Heck, even Wal-Mart's cash registers are PC's now. Where are the Mac's? In advertising and design perhaps...but those are all in much larger cities. So am I wrong in supplying them with the types of computers they will go out into the workplace and use? I think not. Do I have a beef against Macs? Not in the least. But I have a beef against people trying to get kids to use what they see as a superior computer simply because it's there. As for "gunning for" a job...I do my job and enjoy it...and I feel I do the best job anyone can. If that is "gunning for" it, then I am doing so. I believe their mismanagment lies in the fact that they are giving grade-school kids $1000 eMacs (which, I might add, have had a near 50% failure rate in video cards) when a low-end PC would work fine. The mismanagment lies in picking a machine simply because of its name and its aura, and not because of its list of specifications or commonality in the local economy. Now, if you would kindly refrain from insulting me ("If you weren't trolling",) perhaps we could have a nice conversation on why you think I should buy Macs when no business in the area is?

    9. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by Surlyboi · · Score: 1

      Okay...since you obviously have a beef AGAINST anything but Macs,

      Strike one, pal. It would behoove you to do a bit
      of research before making blanket statements like
      that. I work on whatever I need to use to get the
      job done, be it Mac or PC. Most of the financial
      firms I've consulted have used nothing but PCs.
      If I truly had a beef against them, I wouldn't
      work with 'em.

      I will tell you why I think this is good for my school district...and other ones in my region. Let me look at a few places I've worked, and where others from my school might work. First one on my list was an automotive shop...they had a PC doing their shop manuals...they had a PC doing their inventory tracking...they had a PC doing their accounting. So in that job, it's PC:1, Mac:0. Second place...Signmaking shop that used CNC machines to mill them...the design was done on a PC, the CNC machine was run by a PC, and their accounting, inventory, and typesetting was done on a PC. I will admit that their order tracking was done on some old grimy IBM machine, though...still, PC:2, Mac:0. Third place...Architectural Firm. They did AutoCAD on a PC...specificaitons were done on a PC...accounting was done on a PC...correspondence and such was done on a PC. Score: PC:3, Mac:0. Next place would be some freelance work I did for a grocery store chain...everything, from accounting to payroll to e-mail, was done on a PC. I have stopped keeping score because I am done trying to get anyone to see my point with this method. Every place I have ever worked at had PC's exclusively.

      And in every place except perhaps the one that
      used Autocad, a Mac would have probably sufficed
      just as easily. Don't mistake ubiquity for superiority.

      I am preparing these kids for the future in this region of the country, and it looks to me that they're all PC. This is not even mentioning some other local "big" employers that are PC-only...Heck, even Wal-Mart's cash registers are PC's now. Where are the Mac's? In advertising and design perhaps...but those are all in much larger cities. So am I wrong in supplying them with the types of computers they will go out into the workplace and use? I think not. Do I have a beef against Macs? Not in the least. But I have a beef against people trying to get kids to use what they see as a superior computer simply because it's there.

      Yet, that's exactly what you're doing with PCs...

      As for "gunning for" a job...I do my job and enjoy it...and I feel I do the best job anyone can. If that is "gunning for" it, then I am doing so. I believe their mismanagment lies in the fact that they are giving grade-school kids $1000 eMacs (which, I might add, have had a near 50% failure rate in video cards) when a low-end PC would work fine. The mismanagment lies in picking a machine simply because of its name and its aura, and not because of its list of specifications or commonality in the local economy.

      Your reasoning here is slightly more sound, but
      still ultimately flawed. Choosing one platform
      because of its "commonality in the local economy"
      is still not a good enough reason. Plurality is key.

      Now, if you would kindly refrain from insulting me ("If you weren't trolling",) perhaps we could have a nice conversation on why you think I should buy Macs when no business in the area is?

      I wasn't insulting you, I was obliging you and
      insulting your (IMO) invalid arguments. Besides,
      if every business in the area was also practicing
      some form of animal sacrifice to the gods of
      commerce, would that mean you'd have to get your
      kids to do it too? Extreme example, yes, but just
      because everyone else is doing something doesn't
      mean you have to condemn these kids to being
      unable to use another platform should the need and
      opportunity arise.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine...
    10. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by CyberdogOSX · · Score: 1

      glad this dudes not my dad. his kids will make nice ditch diggers or McEmployee's at a nice fast food restaurant. you need to know how to use a computer to do any job these days, not just IT. of course you should also encourage your children to engage in other activities and spend time with real people, but who doesn't know that? you can be good at things on a computer and be successful in other areas of your life, idiot. I know a lot of folks who have fulfilling non-IT lives, but still know there way around an OS. that's how they afford those lives. well, you better go back to breaking rocks, and teaching your kids to brak rocks. because that's about all they're going to be qualified for.

    11. Re:Anyone know if parents are really complaining? by Sigh+Phi · · Score: 1
      glad this dudes not my dad. his kids will make nice ditch diggers or McEmployee's at a nice fast food restaurant. you need to know how to use a computer to do any job these days, not just IT.

      The tools we use change rapidly but the concepts behind them remain durable. A good education is mostly learning how to learn, and you can do that with or without a computer.

      There are millions of people who "know how to use a computer," but all that really means is that they learned Word in high school. And that "skill" doesn't necessarily mean they're able to write a program or cogent prose. It just means they know how to set tabs and move a mouse. On the other hand, someone who takes a course in data structures, geometry, or even critical writing, with attention to proof, structure and method, has a much more solid base for organized thought (and by extension, the good jobs) than someone who ignores those things and jumps straight into PHP and HTML.

      Never confuse vocation with education.

  39. Single Platform is a Marketing Myth by Dr.+Bent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The entire concept of running any decent-sized orginization on a single platform is crazy. Commercial vendors will always want to lock you into their platform. But heed these words well:

    Salesmen have to sell whatever they're given.

    Most companies will simply shoehorn all thier products into whatever market they can get thier hands on, just so they can compete. But any engineer worth his salt knows that things work best when you use the right tool for the right job.

    The real issue here is that people are lazy. So when someone comes along with a song and dance about how all thier support problems are going to be solved by the One True Platform, they swallow the bullshit. Lazy IT people never follow up to figure out if that's actually true. And even if they do, and lazy managers ignore the IT people to make it look like they're 'managing' something by pretending to save money.

  40. Oh great... by God!+Awful+2 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    What's the chance that the terrorists will be able to figure out where you go to school?

    -a

  41. OS X by SHEENmaster · · Score: 1

    I avoid OS 9 like the plague, but OS X (NeXt-based) has much better winshit interaction support. Thanks to Class, OS X can run OS 9 software. Linux can do a similar thing with MacOnLinux. Both use the native process rather than emulator, they are fast enough to run Bryce on my G3 iBook.

    My school is concidering a Linux server, but they'd have to draft me to configure it. They are also having trouble affording the low end pentium I told them would be necessary.

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
    1. Re:OS X by narkotix · · Score: 1

      If you were in australia id donate you a whole lab of 30 cel667's we are giving away at the end of the year!

      --
      We played dungeons and dragons for 3 hours.....then i was slain by an elf
    2. Re:OS X by theTerribleRobbo · · Score: 0

      Ooooh! I'm in Australia. Gimme. :-D

      </Joke>

      (Where are you, by the way?)

    3. Re:OS X by RoundTop-VJAS · · Score: 1
      Don't mention NeXt... I had to put together a working NeXt box on friday... it took me 3 hours. Mostly because the hardware we had for it...had died. And I needed an intact, working boot drive with NeXt on it.

      All I wanted to do was attach a secondary HDD and format it for NeXt so we could send it to a client.

      --
      RoundTop

  42. there's more to it by b17bmbr · · Score: 5, Informative

    i am a school teacher. my district is probably like many. our IT staff are morons. we don't/can't pay industry standards, so we get the bottom. plus, the jobs are secure, so we can't get rid of idiots. anyways...

    a little story. a year or so back, district tech at my school brags about coming back from some microsoft conference, (mind you we are a novell network) and he's got freebies galore. XP pro ( no reg key copies), VS.NET, 2K server, office XP (no reg key), and other crap. thrown out like halloween candy. you think they're gonna cut off their source.

    another story. 3-4 years ago, we were finishing the wiring at my school. so, the district tech head is there, yada yada. so i ask her about the servers, since we didn't even have a local file server for our one lab, (and I had lots of student work get lost), and she says the district goal is to consolidate on get this, "fewer, more powerful, servers". this at the time that when the industry was moving the opposite direction. and then she retires, and we're half way there, and there is just too much momentum to change. so we go ahead, and have a crappy, unscalable network, and we have win98 clients rather than 2k, because of a multitude of piss poor decisions, we have no money to spend on memory upgrades.

    these people have the ears of the PHB's. and let's face it, if it needs 20 admins where another solution would need 10, and their input makes the call, what do you think they're gonna choose.

    for those of you who don't quite understand school spending/funding, let me explain. every year, principals have an end of year "wish list", if there is money left over. why? if they don't spend it, they get less next year. so, saving money is specifically NOT DESIRED. in fact, deficits are preferred. don't ever expect linux to make it in this environment. i could go on. get the ear of your school boards. or vote their asses out.

    --
    My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
    1. Re:there's more to it by codepunk · · Score: 1

      Yea that is why I am installing linux in a school district next week. They have a outdated version of novell and I am going to install K12 LTSP for these folks. It is a damn shame everyone is so blind.

      --


      Got Code?
    2. Re:there's more to it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everybody read the teacher's post very carefully. It's not hard to figure out why the public schools are failing.

    3. Re:there's more to it by Jmstuckman · · Score: 1

      >for those of you who don't quite understand school spending/funding, let me explain. every
      > year, principals have an end of year "wish list", if there is money left over. why? if
      > they don't spend it, they get less next year. so, saving money is specifically NOT DESIRED.

      This is nothing special. You'll find the same thing in any large corporation. In my high school, the sysadmin was fairly clueless, but the computer teacher didn't even know how to move a file into a folder.

    4. Re:there's more to it by Error27 · · Score: 1

      You need to hire a grumpy admin.

      My attitude is that if I can do a job with half the techs and fire a bunch of my co-workers that's peachy.

  43. A place I used to work at... by jcgf · · Score: 1

    used a pentium 233 running win98 and tried to do video editing. the teachers never figured out how to use it, so it sat unused. the problem was someone had sold them on the idea of thin clients so they tried to get away with legacy pentiums and 486s (I'm not kidding) running win98 and a dual p3 800 system with win2k advanced server. worst setup I have ever seen. Anyways the point is they would have been far better off if they had gotten a few macs to do their video editing (it was a small enough school that 2 or 3 would be sufficient) and then just used their shitty 486s for their word processing. my $0.02 anyways.

  44. Linux by iamacat · · Score: 1

    Why not install a free OS then? With a mass market like US school system, I bet you can find a vendor that doesn't make you pay MS tax and sells a system for $450. Even if you don't save much initially, think about upgrades.

    Worried about support costs? Well, every school has a few geeks. Get them to download and install Redhat ISOs as a class project. Obviously, you might want to keep them away from PCs used for grading, but for student labs educational exprience you give them outweighs the risks.

    1. Re:Linux by spectral · · Score: 1

      dear god, why redhat? The only thing going for it is slightly better 3rd party support. Installing packages is easier in other distros, the desktop is nicer in other distros.. you name it, it's prolly better in other distros.

      Of course, I'm just one of those anti-redhat people, so this is all just my opinion.. but I can't see why people like it.

    2. Re:Linux by SlamMan · · Score: 1

      How is nobody realizes that most students in schools are in Elementary or Middle school, and most of the students in high schools are only a shade more literate than your PHB.

      When school systems factor in costs, they can't count on there to be geeks to help run things. They aren't accountable for their actions in the way an employee, so they have no need to keep things running. They can go play soccer or work on a play instead, and the school is out of luck. Schools make strides to not let the students have access to systems, they aren't going to factor it into their IT plan to let students run things.

      How can a school weight the gains a couple of students getting mutiplatform experience versus the extra confusion of the other 99% of the students at having things different at every lab they go into. Again, remember that most students are not all the computer literate. Better than the people you may have to support, but they're a whole different world away from being a tech.

      --
      Mod point free since 2001
  45. Thank god for that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Enough of schhools teaching students on outdated platforms

  46. Macs in School by tylers · · Score: 1
    I'm a techie for an Arizona charter school district. Our equipment is almost entirely made up of low-end PC's, often donated boxes. We're currently running Win98 on most of our computers, but are working to make the switch over to Linux.

    I currently know of 9 working Macs in our district, and they are PowerSchool servers. I'm not a big Mac fan myself, but since PowerSchool only works on Windows and Mac OS, we chose the macs (running OS 9). Do I wish we were running it on Windows? Sometimes - OS 9 isn't very configurable and is very clunky for a server OS. Of course, we didn't have to worry about the Blaster worm, either...

    Now only if they would make a PowerSchool version for Linux... That would be a Good Thing(TM).

    TylerS

    1. Re:Macs in School by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      SCO says you owe them $699 for every instance of a Good Thing(TM)

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    2. Re:Macs in School by moof1138 · · Score: 1

      PowerSchool is a WebObjects application. How can you be deploying it on OS 9? I have deployed WO apps on NT/2k, Solaris, HPUX, and OS X - 9 deployment is impossible AFAIK. Or are you referring to the client? I have not used it but I thought, being a web application, that it was browser based.

      --

      Hyperbole is the worst thing ever.
    3. Re:Macs in School by tylers · · Score: 1

      All I know is that PowerSchool is based on the 4D database and runs in OS 9, OS X, and Windows 2000 Server. It seems to run OK as a server app in OS 9, though it's not really a server OS.

      TylerS

  47. Stop teaching language courses and math by konmaskisin · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ... for one thing courses in Spanish and French and German verge on being **TOTALLY* useless for people who already speak English.

    Ther rest of the *world* is learning English so the school system in English speaking countries could save vast amounts of money by simply halting language courses and firing the teachers as redundant: one world, one language ... other languages are useless for Americans.

    Since computers and spread sheets can do most mathematics and arithmetic we needed to do in thepast WHY TEACH MATHEMATICS??!! People should be left to fend for themselves (using the nwe PC's equipped with the latest most expensive versions of Excel) until university. In university one can learn about hte concepts behind mathematics without having *WASTED TIME* learning it for 10 years in school.

    Clearly too much money is wasted in the US school system.

  48. I've always seen PCs in school... by Sigh+Phi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I remember my high school computer teacher in 1991 telling us that we needed to learn DOS and Wordperfect 5.1 because "that's what they use in industry." He always said "industry" as if it was this mythical, magical place, the one place where people paid for computer skills, the monolithic arbiter of everything good and meaningless.

    Of course, I used a Mac. And his explanations about our need for DOS seemed strange. We used WordPerfect in computer class, and I wrote my English, Biology, and History papers at home in MacWrite and PageMaker. I learned how to program a simple ASCII charting program in GW-BASIC at school, then went home and wrote a grade record tracking program in HyperCard.

    I was, of course, told that my efforts were wasted, because "industry" didn't use Macs. That turned out to be mostly true. But it seemed awfully strange, a year later, taking the second "advanced" computer course to be using Windows, the "future" of the industry and finding myself completely bored to tears. I wrote a simple word processor in C in my spare time from samples in a Mac programming book. The geeks in my school never learned from Windows. They used Macs or they used DOS, and most everybody respected the motive, if not the platform. I learned more from the Mac geeks, though. They just seemed to have more fun, without having to rely on "games."

    When the SoftArc FirstClass bulletin board/email system was really hitting its stride in 1993, I proposed to the school principal and the head of the computer program the idea of creating a school-wide bulletin board hooked up to OneNet and then, eventually, the Internet. I demoed it on my Mac IIsi. All they could see was the Mac. "They don't use Macs in industry," the computer teacher said. "PCs don't do graphics like that," the principal said. It was all very disappointing. I was trying to point out the possibilities of interaction. All they saw was something that they couldn't do (they could, but they just didn't know) with their Intel-Microsoft computers. I learned that day that it didn't take a lot of imagination to be a teacher or an administrator, and that's why I sift dumpsters for food and clothing now, rather than teach.

    1. Re:I've always seen PCs in school... by evilviper · · Score: 1
      that's why I sift dumpsters for food and clothing now, rather than teach.

      And when you aren't defending your catch of the day from hordes of rats, you even find time to sneak into internet Cafe`s, and use your limited time to post to slashdot. You deserve some sort of medal...
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  49. When I was in high school... by Kethinov · · Score: 2, Insightful

    My school ran macs all the way up until my senior year. Then they got rid of ALL the mac machines and got IBM Windows boxes. Saving money was not on their mind. What was then? They wanted to teach students how to use the most popular OS.

    I'm sorry Mac people, but Windows is the most popular OS. The school wants to teach kids how to use the OS they're most likely to use in the workplace. Mac (especially OSX) may be better, but in most people's eyes, popular (meaning compatability) is better and this is the unfortunate but sad truth. Microsoft has simply cornered the market.

    --
    You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    1. Re:When I was in high school... by setag · · Score: 2, Insightful
      but in most people's eyes, popular (meaning compatability) is better

      Are you an idiot? Mac OS X and even linux are "compatable".

      Unless you have something besides Office documents, networking, etc. in mind?

      Oh, you mean extortion like licensing and innumerable viruses. No, Mac OS X and linux are not compatable with those. Sorry.

    2. Re:When I was in high school... by TheAJofOZ · · Score: 1
      I can 100% guarantee you that today's students will not be using Windows XP for the entirety of their working life. Most of today's student will enter the working force after Windows XP has been superceeded.

      Learning a particular OS or software package is a dead-end game that will not give you the skills you need. You need to learn a range of software that does the same thing so you begin to understand the common things that software of that type does and learn to adapt quickly.

    3. Re:When I was in high school... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Thats a silly argument. The OS that the kids are using in school wont be the OS when they're out in the workforce. When I was in school it was Win 3.11 and Win95, today its XP. When todays kids get out of school we'll have some Longhorn derivative with .net and Paladium up the butt.

    4. Re:When I was in high school... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This notion of a teaching you the industry standard is beyond silly, beyond stupid.

      I grew up on Apple IIs. I somehow managed to learn to use Macintoshes in less than a day. And somehow I managed to translate that knowledge when I had to use Windows. Am I the only non-idiot left in the world?

      Is teaching basic concepts of computing so difficult? Is it better to learn the underlying knowledge of how a spreadsheet works or that MS Excel offers this particular syntax to add numbers? And what about databases? And, hey, let's learn about security on Windows.

      I do see this lemming effect and frankly. If you think PC's are all the rage, I say good luck to you -- you're definitely going to need it. Things will change dramatically from the time that you learn something in school and the time you enter the real world.

      If we can't teach our kids to understand basic concepts rather than just how to "run" this particular software, the whole next generation is doomed. Good luck with that!!

    5. Re:When I was in high school... by evilviper · · Score: 1
      The school wants to teach kids how to use the OS they're most likely to use in the workplace.

      Then why are they all using Windows 95/98 instead of NT/2000? Certainly 95/98 can't be very common in companies.

      Besides, if schools want to teach students how to be mindless secretaries, why don't they teach them how to use a particular brand of cash register, or 'Point Of Sale' systems? The reasonaning has to be a red herring, or at least the result of greed, or idiots in charge, combined with Microsoft lobbying.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    6. Re:When I was in high school... by antiMStroll · · Score: 1
      They wanted to teach students how to use the most popular OS.

      I admire any student with the dedication and concern to sit through school district board meetings, the only place they could have learned this. You did sit through them, right? Or is this what you were told in class? Or were you told anything?

    7. Re:When I was in high school... by Gropo · · Score: 1
      The school wants to teach kids how to use the OS they're most likely to use in the workplace.
      Damn f$cking straight!

      While we're at it, let's get rid of all those $^%&@ Cuisinarts from the Home Ec labs... Everybody knows that KitchenAid is what's used in the 'industry'

      As has been insinuated a hundred times already in these threads, the "Pick brand B, that's what's used out there in the Real World" argument just sounds more and more naive and idiotic as time progresses...

      --
      I hate Grammar Nazi's
    8. Re:When I was in high school... by White+Roses · · Score: 0, Troll
      They wanted to teach students how to use the most popular OS.

      If you want to teach kids what "the most popular OS" will be doing when they get out of school, teach them Mac OS today.

      --
      Do not touch -Willie
    9. Re:When I was in high school... by Kethinov · · Score: 1
      Are you an idiot? Mac OS X and even linux are "compatable".
      No. I'm not an idiot. And I am a *nix fan. But look at statistics. Just how much of the home and workplace desktop does *nix hold? (and when I say *nix that includes OSX because it's Unix based) That number is tiny in comparison to Windows. The simple fact is, the company that most computer using workers are going to work for will likely 1. be using Windows and 2. be using a program that only works in Windows.

      Is this how it should be? No. Is this how it is? Yes.
      --
      You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    10. Re:When I was in high school... by setag · · Score: 1
      No. I'm not an idiot.

      Yeah. sorry for saying that in the first place.

      Is this how it should be? No. Is this how it is? Yes.

      Following the same logic. Since most people will only make it to the middle class, the schools should just teach them how to consume and be happy about living paycheck to paycheck. No need to fill their heads with dreams of starting their own business or other such nonsense.

  50. the reason is apples suck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know, a couple of you morons here like to mod people down who don't love apple, but I don't care. We have a couple apple users were I work and this talk about apples being "workstation" class computers is just talk. Apples cost twice as much as PCs and take twice as long to compile code. I do java work and apples suck with java. They are slow and ussually 6 months to year behind x86 updates. This is not a flame, just real world experience. Appless are slow and over priced. I can run the same things apples do on linux for a quarter of the cost.

  51. Re:LIES!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Iraqi Ministry of Information is alive!

    Bless his lying soul *sniff* ;)

  52. its a shame by JeanBaptiste · · Score: 1

    I remember such classics as Wavy Navy, Montezumas Revenge, and Karateka...

    on an apple II, later a IIgs

    and all while I should have been doing algebra

  53. Re:L.o.g.i.c. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Overrated"

  54. If you're looking for waste by ahfoo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    it's not in the classrooms. That's the tricky part. You don't see the waste that goes on in public school districts because it's off limits even for the teachers. You walk into the classroom and you see this pathetic scene and you think, god these people need money bad. And they do, but that doesn't mean there isn't extravagant waste. It's just that you're not permitted to see it.
    The waste is at the district level, not the classrooms. And the worst offenders are usually the district network admins why are owned by MS at the vast majority of American K-12 schools.
    In large part, this district level administrative waste is the major motive for the charter school initiative.
    It's all rather insidious though because if you ask for more information, you won't get anywhere for so-called security reasons. That's security like as in job security. Call it the corporate/educational complex if you will.

    1. Re:If you're looking for waste by bob_calder · · Score: 1

      totally true, totally utterly true
      (see Taj Mahal, see Crystal Tower . . . .)
      I suggested that Heroic Statues of School Board members be placed along the sides of the entrance to one really large headquarters building. You know, Egyptian style. 50 feet tall and granite, not marble or bronze so they would last till the sun burns out. You could see hearts beat faster, eyes glaze over, drool appearing at the corners of the mouth, skin flushed with orgasmic excitement.

      --
      Any preoccupation with ideas of what is right or wrong in conduct shows an arrested intellectual development. (Wilde)
    2. Re:If you're looking for waste by zangdesign · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I just talked to a teacher last night - they run MS windows for the school district. Guess how many people they have to administer about 3,000 computers?

      One.

      Now, tell me they're wasting money on IT staff. MS works for them because it's easily explainable to teaching staff, who wind up handling the actual hands on (for obvious reasons). While Linux might be a better solution from a technology standpoint, the training and setup (in labor) costs would be exhorbitant, and way beyond the capabilities of one person to make it secure and idiot (student & teacher) proof.

      Plus, where's the software? Wine? Does it support every feature of each installed package? The administration is going to want to know that they can get the full potential value (not the real, actual value) of their software. Will Wine run everything that's available for the PC? If not, what's the replacement package on Linux?

      These are questions that aren't being answered very well by the Open Source community, because (opinion coming) they don't care! They're so focused on technology for it's own sake or on beating down Microsoft, they're overlooking that it's not realistic to just up and replace things without some sort of infrastructure to support it.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    3. Re:If you're looking for waste by Scudsucker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I just talked to a teacher last night - they run MS windows for the school district. Guess how many people they have to administer about 3,000 computers?

      One.


      Mmmmmbullshit. There is no way in hell that one person can take care of that many pc's, unless you are using a creative definition of what an "administrator" is. One person to do all the hardware maintenance, monitor the network, handle security and viruses, plan for and test new software, reimage all the computers for an update, etc etc? Either this person didn't know what they were talking about, or they have the crappiest 3,000 pc's anywhere, or he was a bridge salesman in his part time.

    4. Re:If you're looking for waste by zangdesign · · Score: 1

      No, I shit you not. However, the usual method of updating is to send out instructions to all the teachers on how to run their own updates. This is not a situation that anyone likes (from what I gather), but rather what they're forced into.

      I seriously doubt it will improve (using any software) until the public ponies up the money to make necessary improvements (through taxes, robbery, whatever).

      I think the situation they're in is best described as a clusterfuck.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    5. Re:If you're looking for waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evidence?

    6. Re:If you're looking for waste by ahfoo · · Score: 1

      Well you've just conceded the previous post's point. That's administration in title only. Sending out notes to tell people to do a job is not the same as doing the job, now is it?
      Besides, my original point wasn't that there was a vast army of overpaid individuals. I'm sure the administration is thinly staffed. It usually is in public school networks. Not only is it thinly staffed, but as I mentioned, it's more or less off limits to everyone outside the extremely limited network staff. But I wasn't addessing the issue of staff numbers, I was addressing the waste of cash money. Did your poor overworked adminstrator buddy give you some cash figures on server licenses? Yeah, right. That's not available to the public. It's a security issue. Ha hah hah.
      Simply asserting that there is a 1 to 3000 ratio of administrators to PCs doesn't answer my accusation, does it? In fact, it seems to be side-stepping which is probably the single greatest skill of school district administrators. You may want to consider getting into this line of work.
      And as for your issue about all these apps that won't work under Wine. I can tell you as a developer with tens of thousands of dollars worth of Macromedia licenses that 99.99% of your Authorware and Director titles will work under Wine just as they do under Windows. Or, are you telling me that the classrooms don't use Macromedia based instructional materials? Interesting, well if that's the case you're in a very unusual district. But I suspect you've never tried running any of these titles under Wine and don't plan to although you seem happy to talk about how much trouble it would be if you did.

    7. Re:If you're looking for waste by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Yaha! Okay, that makes more sense now. :) Still, its a little disengenious to say that they just have once person taking care of 3,000 computers when most of it gets offloaded onto teachers.

      I seriously doubt it will improve (using any software) until the public ponies up the money to make necessary improvements (through taxes, robbery, whatever).

      Well, all you gotta do is convince enough people that taxes can be a good thing and to fork some cash over. And pigs may fly.

      I think the situation they're in is best described as a clusterfuck.

      Yeaaaah. I'd hate to see what the rest of their budget looks like.

    8. Re:If you're looking for waste by phoenix_rizzen · · Score: 1

      Nope, that's not bull. Our district has 1 hardware tech, 5 software techs, and two Unix techs, for over 5000 computers and 50+ servers.

      Until last year, all the computers ran Windows and Novell. Then we removed all the Novell servers and Windows stations from the elementaries and put in Linux servers and LTSP stations. The software techs used to spend 2 days a week in the elems getting things working ... now the elems never see a tech as we (the two Unix guys) can administer them all remotely.

      The secondaries still use Windows/Novell, but now the software guys have 2 extra days to fix things there. :)

    9. Re:If you're looking for waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I knew what he ment. I thought it was obvious. You miss understood the post and called bullshit. One admin, lots of user working along. Duh.

    10. Re:If you're looking for waste by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite. In the first post he made it sound like one person administered all 3,000 computers and gave teachers a few pointers as training The reality is they have one person called "administrator" but much of the job is foisted on teachers.

      Try again, fucktard.

  55. But what does it include? by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

    The question comes down to what it includes. For instance, if you care to go all-mac (or even if you don't) it is *very* easy to justice MacOS X Server, with its unlimited client license.

    As to the individual computers, that $699 computer comes with things like firewire ports, a 17" flat-screen CRT, and an 802.11g antenna--and MacOS X--a lot there to justify it, particularly if you determine that it will require less support over its lifetime than a comparably priced Windows box.

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  56. the reasons morons are modded down by Redundant+offtopic+t · · Score: 1

    No, the reasons morons like you get modded down are because of your unimaginitive flamebait subjects, diarrheatic syntax, and olde troll lines with easy to see hooks.

    Oh, and you do care about getting modded down--otherwise you wouldn't have posted as A. Coward.

  57. stupid question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm going to ask a stupid, stupid question here. Shame on me for asking something this dumb, but I've gotta know...

    Why, exactly, do schools need ANY computer at all? They never had one when I was in school. I learned all kinds of great things without computers. I honestly don't think I could understand how a computer would help me learn anything I learned in public schools any better than how I learned it. (The one exception would be the two computer science classes I took, although actually Dijkstra advocated teaching freshman and sophomore college computer science classes without using computers at all.)

    To put this another way, I'm not convinced that the computers in schools are anything more than just fascination with technology as the latest thing that's supposedly going to magically revolutionize teaching and improve education by orders of magnitude. (Teachers and school administrators should read the chapter called "No Silver Bullet" from Brooks' book "The Mythical Man-Month.") If my child were in a school that had 500 wintel machines and 4 full-time computer admins, I'd be fairly upset, because I'd really much rather see that $200,000/yr spent on 4 or 5 more teachers. Really. The schools are impoverished enough without throwing money into something that, as far as I know, hasn't even been shown to improve learning.

    1. Re:stupid question by Llywelyn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I strongly suspect you are a troll, but here goes.

      First: Touch typing is a critical skill in most of today's society.

      Second: Last I heard Dijkstra's _grad_ students took a minimum of 6-7 years to graduate with their Ph.Ds.

      Second (a): If you are gong to learn Computer Science, a little time working without a language or a computer can be very useful. If you are going to be an Chemist or an Engineer, but need a little programming, it is probably best if you learn it on a computer a little more rapidly (albeit it should be a language like Python, not C++, but that's another matter).

      Third: Office Apps, such as the ability to use word or excel, or put together a presentation in powerpoint, are exceedingly important when you get to college.

      Fourth: There is a broader skill set requirement in many fields, and programs that are required to use them. It is becomming increasingly common to cover things like Photoshop in school--I consider this a good trend.

      Fifth: Comp Sci AP. You generally get one semester/year to teach this, better make sure you do it well.

      Sixth: There are now programs to help teachers teach their classes more effectively. One program lets students self-pace in mathematics, making them much more effective, and it allows one teacher to teach more students and to teach them all more effectively than he/she could before (seriously, I've seen the results out of these programs and the student's comments as well).

      Seventh: "Hasn't been shown to improve learning" is incorrect--I've spoken to many teachers who have found it a useful aid in teaching basic english (one teacher used a dictionary with a built in vocalizer to help students with definitions and pronunciations of different words--that way she needed less involvement).

      Eighth: Most people are basically comptuer illititerate. With the number of jobs/COLLEGES that prefer basic computer literacy, it is a *good thing* to cover this in HS (or before).

      Ninth: LD students. I am twice-exceptional and have dysgraphia. Through being an accomplished touch typist, I can overcome this and take lecture notes faster and more completely than most people can write them out.

      Tenth: Handwritten assignments vs. Typewritten assignments. I have never seen a college professor accept a handwritten paper. Most college applications I looked at even specified typewritten assignments, and this was some years ago.

      I can go on, and on, and on if you would prefer....

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    2. Re:stupid question by Nine+Of+Mirrors · · Score: 1

      Well.

      While I liked neither Turbo Pascal nor that weird cheapo-VM learn-Assembler-safely environment (or whatever the heck else it was) much, school did wean me off BASIC (which of course directly translated to "spaghetti code" at the time). With no money for books, no (public) internet and no way to access BBSes it was the only way that could have happened. That, I think, was a good thing, if somewhat frustrating because sprites and sound effects weren't on the syllabus.

      These days, they probably teach Visual Basic.

      That was on a "Gymnasium" (the type of German school that'll get you into uni). Now that the "other", more vocationally oriented types of school have computer classes as well, I suppose the main goal is to introduce students to the applications they'll be using to "earn" a "living". My mom's school has some sort of contract with Intel and MS that provides them with Excel, Powerpoint and Word and MS DTP and Imaging suites that are so clumsy I would rather go back to typewriters and cutting and pasting on the photocopier. So it's not like it really matters if it helps students learn anything or improves their "logic" or if they are interested in computers or programming in any way, it's about their future lives as office dwellers which is, uh, useful.

      Maybe it does alleviate the "I don't understand computers" mindset, maybe it does help them obtain "basic computer skills", maybe actually more than the very narrow spectrum of bubblesort to binary tree stuff we covered and subsequently forgot about because we had no idea what it was good for, but "our" comp classes seemed to be aimed at people who really wanted to know something about computers. So we never composed a single spreadsheet and didn't use any "apps" whatsoever, besides the compiler, but anyone who took those classes probably didn't do so to learn anything "economically" useful.

      Okay, so all of that was redundant, obvious and boring but I just got out of bed.

  58. I've said this before by panurge · · Score: 4, Insightful
    But I think it bears repetition. This is a de facto monopoly based, not on open standards, but on one manufacturer's products. The education system is being sold to a high bidder, and on a false premise (i.e that the job of schools is to teach children how to use a product, not teach them how to learn and to apply knowledge.)

    Imagine if every driving school in the US was to use nothing but Ford. Or every geometry class required kids to buy one particular make of compass, ruler and protractor. Or if every school was required to use exactly the same model and make of chair and table from one manufacturer only, even though independent studies had shown that these chairs and tables had a shorter life span and needed more frequent repairs than the alternatives. There might be problems.

    The logical thing, as with other public procurement, would be to have an agreed open standard for school procurement, and allow suppliers to tender freely to meet that requirement. School IT administrators would be trained on the administration and maintenance of the base standard, and any supplier proposing any proprietary modifications would have to declare them and explain the on-costs for support staff training and additional maintenance.

    The answer to the parents who complain that children are not being trained to use home PCs is, it is no more our job to teach kids how to use your PC than your dishwasher, your TV or your lawnmower.

    Of course it won't happen. But it is the genuinely free market approach (i.e the customer decides the rules and the market delivers). What we have at the moment is literally fascism, i.e. a society in which the State works with and favors particular sections of industry, and in which officials corruptly work in both fields despite the conflict of interest. Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be a free, democratic, idealistic 1940s US to ride to the rescue any more.

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
    1. Re:I've said this before by evilviper · · Score: 1
      a false premise (i.e that the job of schools is to teach children how to use a product, not teach them how to learn and to apply knowledge.)

      That bears repeating... In bold, underlined, and all-caps...

      I'm sorry to say that this idea permiates all parts of the education system in the USA. From Kindergarten all the way through High School, the "education" was 0% education, and 100% memorization and recitation of facts... Maybe things are different outside of CA (in fact, I desperately hope so).

      In College, the idea that education is all about facts and procedures, rather than any real education was in control of the vast majority of subjects... Ironically, only in high-tech classes is actual education stressed, although I have witnessed exceptions.

      It certainly looks bad for the education system, and I hope they can break this mindset ASAP, because every second it is in place, it does more (permanent) damage.

      What we have at the moment is literally fascism, i.e. a society in which the State works with and favors particular sections of industry, and in which officials corruptly work in both fields despite the conflict of interest.

      A great point, and one of unusual insight. On /. such a good point is very rare, but in the world at large, such insight is exponentially less common.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  59. OS Change by Llywelyn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The refutation I've also heard to this is along a slightly different line, but equally valid: XP is nothing like Windows 95 is nothing like Windows 3.1. OS X is nothing like OS 9, which is fundamentally different than OS 7.

    That's been in the last 10 years. A kid is trained on Windows XP in high school (or even grade school or middle school!) and the operating system is going to be fundamentally different--even if they are still using "Windows" or "MacOS"--by the time they are out of college.

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    1. Re:OS Change by Alien+Being · · Score: 0

      Are you telling me that the "industry standard" PDP8 skills I learned in HS are obsolete? Should I go to PDP11 school?

    2. Re:OS Change by e-gold · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Same is true of computer-languages (thank GOD I instinctively slacked-off & watched-girls in that "Cobol" class!).

      Well-rounded kids will be able to handle non-Windows operating systems in the future even if many of them are likely to use Windows for the next decade. It's just like knowing a bit of Spanish or French, it helps you to better-understand how things work even if you're using other skills at the moment.
      JMR

      --
      Try e-gold - (contact me). I'm NOT e-
  60. Macs in High Schools vs. Macs in Higher Ed. by vergil · · Score: 5, Interesting
    BusinessWeek might have a point regarding the declining presence of Macs in K-12 computer labs as school officials turn towards a "single platform" for educational computing.

    I work at the IT office of a state-run public university that focuses on research. UMBC's 24-hour student computer labs contain hundreds of terminals with a variety of hardware/OS configurations (PCs, Macs [ranging from G3/4s to eMacs] and a smattering of SGI Indigos/Indys dating back to the mid 90's, when the state budget allowed for such purchases).

    Gradually, our student terminals -- PCs and Mac -- are shifting towards a "common platform": Unix. Our Macs are being upgraded to OSX, and each PC (most are Dell Optiplex GX-110s, GX150s and newer 270s) can be booted into either Windows 2000 or a customized RedHat lab image.

  61. Cost is a factor... by Chicane-UK · · Score: 2, Informative

    As is always the case really.. I work for a college, and our ratio of macs to PC's is probably 1 mac for every 150 PeeCee's. And its a case of a viscious circle - no one on the tech team really knows much about them as the college hardly buys any of them... and the college doesn't really want to buy them as hardly anyone knows about how to support them on our team.

    Its frustrating for me as I always try and push alternatives - refurbed cheap (but still hugely powerful) SGI's for CAD work, Linux in many situations, etc - but its always the same old story. Some excuse to get out of it and buy Intel boxes.

    From a techie point of view it makes the job easier, but I enjoy getting little diversity in the job - it makes it more of a challenge, and it forces the people I work with to learn new things. Most of them find it amusing to chastise Linux even though it is the backbone of the network - the proxy everyone is routed through, the DHCP address provider, and the DNS servers for every machine.

    I think the most overriding factor is money.. MacOSX itself is cheap, and if you could buy it for x86 machines, i'd buy it myself in a second - but the Apple hardware just costs too much, when you consider we were able to get Dell workstations with P4 2.4GHz, 256MB DDR RAM, 15" TFT monitors, and about 30GB harddrives for around $800. Apple can compete by providing machines at that price I am sure, but as OSX really does need a bit more horsepower to get the best out of it, then you really need to spend more to beef it up. How do you justify that to your Wintel loving mansgers with tight purse-strings...?

    --
    "Hey! Unless this is a nude love-in, get the hell off my property!!"
    1. Re:Cost is a factor... by toddhisattva · · Score: 1
      Apple can compete by providing machines at that price I am sure, but as OSX really does need a bit more horsepower to get the best out of it, then you really need to spend more to beef it up.

      An $800 eMac has 800MHz G4, which is plenty enough to run OS X.

      To get the best out of any operating system, you need next year's hardware!

  62. Why are students so passive - one story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
    They tried to follow what I said, but they had no concept of figuring things out on their own.

    (This is slightly off-topic, but I just want to get this off my chest)

    I don't know about you but I am a lecturer at university level (I'm posting AC because some of my students might recognize me) and for the last five years I've observed a gradual decline in the motivation and, in particular,

    They come to the class and sit there like empty receptacles I am supposed to fill in with information that'll be on the exam. If I digress and try to tell them something extra-curricular (like showing photos from my latest trip to the ALS) they'll scream bloody murder (or first they'll ask if this will be on the exam and if it's not they'll scream bloody murder).

    You try to ask them questions and you get blank looks. Some students look at each other as if they're confused by the prospect that they'd actually participate in the class. Some people who I know know the answer won't say anything and keep staring at their open book as if there's something particularly interesting in there.

    And don't get me wrong. They are not fundamentally stupid people beneath the surface. They just don't know how to use their head until someone tells them how. Some of them actually do know how, but the reason why they are so passive remained unanswered for a long time.

    Then, last week, I was visiting my brother who's married with children when her 10-year old niece came to me and asked if "uncle could help with my math homework". The homework was typical 3rd grade mathetmatics and it was apparent that while my niece was mathematically talented, the problem was actually quite hard to solve using the methods they had been taught so far. I skimmed a few pages forwards and lo-and-behold, there was the method I would have used. I showed it to her and said something along the line "You can always go ahead and look for help in the later parts of the book - you're so good with math that you can learn these things by yourself".

    She took the book, smiled shyly but looked a bit worried. Then she said something that still makes my blood boil: "But my teacher says that we are not supposed to learn anything by ourselves because we might learn wrong things".

    I mean what the hell?! Since when did thinking for yourself and being interested in the subject become "a bad thing"? Learning wrong things?!

    I know this is just one case and it's impossible to draw any conclusions based this, but I have a suspicion that something is horribly wrong in the school these days. Could it be that this "do what I say and God help you if you try to learn things on your own!" attitude is prevalent and actually making people into these passive vessels that expect teachers just to pour information into them.

    Anyone else experienced anything similar?

    Oh, and with my bros permission I called that teacher about the matter and told her in no uncertain terms that if I ever hear that my niece has been discouraged by teachers from thinking and learning, I'll call PTA and the local newspaper and I'll sue the school too.

    1. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Troed · · Score: 1, Troll

      I'll call PTA and the local newspaper and I'll sue the school too

      ... and become part of the [american] problem. It's BECAUSE you risk getting sued schools and teachers don't dare doing anything outside what's in the plans and books.

    2. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      For all I care, the teachers can stick with their plans and books.

      Their job is to promote learning. Telling kids not to learn new stuff runs contrary to this. It's like a doctor telling someone with a liver infection to keep drinking more beer. Malpractise.

    3. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by togtog · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I only wanted to reply to one part:

      She took the book, smiled shyly but looked a bit worried. Then she said something that still makes my blood boil: "But my teacher says that we are not supposed to learn anything by ourselves because we might learn wrong things".

      One of my teachers in 3rd or 4th grade said something very similar to me concerning math. I had figured out how to do the math easier for myself in my head and more quickly then her way writing the problem down on paper. She told me that it was improper to do math like that, it didn't matter if it worked or not, I had to do the math like in the book, period. Also that I couldn't just make up ways to do math, there was a right way and that was what was being taught.

      I had a great deal of difficulty with math from then on, I was partly afraid to actually think about the math in fear I was using the wrong math. Also I couldn't seem to get my brain to wrap around the way of doing math she was trying to teach me. I eventually learned her math, I have since forgot it and have dropped to a muddled memory of the way I liked to do it.

      The teacher was little help, often stating that her teachers book didn't explain certain problems that I had trouble with and therefore she could not help me, she told me to guess a number in those cases.

      I actually don't remember many times where adding our own touch or figuring things out on our own was allowed or encouraged, it was usually their way or a grade drop.

      All but three of my teachers were like that.

      Another thing, do you know how many states are part of the United States of America? 52? I bet you didn't know it was 52, there are 50 continental states, Alaska is 51, and Hawaii is 52. No, really, my History/Geography teacher taught me that. Some stupid students tried to correct her but she didn't give in, she sited from her teachers book. I glad she set me right on that common error.

      But anyway, I gotta go get something to eat and head off to bed, be well!

      Best regards,
      -tog

    4. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Pharmboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      She took the book, smiled shyly but looked a bit worried. Then she said something that still makes my blood boil: "But my teacher says that we are not supposed to learn anything by ourselves because we might learn wrong things".

      If you think the kids are stupid enough, you will only allow them to learn what is on the standardized tests that the TEACHERS are graded on.

      My wife and I talk about this all the time, one reason we DONT have children. The schools simply are too focused on outcome based education: every child must be equally smart (or dumb) and must learn the same way. It requires effort to help on an individual basis, and the teachers themselves are strongly discouraged from using their own judgement. It's not just their fault, its a problem with the entire system, top to bottom.

      Part of the problem IS federal money. There should be none, since it is only given in return for schools having programs or acting in ways that may not be the best for THOSE students. The more removed an agency is, the less it knows what is best for your children. The schools must be 100% answerable to the local population, and 0% to the feds. There is a reason there is NO mention of public schools in the constitution, it should be a local matter, where you can hold them accountable, and choke the living shit out someone when necessary, such as your well stated comment implies you verbally did.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    5. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by GlassUser · · Score: 1

      I was partially home educated (a little of primary and all of secondary school), and I've found that it can be very, very good. You need the right teachers (don't be shy about hiring a private tutor), and it's imperitave that the parents and other siblings take an active role in education. You know, you need to CARE.

    6. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      Sorry, logic disconnect. You don't have children because of the Education System? I didn't realize it impacted fertility like that.

      Though working in science museum I can say that being surrounded by kids all the time is the best contreceptive on the market. I didn't realize it had a field effect so profound.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    7. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      I was always one of those annoying kids who never did homework but wrote intelligent papers and tested well. For a while in middle school they had me on a S.A.P. program, where a teacher had to sign off on a little memeograph that I had done my homework. They took me off a year later, in their words, because I was incorrigable.

      I also had a habit of sloppy handwriting. Not my fault, I was diagnosed with Disgraphia and Dislexia around 5th grade. Anyone here remember how much of first through fourth grade was penmenship and long addition. Try doing that with no natural sense of a straight line. Oh yea, make me feel stupid and then make me broken.

      Early on I learned to say "fsck it." I can't say I've ever taken education all that seriously.

      I expect no less of my children.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    8. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by tgibbs · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Anyone else experienced anything similar?

      Yeah, I did, when I was in 3rd grade, forty-odd years ago. I'm not surprised to see that nothing has changed. Teaching children is a low-paying occupation, and you get two kinds of people:

      1) Those who aren't competent to do anything else ("those who can, do...")

      2) Those who have a calling to teach and are willing to accept substandard pay to do it.

      Teachers in category one mainly teach by rote, following a rigid lesson plan, so a bright student who thinks and reads ahead is a problem. Of course, teachers in category 2 are delighted by this kind of challenge.

      School administrators, of course, tend to be mostly in category one, since they don't actually teach. And they tend to favor teachers in category one, because they don't make waves. Basically the same mentality that leads them to favor a single computing platform...

    9. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      It happened to me in Top Infants (age 6 or 7) at school in the UK.

      I was a voracious reader and I had read all of the books in the infant library and was after more material. The teacher wouldn't let me get any books from the junior library for some reason. I forget the actual reason she gave, but i remember my mother was very irate about that and had words with the teacher. I still wasn't allowed to get books from the junior library though, the teacher made me re-read the infant books.

    10. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by blibbleblobble · · Score: 1

      "Anyone else experienced anything similar?"

      Read the letters page of any issue of 2600 for what the kids think about it: learning off your own back is considered disorderly and threatening in many schools.

      p.s. article

    11. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Simonetta · · Score: 1

      To quote P.J. O'Rourke:
      "Anyone who doesn't know what with the public schools has never screwed an education major."

    12. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by DannyO152 · · Score: 1

      I'm not in the lecture halls right now, but your description would seem to be a fair one for my fellow college students back in the mid 70s. Not me, I like the digressions. I just recalled my favorite history lecture which went into the details of the assassination of Archduke Prince Ferdinand, the event that precipitates World War I. While 99% of the material had no bearing on the final exam (this was undergraduate beginning History of Western Civilization), it was a brilliantly developed narrative and had an underlying point about the imprecise nature of understanding history as chain of events, each of which "had to happen".

      As for the niece issue, that is, an easier way five pages later -- I believe this is a writing technique used to validate the later approach. I suppose the student is to learn that, while other approaches are possible, we've saved the best for last. Maybe by seeing alternate approaches, it fosters an underlying understanding of the concepts. That makes some sense to me, but, shoot, I'm a product of New Math 1.0 and I liked it.

    13. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by zazas_mmmm · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't think the original post in this thread is off-topic at all. Here's why:

      teachers in category 2 are delighted by this kind of challenge.

      I'm afraid the current push for standardized testing and the over-administration of teachers is quickly clearing our schools of this kind of teacher.

      My mom has just retired early (59) out of frustration because she can no longer teach in a way that's meaningful. She taught for 35 years as a public kindergarten teacher. She worked at school from 8 am until 5 pm, at-home lesson planning at least an hour and a half every night, and at least 3 or 4 hours every Sunday (my entire childhood). She had her kids doing creative mathematics and writing their own (albeit short) stories and illustrating their books by the end of the year.

      Then the mandatory standardized testing started a few years back and the district locked down all of the ways she can teach. She has to teach only from textbooks and workbooks and give these five year olds frequent standardized tests. The kids must earn a letter grade at the end of the year. There are classroom observers that come in frequently that will downgrade the school if she isn't teaching according to this new curriculum. No more story reading. No more creative mathematics and learning about patterns with unifix cubes. No more buddy projects with the 4th graders who would come in for additional creative learning time. It's all gone. My mom's students always loved school at the end of the year and couldn't wait for first grade. Now they all hate school and much of my mom's job is keeping them on task when they're bored out of their skulls.

      My mom was the most dedicated teacher I have ever known. She easily worked 55 hours a week for the duration of her career and has a masters in early childhood education and a certificate in bilingual education. Teachers like my mom are no longer welcome in the public school classrooms of America.

      It's pretty clear that we're in the midst of the corporatization of our public school systems. Textbook conglomerates like Houton Mifflin and McGraw-Hill are making an absolute fortune off of the recent changes. Not surprisingly, they were also the companies who sponsored the educational studies that were used by legislators to push for these changes. Is it any wonder that a company like Apple would get pushed out of such an environment?

      --
      I'm a friend of a friend of the working class.
    14. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Troy · · Score: 1

      While I also wince at feds calling the shots, the problem with the 100/0 ratio is that there are localities that, frankly, do not value education. A friend of mine grew up in a very blue colar school district with a "I never had much use for book learnin'" attitude among many of the residents. The result was that much of the education she got was a joke. She had to work very very hard to succeed in college because she had almost no background.

      And I don't think her district is unique. A lot of people in economically depressed areas (like most of my extended family) devalue education. Even with federal involvement, that translates almost directly to the schools.

      -Troy

    15. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey here's an idea... why don't you go fuck yourself? kthxbye

    16. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ditto here. The librarian was concerned that I was reading beyond grade level, and that by the time I got to 6th grade, there would be no books left in the school library for me to read; as if that particular school's library contained the entirety of the world's literature...

      My 4th grade teacher was more progressive. We had a "free reading" time in her classromm once a week. I would usually curl up on the floor right in front of her desk and read happily from whatever books I could find in the room. At some point, she would call and end to the free reading time and get back to lesson plans. I'd conveniently neglect to hear her, and she'd conveniently neglect to see me on the floor...

    17. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by fupeg · · Score: 1

      1) Those who aren't competent to do anything else ("those who can, do...")

      Thanks for the info Mr. Education Expert. YOU are the reason why teachers are paid so poorly. People like you who remember some "dumb" teacher you had. So why pay them any money if they are so stupid? We only want teachers who "have the calling" and will work regardless of the pay, right?

    18. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by tgibbs · · Score: 1
      So why pay them any money if they are so stupid? We only want teachers who "have the calling" and will work regardless of the pay, right?

      It doesn't work that way. If you want to attract bright, competent people to teaching, you've got to offer them a salary that at least approaches what they could earn elsewhere. Somebody who really wants to teach will accept a lower wage to do so, but there are limits. Yes, you'll pick up a few who have the calling, and who can afford to work for low wages (mostly people with a spouse in a well-paying job). But there are many others who would love to teach, and would be good at it, but who simply cannot afford to do so.

    19. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      While I also wince at feds calling the shots, the problem with the 100/0 ratio is that there are localities that, frankly, do not value education. A friend of mine grew up in a very blue colar school district with a "I never had much use for book learnin'" attitude among many of the residents. The result was that much of the education she got was a joke. She had to work very very hard to succeed in college because she had almost no background.

      And I don't think her district is unique. A lot of people in economically depressed areas (like most of my extended family) devalue education. Even with federal involvement, that translates almost directly to the schools.


      What you say is a valid point, but I would rather that oversight came from the state level, instead of the federal. With the state level, YOU have more say, more input, and yes, you can even march on the state capitol building. That is much harder at the federal level.

      My opinion about the federal system has always been that the feds should only do those things that CAN NOT be accomplished at the state or local level. Cooperating on interstate highways, building dams that feed power across state lines, national defense, treaties with other countries. That kind of stuff. Its not that the feds are evil, its just fed control should be a LAST resort, not the first.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    20. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Lost+Dragon · · Score: 1

      My experience is that our educational system fails soon after students learn that their test scores are more important than actually mastering and understanding the information they have been presented. In a system where everyone must learn at the same rate, from the same materials, doing the same problems, it is little surprise that a good portion of students end up surviving school by learning how to regurgitate facts on demand. When these students reach college, they take with them the understanding that "facts on demand" will get them through anything. Good freshman professors will correct this right away.

    21. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      What you say is a valid point, but I would rather that oversight came from the state level, instead of the federal. With the state level, YOU have more say, more input, and yes, you can even march on the state capitol building. That is much harder at the federal level.

      Yeah, but a whole lot of people are greedy fucks when it comes to paying their taxes, even if its for children's education. And they vote. There's a town in my state that has a large retired community, and both the roads and the schools are in horrible condition because a lot of those people say "I already paid my taxes and put my kids through school". Never mind that these kids will soon be paying for their Social Security checks if they aren't already. Yeah thats one city, but older folks vote more than younger folks. And they've had 20+ years of "big government" propoganda by the GOP to filter out.

      One reason why some federal control is good is to slap the states upside the head when their being stupid (the fed's own stupidity aside). Earlier this year our state legislature passed a bill that would have specifically raised teacher's salaries. School administrators lobbied the legislature to just give the districts the money so they'd have more "flexibility" to use it as they wanted. I'm wondering what fraction of a percentage of that money is going to still go to teachers pay.

      Not that we'll see any effort by Bush to raise teacher pay across the board, but it would be nice.

    22. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Schools receive very little money from the federal system, the problem is all the strings attached.

      Not that we'll see any effort by Bush to raise teacher pay across the board, but it would be nice.

      Salaries should (and are) decided at a state level, not federal. The feds have no say. They can provide funds, but shouldn't. If a teacher makes more in New York that one in Alabama, it may be the cost of living is different, which is why it should be decided locally/state.

      As to slapping the states upside the head, this qualifies as "last resort" rather than first resort. The 20+ years of Big Government is pretty accurate from what I see. Tax less, let the local and state tax more (a wash) and let you and I decide about our schools. Not washington.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    23. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by fupeg · · Score: 1

      You are correct that teachers need to be paid a lot more. My point is that when people believe things like "teachers are incompetent and teach because they can do nothing else" it places a low value on what they do and CAUSES people to believe it is OK that they are so underpaid.

    24. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by hendridm · · Score: 1
      *sigh*

      > They come to the class and sit there like empty receptacles I am supposed to fill in with information that'll be on the exam. If I digress and try to tell them something extra-curricular they'll scream bloody murder (or first they'll ask if this will be on the exam and if it's not they'll scream bloody murder).

      Could it be because nobody in your class gives two shits about your class but are required to take it to accomplish the greater goal of acquiring a degree? That might have something to do with it. Professors don't seem to understand why their subjects aren't interesting to absolutely EVERYONE and don't seem to get the fact that going to class is just the means to an end.

      I'd bet that many of those people aren't quite so glossy-eyed in the courses that actually have even a remote usefullness to their desired career path (at least I wasn't). I've got a decent web developer position now, and that gym class, music appreciation, and geology course REALLY helped me cope with the 6000 rejection letters I got after graduating from college. Additionally, it wasn't my unique perspective on trilobites and Beethoven's 5th orchestra that got me my first decent job (so I've heard). /rant

    25. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Nurgled · · Score: 1

      I hope your mother made a lot of noise as she was leaving. Let anyone who cares know what they are losing. If noone makes obvious what is being lost, the majority will not notice until it is too late.

    26. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by kramer2718 · · Score: 1

      I totally agree. The public school system is a shambles. Many universities are not much better. Fortunately, when I taught, the school let me do what I wanted as long as I completed the lesson plan.

      The best thing that I did for my students was to give them one on one final exams. They all had to make appointments with me. They each had a series of different tasks to perform on a computer and time limit. The tasks were easy: creating a directory, creating various kinds of files, using a browser, etc. These were much easier than their homework, but their text (which I did not choose) led them through everything keystroke by keystroke, so most of them didn't know how to do things. Well, when I was standing over them and they were under time pressure, most of them figured things out. It was great!

      If I had only had MACs to work with, I could have taught them about UNIX in a friendly environment.

    27. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Knife_Edge · · Score: 1
      My mom's students always loved school at the end of the year and couldn't wait for first grade. Now they all hate school and much of my mom's job is keeping them on task when they're bored out of their skulls.

      You are absolutely right. Why should school be a place of rigorous learning, when it could be an overpriced daycare center where stupid children are entertained and tricked into thinking they are smart and knowledgeable?

      I'm kidding, sort of, since after all you were talking about kindergarten, where the kids are very young. All the same, I do not believe that education should focus exclusively on development of a personal feeling of self-worth, or how much the child enjoys the experience. Nothing wrong with story time and fingerpainting, but the kids need to learn to read too (and do some math, for that matter). Unfortunately, in many classrooms, this is not happening, for whatever reasons. Many people do not like this, but it seems in many cases the only way to identify schools that are performing poorly is to have an enforced set of standards the students are tested with. I think the big problem people have with the standardization is that while it makes a lot of schools better, it also makes outstanding schools worse. This of course means concerned parents can no longer work the system by putting their kids into certain schools.

      I think there are many systemic problems with the public school system in America, and we won't see the end of them anytime soon.

    28. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by tentimestwenty · · Score: 1

      I find it funny to even be having this debate. The level of education even amongst the cream of society is so low in the key areas that intellectuals are reduced to bickering over topics that were decided 100 years ago. Even common sense says diversity is valuable, as is self-discipline and self-directed learning. If you put those 3 things together you get vitality and self-sufficient growth of the broadest definition. If you look at those things as the keys to an advancing society, and you look at the reason they're being subverted, it's the same in each case - capitalist agenda. Capitalism fails in diversity (it requires monoculture). Capitalism fails when people are self-sufficient and disciplined (it requires need and desire). Capitalism fails when people are independent thinkers (it requires passivity and consumption). It's only natural that schools want Windows. Windows is capitalism embodied in technology and since schools are really just creating passive, like-minded working drones now, Windows is going to "train" them even quicker. Apple absolutely doesn't have a future given the trend that we're in. They present something that allows individual success, transparent creative opportunity at a cost that is higher than the artificial alternative. Schools want nothing of the Apple utopia.

    29. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to be obvious, but isn't the answer clear? In general, you can expect a school (or any institution, really) to be under the influence of the federal government to the extent that it accepts money from it; therefore, you should look for schools that accept NO money from the feds if you want your child's education free from the evils of "standardization."

      By no means am I saying that private schools are perfect, or even that most are better than public schools (since "better" is subjective and I don't have enough data anyway). What I am saying is that a private school is the kind of place where exceptional education can occur, since exception education is, by definition, nonstandard.

      -Mike

    30. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      after 10 years in public education, all i can say is "damn straight! tell it like it is brother!"

      and if you have an answer to how to stop having teachers teach to the lowest learner to pass some damn test, and start teaching to have kids learn to learn, i am all ears.......

    31. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by mblase · · Score: 1

      Anyone else experienced anything similar?

      My daughter once had a math worksheet where the problem was unsolvable, because it required her to solve for x by dividing by zero. I actually pointed this out to her math teacher the next morning, and his reply was that he wanted the kids to let zero be the result when dividing by zero, because (I suppose) he didn't want to digress from the book and explain something that wasn't covered.

      Her science textbook that year also claimed that fungi were plants, that there were only two kingdoms of living things, plant and animal, and that humans were neither.

      I didn't know what else to say.

    32. Re:Why are students so passive - one story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ive met many teachers of both of the kinds listed above. most school systems in america are, well, screwed because of it. they might, if they have motivated teachers, want to teach somethign interesting and useful, but then they fail with the standardized tests and lose their job. its a catch 22, they lose either way.

  63. Fresno State's labs tell it all by AvantLegion · · Score: 4, Interesting
    In the Computer Science department, we have a room full of Pentium III systems. Only half of them work. Actually, depending on the moon cycle, it can be less than half.

    In the Mathematics department, we have a room full of ugly-ass old iMacs. I've only seen 1 or, at absolute most, 2 machines in the room that were not functioning.

    The worst part is that the Pentium III systems are set up on a fancy little "imaging" system, where each boot restores a remotely hosted disk image for whatever OS you choose (Win2000, Win98, or an old Red Hat Linux). So we're not even talking OS problems here - every working machine gets a fresh one every boot. It's pure hardware failures in that room.

    The iMacs all run off persistant locally-installed copies of OS something (not OS X, and I'm not much of a pre-OS X Mac user, so I can't tell you if it's OS 8 or 9 or what). No fancy re-imaging on boot or anything. Just an OS that doesn't tend to break, on hardware that doesn't tend to break.

    1. Re:Fresno State's labs tell it all by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      What this could mean is that nobody uses the Macs, and all the deliquents use the PC's. I mean, I wouldn't want my friends to see me using a Mac, I'd get bombarded with "Think Different"(gay) jokes.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    2. Re:Fresno State's labs tell it all by evilviper · · Score: 1
      I've only seen 1 or, at absolute most, 2 machines in the room that were not functioning.
      ...and it only takes 5 minutes, and an IQ more than a single digit, to fix any problem you might have on a Mac.

      In fact, I have no doubt I could give 5 minutes of explanation to a 5-year-old kid, and have them go fix any problems that might occur.

      Plus, I'm not a Mac person at all... I just happened to have used one for 15 minutes, and know everything about how they operate. Things may have changed since OS X, but that's really besides the point.

      It's pure hardware failures in that room.

      I doubt that very much actually. Most PC-farm problems are issues with hardware+software conflicts. Either one system has a card in a different PCI slot, or BIOS settings are different. Whatever, it's usually the fault of the software not being robust enough to just detect the change, and make the minor update to the software.

      If you really are having 100% hardware problems, then something is very very wrong. Either you've got the crappiest hardware on the planet, or you are having some sort of electrical or mechanical extremes that is physically damaging the hardware for some reason. Even with the cheapest computers I've seen, nothing even comes close to 50% hardware failures. Maybe 15% on the worst days, and investing 1% more on decent hardware gets rid of all the problems completely.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  64. Students don't know what they want... by pelorus · · Score: 3, Interesting

    One of our local colleges had a vote among their students. They were faces with a switch to OSX on one hand or a switch to Windows. Both would require a lot of work and a lot of money but their Mac hardware could run OSX.

    The student body voted and came back with Windows.

    So, the Macs were carted out, sold off cheaply (Yes, I made out like a bandit) and new PCs were installed.

    Then the problems started.

    Y'see. When the Macs were there, they were pretty open. There aren't too many viruses available for the Mac and the students could while away their lunchtimes playing UT on the iMacs and no-one would care. There just wasn't much malware and what there was, wasn't unrecoverable. All of the Macs had FireWire and I know of half a dozen really good student films that came out of students with a cheap camcorder and a couple of hours on ANY of the Macs there.

    The students came in and eagerly logged into their new Windows PCs and then discovered that they weren't permitted to install software. Or change the system clock. Or the language of the system. So, now there's no UT or CounterStrike during lunch.

    The other problems were hardware related. 20% of their CDRW drives have already been replaced and they had to buy extra machines for swap-out when the PCs flatline during or just before a class. There's a separate "Video Suite" which has higher quality PCs but the students involved in the film-making claim that it takes too long to edit video on those machines. Instead they bought a low end iMac and do it at their digs. For general use the PCs are fine - to get rid of registry crud and keep them up to date with patches, they re-image them every month and put a fresh install out there.

    Maybe it's not a fair comparison and a lot of the blame lies with the sysadmins but at the same time, due to the amount of malware for Windows, they couldn't just leave the machines completely open.

    1. Re:Students don't know what they want... by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      No, PC labs are that bad.

      I remember my days back at College during our infamous conversion.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
  65. It's actually 660.50... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...once you take out the modem. It's also their one-off internet order price. Dell offers additional educational discounts (although Apple might as well).

  66. Maybe Macs are more for grown ups now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Myself, I'm 25, and when I was in grade school, the Apple II series was a computer I used a lot, and I still love Logo. I would love for kids to still learn to program in BASIC using a fun program like Logo, but now it seems that basic computer knowledge needs to be with MS Office applications instead.

    Unfortunately, there is a much higher number of drones than geeks, and the drones need to learn to use whatever their future employers tell them to use. Really, it doesn't bother me as much to hear that Macs are losing ground in grade schools as much as it bothers me that crossplatform apps like OpenOffice aren't gaining ground.

    As far as Macs in education, I don't forsee Macs losing any ground in higher education, where things are more specialized. Macs are becoming a very attractive platform for computer science students, since it's a UNIX environment but it's easy to use, meaning lot less lost time learning to fix things that aren't part of the class. And the Mac has never lost its appeal to graphics and video people either.

    I would prefer to see a Mac in the place of every Windows machine out there, but that won't happen unless that MS monopoly gets broken up. Right now, it's more important that open source applications succeed. If OpenOffice was the standard, there wouldn't be a such push to go to MS Windows.

    Using the Mac as an example, we should see that the "desktop experience" isn't going to win the mass market share. Using Linux as an example, we should see that "security and reliability" aren't going to win it either. Right now, if we want a good OS to beat the giant, we should focus on the apps before the OS.

  67. Mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why does this obvious troll/retard even have a score of 2?

    1. Re:Mod Parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have no idea why you were modded up as funny.
      'Cause he was. Dingleberry.
    2. Re:MOD PARENT DOWN by onyxruby · · Score: 1
      Look, I'm sorry if I broke your heart. Don't take it personal, ok? What you read may not have been what you wanted to hear, but it's factually accurate. If you can actually think of something wrong with my comment other "doesn't worship mac", than put it in writing with a response. All the hurt feelings in the world aren't going to change the reality of the situation one iota though. There are a number of issues here for Apple to address, and I would welcome them to do so. But to simply make a comment like

      -1 Troll is more like it

      just shows you haven't the foggiest how to try to refute what I'm saying. I happen to have extensive exposure to this situation, and my statement stands. If you think something is factually innacurate, than spell it out. I'm not just some windows fanatic, I have and use Linux, Windows, and have even owned one of Apples' less than lusterful computers.
  68. 532 Nanometers. by Graymalkin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The premise of the article is ridiculous. The entire premise of people needing to learn the programs the "industry" uses is ridiculous. If you work somewhere you have to learn the software your job requires, not infrequently do businesses use software you've never seen before working there.

    I had to go downtown to the Hall of Justice one afternoon to pick up some paperwork. Waiting for the clerk to find the file I needed I was looking around the office. On the clerks desk I noticed an X terminal. Some sort of database search program was open on the screen. When the clerk came back I asked her about it and she just knew the box was a "terminal" and it ran her database software. Way back when my city signed a contract with Sun for a bunch of mainframes so I'm betting the terminal was probably hooked up to a Sun mainframe.

    That clerk was using a Unix system and X11. It is entirely likely at home she had a PC with Windows running on it. She was a bit older than me so it is even more likely she had never seen a computer in school. She had never used a computer before and was using SunOS daily. Did she know anything about it? Judging from the way she looked at me when I questioned her she didn't seem to know much if anything about the terminal or the mainframe driving it. She was using the terminal because she was trained to click the right buttons on the database app and type the right things in the right spots. Anyone who isn't a complete moron could be taught the same thing.

    At a publisher I worked for the pre-press office consisted of about twenty eight Macs. They were all running a program specifically written to layout and work with advertisements. Being as the program has little use outside of pre-press departments dealing with advertisement composing even the most advanced users in the office did't have it at home. I'd be really suprised if any school had ever taught that application specifically.

    Several of the people in the office had PCs at homes. All of the advanced (well paid) artists had Macs at home with most of the software in the office - Photoshop, Illustrator, XPress. My friend had a PC at home with those apps on it. At work he used a G4 PowerMac. Some of the people there while very nice people were computer dummies. They were however still able to use a rather purpose specific graphic design application, a custom written database system, and a Wyse terminal in the corner for order processing.

    The idea that people can't figure out how to use a PC because they were taught on Macs in school is simply absurd. If you understand basic computing concepts like clicking bottons on a mouse and typing things on a keyboard you can be trained to use just about anything. Thinking you're somehow going to train third graders useful or even applicable computer skills is an obscenely myopic idea. It would be at least ten years before a third grader ever really needed to use a computer in a professional capacity.

    Ten years ago DOS was all the rage and networks were voodoo. Teaching a third grader how to do everything in DOS would not be much help to them in today's job market. The Excel XP tips, tricks, and shortcuts will be equally useless in another ten years. What is important is teaching people the concepts of using computers. With the knowlege of concepts anybody can pick up the specifics pretty quickly.

    The pre-press workers and clerk I mentioned had been trained to use systems they were entirely unfamiliar with. They understood enough however to know what a keyboard and mouse were for. They were able to grasp the concept that clicking on-screen widgets would cause the program to do things. People who could not so much shut down there computers without help were able to lay out very nice looking advertisements. It is a shame people want public schools to become vocational daycare for minors.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    1. Re:532 Nanometers. by kazbah · · Score: 1

      That is all pretty true. But it applies to PCs just as much as Macs. According to the article, parents are the ones complaining and saying "my little johnny has to use a PC at school coz that's what he's going to use when he gets out". But it's not the parents who are making the decision.

      The superintendent making the decision says that he's doing this to provide uniformity of platform across their network - likely for support. This is the same approach that many IT managers in large corporations take and given the number of desktops.

      So given the super's argument, suggesting that it matters more what you teach the student than the O/S the computer runs is likely to receive the response from him/her of "exactly - which is why we're choosing the least costly platform out there".

      The fact of the matter is that in the end it's largely an argument around cost. There are many places that prove that Macs cost lest in the long run, but in a world that always seems to focus on short term, PCs are likely to always win out. Of course, given that argument tho, the school should really be using Linux.

    2. Re:532 Nanometers. by Knife_Edge · · Score: 1
      Thinking you're somehow going to train third graders useful or even applicable computer skills is an obscenely myopic idea. It would be at least ten years before a third grader ever really needed to use a computer in a professional capacity.

      Great post! There is a reason that the justifications used for certain types of computers is the classroom are so nearsighted. There is a substantial section of the population that is nearly illiterate and dirt poor. They frequently work in the lowest occupational sectors doing menial labor. These people in most cases would desperately like their children to avoid their fate. But how?

      All they have to go on where technology is concerned is a vague association of computers with sit-down jobs in offices (which seem like an unimaginable luxury to them). They want the computers in the schools to most resemble the ones they have seen being used by the people whose offices they clean, or who dispense their paychecks, give them orders, etc. The computers these people use, as with most of the rest of what they do, is a complete mystery to them. But they see the objects and grasp that they have some significance.

      Now as you point out in the conclusion of your post, is training on how to use a specific system even really education? Not if it does not give the trainee general knowledge that could be applicable to other systems. But what most people who are completely ignorant care little about whether their children get either training or education. They want the appearance of wealth in the schools, and computers similar to those that people they think are wealthy are a big part of this. It sounds so silly, but they think, 'hey, my kid goes to school where they have computers like the general manager has! I bet he'll become something better than me!'

  69. Erm... by Vexalith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think we have this the wrong way round. Surely we should be teaching children how to use a computer and not how to use Microsoft Whatever (TM).

    It'll be great for them in 10 years when some other company or consortium is producing the dominant operating system and all those hours of IT classes will be for absolutely nothing.

    I don't know what they're teaching kids these days, but a word processor is a word processor and a spreadsheet is a spreadsheet no matter what it says on the box or what operating system it uses. Shouldn't they be teaching people to look beyond the Microsoft Excel toolbar and realise that when it boils down to it, practically all these programs do the same thing? Sure perhaps OpenOffice.org doesn't do pivot tables like Microsoft Excel does them. But I have yet to see a school that teaches kids how to do pivot tables.

    Teaching them exclusively on one platform leads to the possibility of giving them a false sense of intuitiveness. Just because a you can't find C:\ or the Start Menu doesn't mean a platform is harder to use - unfortunately this is what many people seem to believe these days.

    If taught right, you should be able to pick up the basics of pretty much any program or operating system in about an hour.

    1. Re:Erm... by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Surely we should be teaching children how to use a computer and not how to use Microsoft

      Quite a vague notion. A Computer is hardware, not software, and software is really the issue at hand.

      in 10 years when some other company or consortium is producing the dominant operating system and all those hours of IT classes will be for absolutely nothing.

      It's very hard to say... Apple and Microsoft have been the only companies to ever hold the position as dominant operating system, and there just isn't enough info to say where things are headed.

      a word processor is a word processor and a spreadsheet is a spreadsheet no matter what it says on the box or what operating system it uses

      The only reason you believe that is because most popular ones imitate each other. Just try switching from 'Excel' to 'sc', and you will see the differences. That's not to say that it will take long to make the switch, but retraining is retraining, and the point is that software varies a great deal. That's why old versions of Word Perfect are still in use... The better you can use something, the more difficult is is to switch.

      Just because a you can't find C:\ or the Start Menu doesn't mean a platform is harder to use - unfortunately this is what many people seem to believe these days.

      Harder? No, of course not, just different, and any platform different than the one you learned on, will be difficult for you. If you've only learned Unix, then Windows will be complicated for you.

      If taught right, you should be able to pick up the basics of pretty much any program or operating system in about an hour.

      Okay then... You to take a class all about using 3D Studio Max, and then I'll put you in front of Blender for an hour, and see how well you are doing...

      I know it sure took me a lot longer than an hour to learn Unix (having experience with Windows and DOS at the time)...
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    2. Re:Erm... by BostonPilot · · Score: 1
      "Surely we should be teaching children to learn how to learn". Thinking we need to teach them how to use a computer, or a particular program, is foolish. If kids need help learning how to use a computer, why are the kids the computer experts in so many households?

      I'd rather see schools try to keep computers OUT of the classroom, stop trying to get kids to memorize facts, and work on skills they really need, like critical thinking, how to find information and know whether it is reliable and... I dunno... how to talk to each other in a way that promotes understanding?

      I've long since given up on the public school system. The percentage of idiots who seem bent on turning kids into another generation of idiots seems to be very high. Many of them are well meaning idiots, but still... (ok, many of the people are intelligent, but seem to be stuck in a system that forces them into acting the part of an idiot).

      The one thing I've noticed kids getting lots of experience using computers in the classroom? Multi-tasking... as in... they seem to be very good at chatting and surfing at the same time they are supposed to be "learning". Either the teachers are clueless, or they welcome having a large percentage of their class doing other stuff besides classwork. Perhaps it decreases the number of kids they actually have to work with?

      I must admit that I am becoming more and more a true believer in home schooling. I only wish I had done that when my kids were in public school...

  70. or get a few PC's to do their video editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is the stupid configuration. A few new PC's would solve the problem just as well as a few macs.

  71. Not very well rounded by ThoreauHD · · Score: 0, Troll

    The article has a mac zealot slant. Not that it's a bad thing. There's room for everyone. But, when you are teaching children to survive in the real world, the odds of them getting a job because they know how to rearrange their icons on a iMac just don't cut it.

    Proprietary hardware is more expensive than intel/amd x86/i64 based systems. And that includes Mac. I think the schools would do well to introduce their students to multiple platforms. If cost containment is a concern, then linux/x86 would be the answer. If teaching students job skills is a concern, then sadly wintel is the answer. If breadth of knowledge is a concern, then give them Mac, Solaris, HP/UX, Linux, et. al.

    Honestly, if these students wnt through 12 years of school, and just used Mac's- they would be fucked. Their prospective employers would laugh them out of the office. Mac's are pretty, and their user base are geared to rich retards or graphic artists.

    There is no freedom with Apple anymore. Their software is closed. Their hardware is closed. you can't learn dick. They don't pay these kids, when they get out, to believe in the power of their dreams. They pay them to do work. The rest of this shit is artistic window dressing. It's time for this dark age Mac weenies to realize this. Think different(TM), as it were.

    1. Re:Not very well rounded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Honestly, if these students wnt through 12 years of school, and just used Mac's- they would be fucked

      Did you learn English on a PC?

    2. Re:Not very well rounded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no freedom with Apple anymore. Their software is closed. Their hardware is closed. you can't learn dick.

      Crawl out from under your rock and wake the F**k up. Macs are built out of the same parts as your stupid PC. In fact everything but the CPU probably comes from the same factory as any x86 box. PCI, USB, ieee 1394, 802.11, DVD-R, etc.. are the same on Macs and PCs. As far as software, if you didn't know Mac OS X is probably one of the most open standards based OS's out there. Do things like Kerberos, LDAP, POSIX, pthreads, gcc, x11, CDSA, IPv6, IPSec, BerkleyDB, MySQL, IMAP/POP/Postfix/Cyrus, NFS, Apache, BSD Sockets and on and on, ring a bell? Last time I checked they were open standards based software.

  72. Winshit compatible? Try Virtual PC. by dbirchall · · Score: 2, Informative

    Any Mac under 2 years old with 256MB of RAM can run Virtual PC under MacOS X. And any native G3 or G4 with a CD-ROM and 192MB of RAM can run Virtual PC under MacOS 9. (And I'm talking Virtual PC 6, of course - latest and greatest.)

    That means the schools can have their "single platform" in terms of hardware support -- yet also have diversity. OS X? Check -- and of course, you can run Office:X on it, if you want your students to learn to be mice, er, MOUSes. OS 9? Just start Classic. DOS? It's in Virtual PC. Any Windows version you like? Virtual PC. Linux? Probably Virtual PC - or if you just want to run apps, a lot of them are available through Fink. X Window apps? X11's already available for Jaguar, and I've heard it'll be built into Panther.

    Schools aren't the only places that want a single platform. Scientific users have glommed onto OS X Macs because they can run "UNIX apps," Mac stuff and "Windows apps" on a single machine. It frees up desk space, and while a Mac may not be cheaper than a Windows PC, it's most certainly cheaper than a Mac plus a Windows PC plus a UNIX or Linux box.

    Yeah, it'll get a little slow if they try to run it all at once on a G3, but oh well, don't do that, then. Unless you're going to do a screen capture of it. :)

  73. This is stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is totally stupid. The argument that kids should use Windows because that what people perceive to be the standard right now is idiotic. When I was in school, we learned on commedore 64s and Apple IIs. I learned how to use computers fine, even though the "standard" has changed some 3 or 4 times since then. It not about learning "programs" or "Windows", its about teaching general computer skills. Who says in 10 years when these elementary kids go to college that windows will even exist anymore?

    1. Re:This is stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A good argument always contains phrases like "this is totally stupid" and words like "idiotic". Great work.

    2. Re:This is stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut up and go back to sucking my dick.

  74. Tides Ebb...Tides Flow... by MacDaffy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I consult for a couple of schools. The inertia built up by Apple is much more difficult to overcome than this quarter's--or even the next three quarters's--sales figures indicate. There is an enormous investment in software, hardware, expertise, money and time in establishing and maintaining a school computer.

    One of the schools I work with just installed a 24-station publishing lab. Do you think Dell pulled off a coup and supplied the machines? Do you think Apple delivered a pallet of iMacs? No. The vice-principal in charge of technology bought two dozen Macintosh LC II's, upgraded the motherboards, memory and hard drives, equipped them all with Ethernet cards, and started teaching for less than $200 a seat with site-licensed software. I was brought in to deal with a little SCSI voodoo. I couldn't argue with the VP's logic or implementation. More bang for the buck (and the only machines affected by Blaster were the mission-critical IIS servers running Windows 2000.

    The article is based on anecdotal experiences with a few schools. There is a more vast, more stable "If It Ain't Broke, Dont Fix It" constituency for Macintosh out there than a few recent quarters of sales can affect. The LC II was introduced in 1992. The ones I installed will be in service for at least two more years and possibly longer. As I write this on the fifth anniversary of the iMac, I know of two of the original Bondi Blue models that are running Mac OS X in private homes because of their stability and freedom from viruses, worms and trojans. I just retired a customer's upgraded Macintosh 7500 (equipped with a 400 MHz G4, chock full of memory and with a state-of-the-art graphics card). That machine was released eight years ago.

    The tide may be turning the PC's way, but it has a long way to go before it inundates Apple in schools.

    1. Re:Tides Ebb...Tides Flow... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it ironic that they were resourceful enough to upgrade all their macs for 200$ a pop, but left a mission critical server running windows that got hit by blaster...

    2. Re:Tides Ebb...Tides Flow... by MacDaffy · · Score: 1
      I find it ironic that they were resourceful enough to upgrade all their macs for 200$ a pop, but left a mission critical server running windows that got hit by blaster...
      The mzchines in the office are strictly dictated (and supported) by the district. Windows all the way.
  75. Last I heard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    scientific users are stampeding to openMosix/Linux, not macs. Three computers? Try the power of all idle computers available to your terminal at all times. And offloading loads to in use computers with a lower load.

    The only users who may be "glommed" onto macs due to OSX are those that are already mac biased.

    I know one scientific company switching to openMosix/Linux. I know another talking about it, and they don't know much about computers. I've heard scientific companies talking about oM/L, contracting companies, abatement companies, consulting companies. And for non-openMosix Linux, inspection companies and others. And when I let them know about the capabilities of openMosix on Linux, they are instantly interested and want to know more.

    Out of all these companies, the only ones using macs are those that need them for graphic work, which are just a couple that I can think of now.

    Cost?

    I haven't checked prices on G4, G5, Gwhatever, and have no interest in doing so. But virtually all of the companies mentioned above are using existing computers, in the pentium I, and pentium II range.

    Any of the companies above that are looking for more powerful computers are steered to the $200-$250 range TigerDirect/Walmart Linux boxes, with insider pricing on a local affiliated company for a few of the companies. There haven't been any problems in over a year of use on some of the boxes, and they are overkill for the tasks they are being used for. openMosix is a big reason why.

    Except for mac compatibility, gnu/linux does everything you mentioned above, even dos emulation. And guess what? I don't see any of the major studios contributing mac code. I do see them, as have others seen them, contributing code to gimp, filmGimp/cinepaint, and other video applications. And just as Industrial Light and Magic has moved to linux (not mac), and just as their developers are moving off unix (and some macs for some video creation/editing) and on to linux.

    So, who again, are these people that are going to mac? Oh, yeah, somewhere less than the 100% of older mac users (OS9 and earlier).

    Cringley always seemed half-baked to me from some of his articles (like the one where you buy out an alarm company and transform it into a dsl company by selling dsl over all those dry pairs), but the article on macs shows that he is a real idiot. Or just an overzealous mac fan.

    Sound familiar?

    1. Re:Last I heard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Here are the flaws in your argument:

      scientific users are stampeding to openMosix/Linux, not macs.

      One of the areas where Macs are actually growing in marketshare is in the scientific community. It is possible that openMosix/Linux is also gaining marketshare in those areas.

      Three computers? Try the power of all idle computers available to your terminal at all times. And offloading loads to in use computers with a lower load.

      Wow, just like you can do with a cluster of properly configured Macs.

      The only users who may be "glommed" onto macs due to OSX are those that are already mac biased.

      And those who understand that the ease of use of the OS as a whole contributes to the total cost of ownership of the machine, thus erasing Linux's perceived price advantage by a huge margin.

      Cost? I haven't checked prices on G4, G5, Gwhatever, and have no interest in doing so.

      In other words, you have no interest in learning what would really help your potential customers (or your company, or whatever). You just want to push your agenda.

      But virtually all of the companies mentioned above are using existing computers, in the pentium I, and pentium II range.

      Let me get this straight. They're using machines that are 10 years old, and they think they're getting as much out of them as new machines? Given that new machines have 10-100 times the processing power of 10 year old machines, and given that older machines breakdown more often, are harder to find parts for, and often cost more to fix (who's still making memory that works those machines), I find it really hard to believe that these people are better off with a room full of pentium 1's and 2's than they would be with a single modern desktop of any flavor.

      There haven't been any problems in over a year of use on some of the boxes, and they are overkill for the tasks they are being used for.

      Translation: They haven't done anything that required any significant amount of processing, so they're fine with what they have. Therefore, everyone else would be fine with it, too.

      I don't see any of the major studios contributing mac code. I do see them, as have others seen them, contributing code to gimp, filmGimp/cinepaint, and other video applications.

      Ha! filmGimp? You must not be talking to any major studios, then, as they use real tools like Shake, Combustion, After Effects, Maya, etc. They don't use toys like filmGimp.

      And just as Industrial Light and Magic has moved to linux (not mac), and just as their developers are moving off unix (and some macs for some video creation/editing) and on to linux.

      Actually, ILM is contributing plenty of open source to the Mac community, as well as the Linux community, with projects like OpenEXR.

      Oh yeah, and it appears that Pixar is producing a new version of RenderMan for MacOS X. (Oh, but they somehow don't count, right?)

      And I spoke with an engineer from WETA at MacHack about the Mac tools he's been writing for doing live compositing during shoots on the set.

      So it looks to me like the best studios are producing plenty of Mac video software.

      Cringley always seemed half-baked to me from some of his articles

      What does Cringley have to do with this discussion of schools moving to Windows?

      (like the one where you buy out an alarm company and transform it into a dsl company by selling dsl over all those dry pairs)

      Then you obviously have never studied the issue, just like you didn't study the one above. I know someone who has done this and is quite successful at it. It's a cool way to get around antiquated telephony laws that favor a monopoly.

  76. thanks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny, first people complain about Macs going out which is bad as kids are dumbed down to using Windows. Next sentence it is argued that Linux shouldn't be used because of interface inconsistency and because it is different. hyporcicy at it's best. Oh, and read AskTog about why the Apple interface is a pile of dirt. "Ten things about the Dock" is rather insightful. I for one am happy if I have never again to work on such a one-button-mice abomination.

    -t

  77. Pricing by CrackedButter · · Score: 0

    If Apple is that concerned then why don't they lower the prices on emacs so much that they are better than a DELL? Drop the price by 200 or drop it so there is no profit but there isn't a loss either.

  78. Jobs screwed Apple. Spinderler helped a bit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Remeber "Apple ][ Forever"?

    This was the advertising slogan Apple used to boost flagging sales 'back in the day'. So, many a teacher lobbied the school district to keep buying Apple ]['s. These educators lost face.

    How about the Newton eMate? It was sold to schools as a way to put low cost, hard to break, uniform computers in the schools. Many a teacher lobbied to make it part of the school district plans. Not only did these teachers loose face over the cancellation, but Apple knew this, and was willing to lie to educators. The Newton was axed on Feb 27th, but during the March national educators convention, Apple staffers gave a speech refering to the Newton as "A very important part of their product line."

    Then you have Micheal Spindler (Short time CEO after Scully) who said "We are committed to enhancing shareholder value." This was the formal announcement of the continuation of the price premium on Macs - gouging of the customer.

    The memory of being shafted by Apple is long in education. Why would you buy a product form a company with a history of shafting its customers?

    Jobs himself does not understand the education market. His NeXT computer was to be sold to schools. Instead, due to the great engineering of the NeXTSTEP environment, the NeXT was popular in wall street and the NSA because of faster turn around time from idea to code, meaning quicker results, to give both orginizations competitive advantage. To further support the cluelessness of Jobs WRT the marketing of computers I will remind you of the 1986 Seybold speech where Jobs said "Publishing is a niche market for Apple and will be gone in 2 years." (Turns out that Education didn't move to the mac in droves, and that publishing is what kept Apple afloat.)

  79. Another Linux alternative by Tete-a-tete · · Score: 1
    Yea that is why I am installing linux in a school district next week. They have a outdated version of novell and I am going to install K12 LTSP for these folks.

    Way to go! You might want to take a look at the Skolelinux project too.

  80. Writers Naysaying Ignores 5% increase in sales... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple's big push now can be in the science , biology, and physics classes now, with the G5 - soon to be 2x3GHz - the 64 bit machine is the biggest number cruncher for the buck...

    And Apple stands strong on the video & music production and editing... but they need more educational software for OS-X.

    A BOGO Sale on iBooks to students and teachers would be a great idea!

  81. Windows in the classroom... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Windows:

    How else can all those 14 year olds learn to write a proper Virus?

  82. What one windows school admin says by release7 · · Score: 1

    I just spoke with an admin who oversees a public school system network that runs a bunch of Windows machines. He says that despite being up to date on all the patches and having good security procedures, he feels like the network could just crumble and go down at any time.

    --

    <a href="http://www.joblessjimmy.com">Work is dumb and so is Jobless Jimmy.</a>

  83. Mac OS X is a FANTASTIC teaching platform by emil · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On one platform, you can:

    • Expose students to common Office applications
    • Use C, C++, and Objective-C compilers in a UNIX environment
    • Demonstrate a UNIX environment, with many of the applications that are in use by industry (Oracle, Apache, etc.)

    Thorough study of Mac OS X can land a student a $100k+ job. Thorough study of Microsoft platforms gets a student an MCSE and $8.50/hr.

    School administrators, do not cripple your students with Microsoft products.

    1. Re:Mac OS X is a FANTASTIC teaching platform by MethylPhreak · · Score: 1

      Wow, things that no elementary, middle, or high school age students will be learning at their school. Have you seen any high school graduates landing 100k+ jobs lately? I also haven't seen many high school kids getting MCSEs.

      Maybe school kids around where I live are just slackers though :)

    2. Re:Mac OS X is a FANTASTIC teaching platform by winstarman · · Score: 0

      MCSE and $8.50/hr??? Where did you get that number?

      Sorry buddy... I will admit that OS X is a great platform, we use it for a few things in our support department. But it is *not* as great a trainer for *nix as everyone says it is. The best trainer IMHO is a simple Redhat, SuSE or Mandrake box that can be played around with - this is because it will work exactly how most other *nices work. I believe OS X is a bit too different to be a good trainer for most students looking to get into *nix work. The best trainer is smb.conf and httpd.conf on a Redhat box - just opinion.

      Remember, I'm not saying it's not a good platform, I just don't agree about it being great for teaching.

      my $0.02

      --
      Hard loop..... huh?

      Dynamic Designs
    3. Re:Mac OS X is a FANTASTIC teaching platform by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $8.50 an hour? You are completely full of shit, yet modded up anyway. Do me a favor, please search for a job in Northern VA that is looking for a Mac Sysadmin or developer. Let me know when you give up. Now do the same for an MCSE. Please show me even one of those jobs that pays $8.50 an hour. You are completely full of it, and anyone who modded you up is aslo full of it. There are few Mac centric jobs out there, stop spreading your FUD please.

    4. Re:Mac OS X is a FANTASTIC teaching platform by FFON · · Score: 0

      wow.. where can i find this $100k job? just by lerning OSX?

      i know more about OSX than anyone i know and i can't even land a $30k job you nimwit

      --
      .cig
    5. Re:Mac OS X is a FANTASTIC teaching platform by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's probably because your writing is sloppy and you can't spell "learning."

    6. Re:Mac OS X is a FANTASTIC teaching platform by FFON · · Score: 0

      thats it! thanks.

      i just got hired as the OSX product manager for attachmate for $90/yr... all thanks to your "spelling" tips! ./ comes through again!

      --
      .cig
    7. Re:Mac OS X is a FANTASTIC teaching platform by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      The sad truth is that most high school kids could give a RIP less about how ANYTHING works.

      The sad truth is also that all the $100k+ jobs are dissapearing through the import of H-1B and L-Z1 indentured servants. The LAST career I would recommend for graduating seniors right now is IT.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    8. Re:Mac OS X is a FANTASTIC teaching platform by Deacon+Jones · · Score: 1
      Thorough study of Mac OS X can land a student a $100k+ job

      Plesae let me know where I can land one of those $100K jobs.
      Sincerely,
      America.

      --
      I pulled a jack move to cop this sig
  84. The first one's free kids... by squidinkcalligraphy · · Score: 1

    That's what micrso~1's stance is. And it's working in Victoria, Australia, at least, where I teach. Almost all schools here run PC's with windows, simply because they're cheaper. Low end computer + free software. They don't really thing TCO or ease of use, it seems.

    --
    "I think it would be a good idea" Gandhi, on Western Civilisation
  85. School Superintendents say "We want a..." by NoMoreNicksLeft · · Score: 2, Funny

    Virus-vulnerable monoculture network!". "It's really quite simple you see, there is no other way to guarantee that the virus of the week, coded by some filipino script kiddy, can shutdown every single computer on our network" says J.D. Umbass, superintendent of Jefferson County School System, Pennsylvania. "Besides, if kids every growing up having an alternative perspective on computer technology, they may accidentally understand it." "And it can't be overstated, just how much we save yearly, by being able to hire idiots that only know how to say 'Reboot the computer and see if that fixes your problem'", J.D. Umbass.

    "Most important to remember though, is that we don't really teach the children anything other than how to be the secretary or register monkeys of tomorrow, earning minimum wage, and never quite enough to own the likes of the beautiful machines in our computer lab. So what does it matter, if they only get to experience the most ill-designed OS ever concieved, that's what Microsoft is extorting every PC and POS manufacturer into using." said J.D. Umbass.

    1. Re:School Superintendents say "We want a..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I taught with a teacher who never challenged the students with creative work...

      I asked why?

      She said 'The only jobs these kids will get is pumping gas or flipping burgers.'

      THAT IS YOUR PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEMS PROBLEM...

      Teachers who dont give a %@$%! about the kids,
      let alone care at all about technology...

      The Public's Grading system only grades students like MEAT, if they really were all about LEARNING, they would require students to constantly be creative and growing in knowledge and ability... and you can do that on any platform - even books from the library!

  86. my experience... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually the price of ANY equivalent decent system on both sides puts the price of a Mac at almost twice the cost of a PC for both hardware and software.

    So any new systems I buy are Windows based. Just for cost. I get great education discounts from Microsoft. I don't get much of anything from Apple.

  87. *NO* - I think Xrikcus is bang on the money! by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    See sibling post.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  88. School should standarize on PC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why on earth does US school spend large amount of cash and time trying to teach kids on an OS and machine that has less than 1% of market share?

    At the same time, industries are moving overseas because there are a large amount of student that were trained on Window NT/2000/XP platform. Maybe school should be asking what companies need and try to train their student the requirements instead of what their teachers think what's cool

    1. Re:School should standarize on PC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      At the same time, industries are moving overseas because there are a large amount of student that were trained on Window NT/2000/XP platform.

      You misspelled "are moving overseas because labor is dirt cheap".

  89. My experience with ed pricing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am posting this as Anonymous Coward because I work for a public higher education institution, and I have a budget that I manage.

    I recently needed a couple of workstations for my office area. I went to the network administrator to ask for price quotes. He of course pulls quotes from a PC manufacturer. He only buys one brand of PCs for desktops, another brand of PCs for laptops for the school.

    Here's what he quoted me:
    2.4 GHz P4
    512MB RAM
    40GB HD
    CD-ROM
    17" Standard CRT Monitor
    Price (with loyal customer discount because our institution buys so many machines from them): $1050

    Now, I decided to do a price comparison on a similar equipped Mac. Here's what I was quoted from Apple:

    emac, 800Mhz G4
    512MB RAM (remember the prices of RAM from Apple?)
    40GB HD
    CD-ROM
    17" Flat CRT Monitor
    3-year AppleCare warranty
    Price: $953.00

    Despite the inflated prices Apple charges for RAM upgrades, a comparably equipped Mac was about $100 less than the PC. When you start looking at PCs with CD or DVD burners and flat-panel displays, the iMacs in comparison are an even better value at the education pricing. The 800Mhz processor? These systems would be primarily used for wordprocessing and spreadsheets, so I would think the 800Mhz processor would be adequate. Our desks are small, so the eMac's space saving design would work well in our environment. Our campus has the sitewide Microsoft licensing that INCLUDES Office for Mac OS X, so no additional charges for that. Not to mention that with the Mac I would have had the capability of creating PDF files built-in without having to go out and purchase additional software or worry with licensing issues with some of the freeware/shareware equivilants on the PC side.

    To make a long story short, I COULD have got the Macs and saved the state some money and still had very capable machines for the job I was doing for years to come. But I had no choice but to go with the PCs because I WASN'T GIVEN A CHOICE. The network administrator has final say on all computer purchases. Be damned about the needs of the folks who need to do the work or the students. Need to create PDF files? "Well, we can purchase a license of Acrobat..." More of the state's money being spent that wasn't necessary. The money could have been spent on something else that was needed but will have to be put off.

    Oh, and one more thing. You've gotta watch the educational price quotes from the PC manufacturers. I see their education material all the time, and you can find out some of it on their websites. They inflate the retail value of the equipment so they can say the education price is $500 lower. And despite their "lower education price", often times what they offer is last year's technology at prices that's higher that what you can purchase today's technology through the standard consumer channels. Apple's education discounts may not look great, but their pricing scheme for education is straightforward with no smoke and mirrors.

    Mod this down if you want, but if you don't believe it, go do a little research and find out.

    End of rant.

  90. Bullshit by BoomerSooner · · Score: 1, Insightful

    #1 IT is not a high priority in schools.

    #2 The amount of work performed supporting dual networks is usually less because when worms like slammer, etc hit you only have to patch 1/2 the computers instead of all. Checking for the minute by minute patches comming out of MS makes administrating a Windows network exponentially more difficult than a Mac network or a partial Mac/Windows network.

    I am the sysadmin for my small company (in addition to being a software engineer and dba) and we run Windows, Mac, Linux and Solaris boxes. Guess which ones I have to check daily? Guess which ones have 180+ days of up time? Guess which ones have a better TCO.

    Maybe next time you should do your research. Or learn to be a better admin.

  91. Monoculture sucks by leonbrooks · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Monoculture in general is bad, monoculture in education is lethal. One of the reasons that home schoolers do so much better on average than State schools (despite the absence of qualified teachers, dearth of material and limited common facilities) is that they're not a monoculture.

    In some ways, Apple sucks. If schools were to lose just one platform, it should be Microsoft. If schools were to switch to a monoculture, it should be a Linux distribution (for the felxibility that gives). However, I firmly believe that schools should teach as many systems as practical for the important lessons to be learned therein, including the Greatest PERL Lesson: TMTOWTDI. (-: Note that I say this as a near-non-PERL-programmer :-).

    The Greatest PERL Lesson is a more important thing to know (not just hear occasionally) than most if not all of the entire high-school courses I can remember.

    Schools really should be teaching principles, not single-obsolete-system recipes. That way when the systems they were taught on are obsolete, the students aren't left high and dry, a herd of one-trick ponies - and The Greatest PERL Lesson will continue to serve them well in area's they not yet faced, perhaps in areas that don't yet exist. The "How to produce greeting cards in MS-Publisher 101" course won't even make a dent in that.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Monoculture sucks by Troy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      While in an ideal world we should be teaching as many OSes as possible, the run into material and personel storages.

      I could teach my kids linux, bsd, xp, solaris, and os x, but there is no room in my schedule. Nor is there room in the schedule of any other teachers at my very average, suburban high school. Furthermore, very few of the other teachers in the district have the training that I have to reinforce it....and if they had the training offered they probably wouldn't want it (and I don't blame them). We're sufficiently swamped as it is with the state telling us what and when to teach.

      I would sell my soul (and I'm a Christian!) to get the materials and the time to teach my kids all of those different OSes. Heck, I would sell my soul to have all of my XP boxes turn into Macintoshes.

      Instead, I have to focus on teaching my students how to teach themselves, and the basic ideas guiding the design of different kinds of programs. I also bitch about how much I hate XP and how much I wish I had Macs or could run a BSD or a Linux.

    2. Re:Monoculture sucks by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 2, Interesting
      One of the reasons that home schoolers do so much better on average than State schools (despite the absence of qualified teachers, dearth of material and limited common facilities) is that they're not a monoculture.

      Gah - I'd love to see some real numbers on this; my mother (a learning-disabled-kids teacher) is perpetually complaining about the kids she has to bring up to snuff, damaged (both academically & socially) from "home-schooling". There's a reason why teachers receive training to teach - to make them better at it than most of the parents. About the only "home-schooled" kids that I've heard of that turned out to be well-adjusted adults had teachers for parents.

      Of course, if you don't pay the teachers well enough for most of the good ones to stick around, then you're pretty much sabotaging your own educational system. Sometimes, I get the strong impression that this is the desired goal of some of the "conservatives" - to destroy the public educational system, since it's too secular for their tastes.

      What's really obnoxious are the parents who totally screw up their kid's life, then bring them back to school to be "repaired" and blame the teacher when their kid gets poor results on the next set of exams. God forbid the PARENTS accept the responsibility.

    3. Re:Monoculture sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Actually, in my experience, home-schooled children are poorly prepared for life outside of the home. They don't get necessary social exposure, and the parents don't usually understand the material very well themselves. Home school kids do get monoculture -- the single minded (and usually extremist) view of the parent. I, for one, am an advocate of sending children to school (private or public), but also supplementing the education at home (rather than ignoring the child and leaving them to their own devices).

    4. Re:Monoculture sucks by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      "About the only "home-schooled" kids that I've heard of that turned out to be well-adjusted adults had teachers for parents."

      Why would a teacher home school their child if they believed in the public education system?

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    5. Re:Monoculture sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      How many home schooled students do you know? All too frequently people generalize from small data sets. I could do the same and say that I have three home-schooled children. My oldest is now in his second year at college studying to be an audio recording engineer. My middle child decided to enter public high school in ninth grade and was turned off by the whole environment -- the lack of learning, the time spent discipling students instead of teaching, the time spent doing pointless busy work. He is now joint enrolled in college for his senior year and hopes to have a better learning experience. Both are Eagle scouts. The oldest is working summers to help support himself. He just recently witnessed an attempted suicide at work where a high school student, aparrently on drugs, leapt off the 3rd story inner balcony (pointing to the failure of the parents and the school to help this kid). My little girl is in sixth grade and has been home schooled the entire time. They receive plenty of socialization through sports and other extra curricular activities.

      But a small data set does not a generalization make.

    6. Re:Monoculture sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now this is the best explanation I've seen of why a monoculture doesn't work. I think even school administrators may be able to understand his argument.

      http://tingilinde.typepad.com/starstuff/2003/08/ mo nocultures.html

      A mixed environment is definitely the way to go, as long as it isn't Windows.

  92. Yup, my high school borrowed a single Wang 2200B by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Like, QED, man. (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  93. Um, tap-tap, is this thing on? by leonbrooks · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Expose students to common Office applications

    Wow, things that no elementary, middle, or high school age students will be learning at their school.

    Things to remember to bring today:

    1. Brain.
    Oh, well. (-:

    In point of fact, the Mac will avoid teaching them how to reboot their machine when it wedges, but it will show them what a nice UI actually looks like (by 2005, I'm sure MS-Windows-YQ will look the same but Apple will have moved on), and give an even more fundamental lesson: that not everything out there has a Start button (to stop it with, no less) in the bottom left corner of the screen or gets shipped by the most cashed-up company in the world. Most students won't get far past this, but for those that do the variety of lessons beyond will be invaluable.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Um, tap-tap, is this thing on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not everything has a start button. Now they will be looking for the power button on the keyboard or ask the teacher before inserting a CD in case it gets stuck.

  94. Sold! by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    I'm in WA, if that's too far off, I'll find somewhere closer to your school that will take those babies and use them! 0409655359

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  95. schools dont need computers... by rtphokie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... they need some new books.

    It amazes me that educated people get all up in arms about the computers in their kids schools. These are tools people!

    Reliance on computers in the classroom is turning academic programs into vocational ones. Mac? Windows? Linux? Who cares! Teach kids concepts not tasks.

    Some kids are learning how to fix carburators over in auto shop (for those schools where these things still exist) while other kids are in physics class learning how the internal combustion engine works. The kids in auto shop can apply that knowledge, pretty much just to fixing carberators.

    Similarly if we teach kids to accomplish specific tasks on specific hardware on specific software, that's pretty much all they'll be able to do with it.

    I've worked with some people who received serveral Cisco certifications without ever having touched a simulator much less a router. They had a far better conceptual understanding of what was going on and learned new skills and tasks very quickly as a result.

    1. Re:schools dont need computers... by sal · · Score: 1

      All education is vocational at least at some level. Even if that vocation is more education or the magical world of pure research.
      Back in University, I learned C/C++, lisp, quel, smalltalk and scheme. Other than C++ for a couple of years, none of my decade+ of software development has made use of languages I learned in academia. All of it has been perl, vb, delphi, java, sql, javascript etc.
      Frankly, the best things schools can do to prepare students for the real world is teach them to think, teach them to value learning as a life long process and teach them to use EMACS :)

    2. Re:schools dont need computers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Some kids are learning how to fix carburators over in auto shop (for those schools where these things still exist) while other kids are in physics class learning how the internal combustion engine works. The kids in auto shop can apply that knowledge, pretty much just to fixing carberators.


      Don't just accept that as fact. Frankly, omitting one or the other is a recipe for disaster. A holisitic understanding requires both an academic as well as a practical view of things... a smart lad with a training in carburator repair might pick up concepts from experience that make him more apt than the other lad who took physics who still can't tell what the carburator looks like.

      The real problem is that our education system trains us for one of two things: joe jobs or academia... neither one is really conducive to enlightenment or much personal growth. Most people succeed in spite of this system and not because if it.
  96. Learning to Learn by The+Herbaliser · · Score: 5, Insightful

    School should be about learning how to learn. I know that this is increasingly no longer the case, but if it your goal is learning, rather than training, non-education market-share is completely irrelevant.

    The purpose of having computers in the classroom is not to teach kids how to use computers, but instead to use computers to teach kids how to do all kinds of other things. I think it will be a sad day when the purpose of school is to prepare kids for clerical jobs.

    If you stick a young child in front of a PC, they're lost. If an older child wants to do anything remotely advanced on a PC, they're thwarted and frustrated. Half the time will be spent learning to use Windows, rather than learning things like reading.

    And if we do want to prepare children for the real world, using Windows they'll learn nothing about computer concepts, because everything is hidden from the user. If a kid uses some Unix variant - Linux or OSX - they're going to be a lot more prepared for doing real computing work than if they grew up using Windows.

    The problem with IT admins, in my opinion, and I will probably be flamed for this, is that they're IT admins. They're not computer scientists, they're not engineers, they probably didn't go to University. As such, they don't really know much about computing in general, instead usually knowing only how to administer a certain OS, and maybe if they're lucky, a couple of OSes. Obviously someone who only knows how to use PCs is not going to go out and buy a pile of Linux or Mac boxes.

    1. Re:Learning to Learn by salesgeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem with IT admins, in my opinion, and I will probably be flamed for this, is that they're IT admins.

      No, you are right and should be modded up. What goes in the classroom and in the office should be two different things. If our schools thought teaching computing ment something other than teaching MS Word, Excel and PowerPoint then it would matter. Reality is that most educators can't do much more than email and bad PrintShop newsletters and posters.

      --
      -- $G
    2. Re:Learning to Learn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      School should be about learning how to learn. I know that this is increasingly no longer the case,....

      Absolutely right. It's about "accountability" and passing very particular tests, at the risk of having funding cut off.


      Our "education president" sees no problem in touting his "no child left behind" BS while cutting education funding.

  97. Also by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Turn on Active Desktop and Show Web Content. Then, hide desktop icons. This is the response I got - 'Help all of my files were deleted'

  98. Schools, Macs, PCs and quality of education by theolein · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One thing I have noticed over the past number of years in forums and in chats is that very many (by no means all, but very many) school age people with English as a first language simply can't spell. I suppose I could rant on about the fact that my schooling, without computers at all, was better and that students actually learned skills that encouraged thinking, such as being able to do simple calculations on paper or in one's head, but I won't because I don't really know the answer. I do see my own ability to spell has receeded in recent years, and my ability to do quick, off the cuff calculations has dwindled but that might as well be age as well as heavy computer use.

    Most if not all students these days write their essays on computers and having to write everything on paper would take far too much time. The world has changed and life without computers would be all but impossible these days, irrespective or whether they are Macs or PCs. It definitely is true that most businesses use Windows and knowledge of Office is worthwhile, but will this be true in 10 or 15 years time? There is a good chance that much of the developing world and a good portion of the developed world will be using Linux by then, which will always be cheaper than Windows, and definitely will have a much larger share of business life by then. And OSX, as a Unix like platform, is better shaped to fit in there than Windows, which hasn't had any good press for a long time.

  99. One WestOz school is mulling over 450x2GHz boxes by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    More or less the equivalent of a 900GHz supercomputer. Raytracing in realtime, and so on. Hard to resist for their Maths and CompSci people, but the resident IT idiots are resisting tooth and nail because they know naff-all about anything but MS-Windows, and they also know their jobs are toast the year after this goes ahead - if they can't stop it.

    Note that you can do Beowulfy tricks with OS X just as easily as with Linux - well, as with disk-bound Linux (nothing beats ClusterKnoppix for convenience). It just costs more to do so (like, nearly double), and sadly the schools figure that if they're going to change, it will be to one system only: and the almighty buck rules. However, I figure that a desktop loosed from MS-Windows' clutches is a desktop freed, never mind the beauty competitions. (-: PS, it tickles my funnybone that the linked OS X page - written by an afficiondo of the stylish Mac - looks ugly and says so. :-)

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  100. Macs Easier To Maintain....At Home, Maybe by zenquest · · Score: 1

    I'm the sysadmin at a school that uses both Macs and PCs. We have both kinds of labs, and teachers get to pick which platform they prefer. I can tell you that from an administrator point of view, the Macs are the biggest bane of my existence. Now, before parroting the "but Macs don't break" line, hear me out.

    The following things are trivial on a PC and cannot be easily done on a Mac. (Most of this refers to MacOS 9, but let's compare to Windows 98 to be fair.)

    1. Debugging a system failure of some kind, like a GPF. (YES, they do happen on Macs...it's called "error type 2".) It's impossible to retrieve meaningful information on a Mac.

    2. Login/Logout with mapping of drives to a network share location. (this is easier in OS X, but we have old machines...not an option)

    3. Installing applications remotely. In the labs, it's not such a problem; we can slam a new image down to install new apps. But on teacher PCs, I can install programs remotely with about 20 different management utilities (we use ZENworks), while nothing similar exists for the teacher Macs. (except sneakernet)

    4. Replacement of basic parts. We had to have the apple store replace power supplies on two of our G3s last year at a cost of about $200 each. (parts and labor) This is a job I could have easily done if the power supply wasn't a non-standard size.

    Even though they make my work more difficult, I don't hate Macs. In fact, I think OS X is wonderful, and I recommend Macs as home computers to friends regularly. But, in a network environment where you need them to play well with others, Macs fail miserably compared to PCs. Yes, yes. I know, they CAN connect to shares, they CAN do login/logout. But, on the PC, these are effortless. As for security patches and updates, I understand this is a issue for home users, or users without proper support. But for us, it's not a problem. I can easily make an update and send it out to all our PCs in an hour.

    Macs are easier to maintain if you don't have anyone on your staff who knows how to manage/fix computers, it's true. But, once you have someone who can, that argument is gone because the PC allows a knowledgeable user to take care of it. The Mac may "take care of itself" more often, but when it fails to do so, there is nothing anyone can do but throw their hands up and say, "Damn that Mac!"

    1. Re:Macs Easier To Maintain....At Home, Maybe by etresoft · · Score: 1
      1. Just what kind of "meaningful information" does a GPF provide?
      2. This one I really don't get. This is standard '80s Mac technology and is actually more difficult to do in X.
      3. Actually, the correct term is "Ethernet." You install the software on a shared drive and then use it. But, of course, it doesn't require 20 different management utiltites - so I guess Win98 wins this one.
      4. I will admit, repair for repair, PCs are always cheaper. But that is purely a supply and demand issue.

      So, if you use Macs, you don't need support staff. But if you have a support staff, there is no need for Macs. I think you've hit the nail on the head.

    2. Re:Macs Easier To Maintain....At Home, Maybe by MacDaffy · · Score: 1
      1. Debugging a system failure of some kind, like a GPF. (YES, they do happen on Macs...it's called "error type 2".) It's impossible to retrieve meaningful information on a Mac.
      You've obviously never heard of Macsbug. It is downloadable from Apple. It makes what you say above very, very wrong. This mistake affects the credibility of everything else you say.

      I'm not sure what you mean in number two. If you're talking about logging onto a share on startup, there's a checkbox that allows this each time you mount a share pre-OS X. Now that you know it exists, I'm sure you'll be able to find it.

      Number three is pure hogwash. Assuming that you have a viable, shared machine available on the network, I don't see why remote installs don't work. Thousands of Mac users do this every day. The simplest install is a drag-copy. Keyed applications are more problematic, but it's done all the time. Just because YOU can't do it doesn't mean it can't be done...doesn't mean that it ISN'T being done. Ease of installation on a Mac as compared to Windows is too embarassing to your case to mention further.

      Number Four--Power supplies for a G3-what? Be specific. Before you answer, be advised that entire G3 computers are dirt-cheap on the net right now...whole machines going for just under twice the price you paid for the power supply alone.

      The best thing I can say is: you're not a troll, you're just sloppy.
    3. Re:Macs Easier To Maintain....At Home, Maybe by zenquest · · Score: 1

      1. No, I hadn't heard of Macsbug. Thanks for the tip. I will check it out.

      2. This checkbox is not a viable solution for more than a few users. There's no way to have your own separate home directories that get mapped. You have to reboot the machine to make the log in window come back up, or teach people to drag the shares to the trash and map again with Chooser. (or perhaps an alias to the share on the desktop...but then users will try to drag it to the trash with the shares, probably) If you reboot and don't log in, the log in window will go away after awhile. You need a way to easily log in and out. Like I said, it's possible to map shares on the Mac, but it's not easy. Right now, I'm using an Applescript program to duplicate the functionality of a Windows login.

      3. What happens if a server has to be rebooted? What happens if a network switch fails? I don't have money to stockpile extra switches around, so it might be 24 hours before I get an acceptable replacement. So, people just can't use any programs until then? I guess they can just go over and use the PCs. We do use network installs for some of our applications, but I can't imagine it for everything. Three hundred computers pulling all their apps from the server seems like an unnecessary burden on the network. I agree with you that installing programs on a Mac is easier than on a PC for the average user like a teacher, but for an administrator, it's roughly the same, so there's no benefit in our circumstance, really. Our teachers have me install all their programs. Also, what if I need to customize the install? Drag and drop installs usually set themselves up the first time they are run.

      4. Yes, I could buy G3s off eBay, but it's a time issue again. Actually, I do stockpile all the half-broken G3s for parts, and this works most of the time. But for the PCs, I'm down to the local computer parts store and back in an hour.

    4. Re:Macs Easier To Maintain....At Home, Maybe by zenquest · · Score: 1

      So, if you use Macs, you don't need support staff. But if you have a support staff, there is no need for Macs. I think you've hit the nail on the head.

      This is true if you are willing to give up capabilities. I find it hard to believe that the teachers at my school could set up a reliable file server with home directories for 600 users that are accessible easily from any computer at the school and remotely at home. However, if you just want to plug the computer in and get internet and a few apps, you're right. The Mac without the support would probably work. Though the computer experience would likely become inconsistent across machines over time, which may be confusing to some users.

    5. Re:Macs Easier To Maintain....At Home, Maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Debugging a system failure of some kind, like a GPF. (YES, they do happen on Macs...it's called "error type 2".) It's impossible to retrieve meaningful information on a Mac.

      That was OS 9 baby. Error Type 2 simply means that your app ran out of RAM. Grade 5 kids can figure that out.

      2. Login/Logout with mapping of drives to a network share location. (this is easier in OS X, but we have old machines...not an option)

      OS 9 machines can run as Admin/Student and operate without problems indefinitely. 10.2 machines can get home directories from anywhare you want.

      3. Installing applications remotely. In the labs, it's not such a problem; we can slam a new image down to install new apps. But on teacher PCs, I can install programs remotely with about 20 different management utilities (we use ZENworks), while nothing similar exists for the teacher Macs. (except sneakernet)

      And Assimilator, Lan Commander, Net Octopus and Apple's Remote Desktop. Even Software Update can be run remotely by SSH. You didn't look into this at all.

      4. Replacement of basic parts. We had to have the apple store replace power supplies on two of our G3s last year at a cost of about $200 each. (parts and labor) This is a job I could have easily done if the power supply wasn't a non-standard size.

      With 280 Macs in the school I have never bought Apple parts, so I wouldn't know. The drives are standard, the ram is standard, the rest is on warranty. Big deal.

      In a network environment where you need them to play well with others, Macs fail miserably compared to PC s

      Again, You didn't look into this at all. We have 690 GB of Server space that gets used up constantly, by macs, so those people must be connecting somehow. Also, when our grade 9 students go home with their iBooks, they hook up just fine to their home pc networks.

      If you're not going to learn how to support your macs properly you should get rid of them. Seriously. What the hell are you doing with them? You should admit to your people that you don't know how to support them and that you refuse to learn. Better that then have your students hear your sour little lies.

    6. Re:Macs Easier To Maintain....At Home, Maybe by zenquest · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That was OS 9 baby. Error Type 2 simply means that your app ran out of RAM.

      Wrong. Perhaps that's one possible reason for it to happen, but technically means that some program tried to write in a space of RAM that it was not allocated. That's a GPF. There's alot of other reasons why it happens, but running out of memory might be one of them. Though, I usually get more specific errors when that happens.

      OS 9 machines can run as Admin/Student and operate without problems indefinitely. 10.2 machines can get home directories from anywhare you want.

      Yes, OS X can pull the usernames from our LDAP directory, but we have too much old hardware right now to go OS X everywhere. Next year, though, that's what we'll do. I don't think it's workable to put 500 individual student accounts on every OS 9 machine. We could use a generic Student account, but that goes back to what I was talking about...if you are willing to give up functionality of everyone having their own accounts, Macs work.

      And Assimilator, Lan Commander, Net Octopus and Apple's Remote Desktop. Even Software Update can be run remotely by SSH. You didn't look into this at all.

      Not true. Software Update is the only one that works anything like what I need. The others would work in a lab environment where all the machines are really identical, but not where the machines are personalized for teacher users. Assimilator in our Mac lab was the biggest nightmare I've ever encountered. We tried it for 2.5 months and had to abandon it for manually loading images with Apple Software Restore.

      With 280 Macs in the school I have never bought Apple parts, so I wouldn't know. The drives are standard, the ram is standard, the rest is on warranty. Big deal.

      True. Drives, RAM are standard. Our newest machines, eMacs, have a one year warranty that is up now. Yes, we could buy an extended warranty, but Macs aren't supposed to cost more than PCs, right?

      Again, You didn't look into this at all. We have 690 GB of Server space that gets used up constantly, by macs, so those people must be connecting somehow.

      Yes, we have about the same. And, I've had to learn Applescript programming to make it work.

      I never claimed that Macs could not do all these things. I said it's harder to make them do these things.

    7. Re:Macs Easier To Maintain....At Home, Maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can remotely mass deploy software in Mac OS 7-9 using Apple Network Assistant.

      The rest of your comment... well... you have problems with macs because you are too lazy to get off your ass and realize that the M$ way isn't the only way.

      At the school I admin at, we have Windows 2000, Mac OS 9/X, and Debian. It's not all that hard to do, if you actually open your mind.

  101. All MacOS ever needed... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    ...was having ProDOS replaced. Timesharing that works. User management that works. Memory management that works. SMP. What else...?

    A command-line you can bolt on any old time. Port bash to Mac OS 8 if you dare.

    Linux doen't actually need a shell (-: the cries of "stone him!" grow steadily nearer in the background :-) to work, you could run the whole box of cogs in Python or Ruby or TCL or PERL quite nicely and push all stdout/stderr into (a) logfile(s) or into a pipe to a GUI tool, no worries.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:All MacOS ever needed... by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      Heh. I agree there. However I do believe that the epitome of "n00b-friendly" UI is MacOS 7.

      If I could design a system, it would look and feel like MacOS 7, but it would have real multitasking and memory protection, improved file system, and have a bit more POSIX compatibility (so BASH - or maybe ASH, MSH or RMFCOM - and other stuff can run in a window).

      However, I don't consider "user management" or "SMP" a need for a Mac-like OS - MacOS (not X) was an OS for a single user on a single CPU.

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
  102. hurumph!! by Diotallevi · · Score: 1

    schools going with microsoft...hmmmm this only proves that government is evil

    --
    Never underestimate the logical power of sarcasm
  103. Um, I can click this little power-button thingy... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...and shut down my computer from KDE. Does that mean KDE wins and the GNOME team can all go home now? (-: Joke, James, it was a JOKE, OK? Mr Henstridge? Please put down that reobar! What are you doing, James? Aaaaahhh...! <thud> :-)

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  104. This is the best justification I've ever seen by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    ...for Linux in the classroom, with each student knowing their own root password:
    "But my teacher says that we are not supposed to learn anything by ourselves because we might learn wrong things"

    It seems that Orwell was right about the principles, he just got the date wrong.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  105. Monoculture The lazy man's way of avoiding thought by crovira · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hey, they're school administrators. (Why would you listen to a high-school guidance conselor? The man's career acumen has led him to become a high-school guidance conselor. Not a glowing recommendation.)

    They don't want to have to think. And stop developping new applications too. They are still pissed off at having to teach VisiCalc (What do you mean they don't sell it anymore? Who cares anyway? Its only for school.)

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  106. Think about it by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    I didn't realize it impacted fertility like that.

    Dunno about you, but thinking about my public school days would make a pretty good prophylactic.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  107. Remember that worms like CodeRed... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...sometimes turn up in advance of any patch for them. If all of your servers are homogeneous, they're all dead no matter how early you apply the patch. Diversity is yet another useful tool for administrators that don't suck.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  108. Mindless beast of education +lab of "new" G4s :-(( by bob_calder · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I work in the fifth largest district in the US. The second largest accredited district. At the top are IBM AS400 machines keeping the data. Under that there is a mixed enviornment. The so-called network has a silly bunch of MS boxes groaning under the email load and running in circles trying to keep up with the traffic. Thank BOB for Cisco. Let me hear it!
    Points:
    (1) There is really no motivation to save money. Box cost is irrelevant.
    (2) During the bidding, undercuts do occur to contradict this statement. (see number 6 for service contract ad ex)
    (3) Most students are being taught applications because most educators are without *clue*
    (4) Teaching people the right things will always be like swimming against the tide.
    (5) Users can and will use anything that gets the job done.
    (6) My lab was set up last week with 25 already obsolete G4 machines by a vendor who installed OS X 1.1 (Am I pissed?)
    (7) I've been using OS X for two years and the official support from downtown is non-existant. Thank BOB my support people are simply wonderful and let me do what I want.
    (8) The people downtown still hire Pascal programmers.
    (9) School districts are 80% elementary, 15% middle, and 5% high school. Don't forget the guys at the Taj Mahal downtown. Oops, that's the county to the North. Ours live in the Crystal Tower. So how are decisions made you ask, given that distribution of personnel? School districts are as varied as any other business. Mine consists of hundreds of individual schools. Some have just a few. There is a group in North Florida that pool their IT needs. Some can and should be broken up under anti-monopoly laws. *coughnameyourfavoritecough*

    Conclusion?? sadly, none. Obviously the population of the world will do what it is told to a degree. Then it will get irritated and shrug off whatever is bothering it. It is a huge mindless beast confronted by the other huge mindless beast of Education.

    Enterprising companies will make money off foolish behavior. Wonderful smart and loving people will try to prepare the latest crop of geeks for eventual geekdom. They are such unruly little buggers. Should we keep them in the same classes with the rest of humanity?

    Can I offend anyone else? Please email me with suggestions.

    --
    Any preoccupation with ideas of what is right or wrong in conduct shows an arrested intellectual development. (Wilde)
  109. And here was me, worrying... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...that I was too sarcastic. (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  110. The point is not to teach computing by Markonen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think many people here are missing the point of computers in schoolwork these days. Back when our generation was in elementary school, the few computers the schools had were there primarily to teach kids about computers.

    But times have changed, and that's no longer the focus.

    Those kids in Maine didn't get an iBook each just to learn how to use an iBook. They got the laptops to use them in class, to google up facts, to write essays, to edit short video presentations.

    It's not about learning to use a computer. Believe me, the 10-year-olds of today are so computer savvy that they don't need a mouse usage primer. And if they later in life encounter a system with the widgets in slightly different places, the difference is trivial enough to be completely inconsequential to them.

    1. Re:The point is not to teach computing by kootch · · Score: 1

      I thought the purpose of the computer in the classroom back in the day was so that we'd learn what was necessary to go from Philadelphia -> California via the Oregon Trail, how to effectively run a Lemonade stand so as to become a millionaire by the age of 12, and what big ass fish can eat other fish in the lake down the hill.

    2. Re:The point is not to teach computing by Pray_4_Mojo · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because the 18 year olds of this generation our helpless. I'm about to graduate from college this year, and I've got everyone I know younger then me calling about how to get rid of Blaster. Hopefully Ten year olds of this generation know to keep virus defs. up to date, if they're running windows.

    3. Re:The point is not to teach computing by foonie · · Score: 1

      The Oregon Trail went from Missouri to Oregon (note the name of the destination--hence the name of the trail). Those were fun games though :)

  111. Even meaner... by Rooktoven · · Score: 1

    Make a screen shot of the desktop then hide taskbar and delete (move) icons.

    Actually this works for any gui ;-)

    --

    Acquiescence leads to obliteration
  112. PLEASE: HAVE CHILDREN!!! NOW!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    My wife and I talk about this all the time, one reason we DONT have children...

    Part of the problem IS federal money. There should be none... The schools must be 100% answerable to the local population, and 0% to the feds. There is a reason there is NO mention of public schools in the constitution, it should be a local matter, where you can hold them accountable, and choke the living shit out someone when necessary, such as your well stated comment implies you verbally did.

    You are exactly the sorts of people who SHOULD be having children! And you know the answer to your dilemma?

    HOME SCHOOLING!!!!!

    It's the great American tradition: George Washington did it. Abe Lincoln did it. Thomas Edison did it. Who needs some damned government bureaucracy to shove a bunch of propaganda down our throats? For that matter, who needs a God-damned government in the first damned place?

    Have children! They're the greatest thing that God ever invented; believe it or not, they're even more fun than making them was in the first place.

    HAVING KIDS + HOME SCHOOLING THEM = THE MOST FUN YOU'LL EVER HAVE IN YOUR LIFE

    Guaran-damn-teed. Cross my heart and hope to die.

    1. Re:PLEASE: HAVE CHILDREN!!! NOW!!!!! by Eric+Ass+Raymond · · Score: 1
      The problem that I see with home schooling is that done wrongly, it doesn't prepare the kids to deal with different people.

      I mean I did go to public school and I had to deal with smart kids, stupid kids, social kids, anti-social and outright aggressive kids, kids from rich families and kids from welfare families. Exactly like it will be in the real world.

      A kid who is home schooled becomes easily blind to the differences, might grow elitist or just unable to cope with people with a different background.

    2. Re:PLEASE: HAVE CHILDREN!!! NOW!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sad but true. The joke we used to have in high school was that any home schooled girl that came in (at the high school level) would be pregnant and/or drop out within a year.

    3. Re:PLEASE: HAVE CHILDREN!!! NOW!!!!! by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      Send the homeschooled kids to bars at night. ;-)

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    4. Re:PLEASE: HAVE CHILDREN!!! NOW!!!!! by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      HAVING KIDS + HOME SCHOOLING THEM = THE MOST FUN YOU'LL EVER HAVE IN YOUR LIFE

      I assume you home school, so I have to wonder: Are you trying to share the experience, or is it just that misery loves company? ;)

      Seriously, the school situation isn't the only reason, but it is one of the reasons. I am not so sure I could be that successful a parent with all the screwed up influences and problems. Its not that things are worse now than they were before (they are NOT) its just it is getting impossible to keep certain influences from reaching your kids at an inappropriate age.

      I told my wife when we first married that under NO circumstances would I send my kid to public schools here in North Carolina (some of the worst in the US, 47th I think). Now Im getting too old anyway. Usually I can go over to visit the nieces, and a few ours of roughhousing with a 5 and 8 year old will wear me out enough anyway.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  113. Preparing kids for the internet by tomem · · Score: 1

    Let's prepare our kids for the diverse internet, rather than the monocultural intranet. They will grow up in a world of diversity where communication is enabled by language, document and data standards rather than hardware/OS standards.

    The internet was not created by standardization to proprietary products. Microsoft and Apple were both slow to the party because of their common dream of product lock-in, which they both continue to pursue in defiance of the principle of the internet.

    Let's inform our educational administrators that their jobs will depend on preparing our kids for the real world; not some dream world in which their investment portfolios expand without limit.

    --
    ThosEM
  114. Accurate title? by jpellino · · Score: 1

    How about "Haddad Claims 'Apple's School Days are Numbered'" It's not like the title line was running out of pixels.

    At least then we'd know it's an opinion piece not a fait accompli.

    We'd also factor in Haddad's cred.

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  115. And when Microsoft goes bankrupt...? by leonbrooks · · Score: 2, Informative
    most people in education are not growing up to be computer techies and will be using Windows with Office.

    Justify that presumption, I dare you!

    Will Microsoft be in business when by 13yod hits the workforce in 5 years? Probably. But how about my 4yos, in 14 years? Maybe, maybe not - but the office tools will be completely different. His older sister won't have hit 30 yet, and the stuff she was taught in school will already be totally obselete.

    Teaching kids to use a single toolset (and this applies outside the computing arena too) by rote is stupid, stupid, stupid. Teach them how to find out by themselves for themselves, exemplify it by teaching them with at least three different toolsets.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:And when Microsoft goes bankrupt...? by rendermaniac · · Score: 1

      OK maybe Microsoft won't be around, maybe even Linux won't. It's impossible to make long term predictions sucessfully. For the short term though these are the skills in demand. When it comes to current Office tools I doubt there are many fundamental differences between them which are not very transferable so why not learn Microsoft first and potentially be able to dive straight in? Heck they even might have it at home, saving time learning new things. If situations change then so should the education system. It's all part of life long learning. I'd have hoped that educators would have reviewed their policies in less than 14 years intervals!

  116. And remember to add... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    ...about USD$30 per seat for the MS-Windows fileserver licence, and a similar amount for MS-Exchange seats if you do email, and heaven help the poor buggers if they need SQL access too. And even though your techs are cheaper, you need more of them (expect to pay around 3-4x as much in total once you're up), and don't forget to factor in the extra downtime.

    Or do the whole lot with Linux and save about USD$100 off each system - plus the per-seat licences and cost of Minesweeper Experts mentioned above if you're not taking the Mac route.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  117. Too late... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...try Vax school.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  118. +1 Insightful by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Damn, I wish I could save up my mod points for special occasions!

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  119. I dunno about that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few weeks ago I was visiting my old grade school in Houston: The Kinkaid School. Its the most preppy expensive white-kid school in the Houston area (except for its rival school St. Johns). While touring the newly built lower school (grades K-4) what did I see? Brand new Emacs in just about every classroom that was loosely related to math or science. Plus there are giant "writing labs" full of Mac's in the lower, middle, and high school.

    Apple may lose market share in general but I doubt Kinkaid is ever going to stop buying Mac's in bulk - and I have a feeling many other elite private schools will continue to do so as well. Yeah they may be more expensive - thats the whole point. How can a school maintain its reputation for superiority if it fills its classes with cheap looking stylistically challenged PC clones? (if anyone says "Alienware", please go back to playing Quake3)

    I do think that the high school computer programming classes are taught with PC's, and I'm sure the network operation center there is running linux machines, but thats all tucked quietly away into areas that the parents aren't shown on come-and-see-why-you-pay-$10000-per-year-to-send-y our-child-here night.

  120. Apple's Days In General Are Numbered by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Nothing against apple's products, i even own a couple of them.

    But they are in trouble.. Between poor marketing decisions by Jobs, and the ever present pressure of Microsoft, i dont think there will be an Apple in 10 years.

    It will be sad to see it, as they DO actually invent things.. not just copy stuff and call it 'innovation'.

    And i hope im wrong, and they continue to hang on to that tiny share of market they have left and dont totally implode...

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Apple's Days In General Are Numbered by phillymjs · · Score: 1

      I am very happy to tell you you're crazy. Not only will Apple survive, they will flourish-- and a great deal of that will be BECAUSE of Microsoft. It's already starting.

      On the consumer side, people are getting really sick of all these security holes, viruses, worms, spyware, etc. They don't want to have to be bothered with maintaining their machines, and still don't-- a fact made most obvious by my firewall logs which STILL to this day show frequent Code Red and Nimda probes, not to mention SQL-slammer. Media outlets are starting to mention in their news reports that the worm/virus-of-the-week "doesn't affect Macs and Linux" or "only affects Windows." More people will start to pick up on that the more it happens. Mac OS X has generated really good buzz since 10.2 was released, and that's only going to improve with Panther. The GHz Gap nonsense is finally being put to sleep, thanks to the G5. The piss-poor marketing of Macs by large PC retail places is being addressed by Apple stationing Apple-paid representatives there. The Apple Stores are aiding in the visibility of the Mac platform and driving quite a bit of first-time sales.

      On the business side of things, Microsoft is getting really bad with the nickel-and-diming of everyone for everything. They were forced into it because Windows has achieved market saturation-- their only recourse to keep profits going up is to charge ever more for the same shit, and to adopt subscription models wherever possible. They are pissing companies off with their upgrade-or-pay-anyway licensing schemes and associated costs, and with the fact that "the most secure Windows ever!" that Microsoft sold them is not really that secure after all. Companies are also not pleased with the Windows lock-in-- where once enough Microsoft shit is in your company, the only way to not have problems is to make ALL your systems Windows PCs. Apple takes pains to adopt open standards to interoperate with everything, while Microsoft works harder and harder at proprietarizing as much as possible so only their stuff will work 100% properly (in theory, anyway) with their stuff.

      These things are building up on the business and consumer level, and will eventually reach a critical mass. People as a whole will be pushed too far by Microsoft one day, and they will finally say "enough!" and seek out and purchase non-Microsoft alternatives, even if it means paying a little more and/or having to learn some new things.

      ~Philly

  121. Who's a dumbass? by twitter · · Score: 1
    The techs at most public schools are dumbasses.

    Did you read the article? It was clear that this was a top-down action by superintendents. They have hired a bunch of dumbasses called "info-tech manager" based on their own ignorant demand for a "single platform" regardless of price or performance. They are ignoring the teacher's needs, teacher demands, studdies that say that PCs are more expensive and everyone's advice but MicroSoft's. Nuts.

    If they [Apple] focus on the informed consumers and professionals, they'll survive and flourish.

    That's what they did, but the purchasing decisions have been moved up the chain into know nothing land. That's what's responsible for the shift.

    It's by no means permanent and this article has a load of Windoze reality distortion in it. The shift is, like you say, a hang over from Apple's dark days under the Pepsi Lord. It was then that public schools started purchasing computers like never before, and that's mostly responsible for the "loss is share". The pool has been diluted with computers that no one really needed in the first place. Wintel PCs only last about 3 years before M$ declares them obsolete. To say that the game is over is to buy into the usual M$ line, "we have already won." The high cost of running these dinky PCs that no one asked for will embarass the dummies at the top and they will soon be ousted. Like other places, they will be the first to go in budget cuts. Bullshit, like M$ PCs really does not last.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  122. kids who learn on macs cant learn windows? by dmnic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    in jr/highschool, my home computer was a Commodore Vic20/C64. in school we only used Apple IIc's. I was one of the very few who could do any "homework" for the computer class because of the fact the Commodores were BASIC. the others in class either didnt have a home computer or they were Wintel/DOS machines(yes, they had QBasic, but c'mon, that wasnt real BASIC!

    get to college in fall 90, and the instructor and most students waere so happy that they had a system running a GUI(Windows) as it was brand new(a horrible kludge compared to even GEOS!). he couldnt understand that I knew so much about computers...he thought they were one of the few to ever have a GUI. he didnt grasp the fact that both Commodore and Apple had GUIs YEARS before Windows.
    when I explained this to him, he questioned the ability to cross platforms...he couldnt grasp that all GUIS were the same...point/click, drag/drop.
    in his mind it was Windows only/allways, and if you didnt use Windows you would never succeed in the "world".
    needlesss to say I was bored silly for my entire time in college with exception to the COBOL/PASCAL classes...wish I had taken those classes more to heart :(

    nowadays at work, all I ever see is companies miserable with Windows and looking for alternatives to ease their headaches.
    they dont care if they end up with a mixed network because they know the systems will integrate regardless.

    in my experience, the more you know about different platforms, the farther you will go. getting stuck in a rut is the quickest way to becoming "dumb".

  123. Macs in Schools by Sfing_ter · · Score: 1

    I work in a very prosperous district that 3 years ago the Tech-Coordinator took a look at costs, and decreed no more mac purchases by the district or schools, because the price of a mac vs. pc was disparate. This does not stop the teachers from purchasing them through grants. The high school has a graphic arts teacher that teaches on macs, we just moved a lab of 25 G4's of varying processors and ram to 0S X. While it took a while and we have had to overcome some minor yet time-consuming issues she will have the lab the way she wants it. Because as we all know, you can only do graphics on a mac

    Could she teach the same thing on PCs? Yes
    Would it cost less? Yes
    Would the children be confused/bored? Yes.
    Could she get more/faster computers if she bought pcs with her grant money? Yes.
    Will she change? No

    Same goes for the art teacher and the journalism teacher.

    Fact is though the lab will be nice and secure and not have any virii to worry about, with a linux router I can block the outbound traffic and the apps are kept to what they "need" to use for class. This is not because of OS X though, it is because at it's base if FreeBSD, let us not forget that...

    --
    A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing. Emo Philips
  124. Legacy Macs and Modern Dells by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As a school library information specialist, I'm working in the trenches of this issue, and I have three observations:

    1.) When I started in this position, I laughed at all the Macs we had in our school (we had 3-1 mac to pc ratio). I called the Macs "toy computers". I'd only ever used Wintel machines, and was basically uncomfortable with the idea of having to fix them. I soon learned, however, that they required less fixing than the x86 machines, which allowed me to focus on my real job-- teaching students. It's the rare school that has in-house dedicated tech support. Time spent fixing PC's is time not spent teaching by librarians and computer lab instructors.

    2.) Because of budget cuts (and, to be frank, a financial scandal in the district tech department), we've been unable to upgrade more than a handful of machines in the last six years. That means our students are still using LC575s and PowerMac 5400s. These are slow machines that have a hard time running today's software and browsing today's internet-- but they're still running. We don't have even a single Wintel machine left from that era. They've all died.

    3.) Our principal has recently gotten a new black Dell-- and he's convinced it's better than any Apple machine. Why? Because it's so much faster than our LC575s and 5400s! Our teachers say the same thing-- they have newish Dells at home, and so they know that PCs are faster than Macs. The fact that they're comparing 7 year old Macs with new Dells doesn't seem to have occured to them! None of them have ever used a modern Mac-- we have two bondi blue iMacs, and everyone refers to them as "the new macs."

    Apple makes good computers. Too good. Our legacy Macs are still running, and so are unfairly being compared against modern Dells. This is feeding the push to go all Wintel in our district.

    1. Re:Legacy Macs and Modern Dells by b1t+r0t · · Score: 1
      A bit of advice: When telling them how old the Macs are that they are comparing against, why not say they are 10 years old?

      1) They probably have sufficient innumeracy (even the math teachers) that they wouldn't be able to figure it out even if they saw a manufacture date sticker on the bottom of those crappy old Macs.

      2) 10 sounds at least twice as big to people with innumeracy than 7 does. 'Cause it's got twice as many numbers, of course.

      --

      --
      "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
      "Open source is evil." - Microsoft
  125. Parent's Responsibility as Well by sweatyboatman · · Score: 1

    you love your child, you want the best for him or her (let's say her) and you're still willing to hand her off to some random stranger for the entirety of her education?

    It's well known that the public school system is flawed. The funny thing is that parents are increasingly detaching themselves from the education of their children. This exposes more flaws in public education and makes it appear that the system is failing. Parents must be involved for the system to work.

    I'm sure there are mitigating circumstances (like money/work issues), but it seems entirely irresponsible to say that public school teachers are responsible for mental laziness. Whatever the teacher says, the word and example of the parents speaks far more loudly to a young child.

    -tom

    --
    It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
  126. Consider alternitive explanations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) Your niece is a troll

    2) Over the years you have gotten worse and worse at teaching

    and finally, not sure but . . .

    3) Posting AC didn't stop your students from recognizing you

  127. Not really. by PotatoHead · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Kids should know what computing is, what a word processor is, filesystems, programs, operating systems, interfaces, what makes your average computer, how to recognize one and perhaps its type, etc...

    If they see only one computer, then they make many assumptions that will hurt them later on.

    These things only become evident when more than one platform is used.

    That platform could be a PC running more than one OS, so this does not exactly support Apple however.

    Every kid should be equipped to understand on a basic level what computing means, not just what a particular computer happens to do. We have had these machines in our culture long enough for these bits of information to become part of the body of common knowledge. If these things do not happen during K-12 then something very clearly is wrong with the teaching.

    Unless, we all want to accept the fact that Redmond Washington is the authority on computing...

    I for one don't. I also don't want my kids to either.

    1. Re:Not really. by jbolden · · Score: 1

      And how broad to you get? User based permissions seem standard. OTOH windows itself uses capability computing (though the software primarily supports permissions based computing). Which do you teach?

      When you teach filesystems do you teach level 2 filesystems like Windows and Unix have (i.e. hierarchy of files) or level 3 database filesystems like VMS , zOS, iOS...?

      Do you teach systems where the OS and application level are seperate or use things like Symbolics or QNX where they are the same?

      In other words are you sure you aren't asking way too much of teachers who have way less knowledge about computers than /. readers?

  128. From the trenches... by gozar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As a technology coordinator in a 2,200 student school district, I feel that articles like this are important as I plan out the future. We have 700 workstations, 94% of them are Macintosh. K-5 run OS 9, 6-12 are now running OS X.

    Some of the reasons we stay with the Mac:

    Ease of administration: Mac OS X Server and Macintosh Manager/Workgroup Manager coupled with Apple Remote Desktop makes managing this setup possible by one person. Imaging of machines is taken care of by Apple Software Restore.

    Price: A $723 eMac ($699 base + $24 for an additional 128MB of RAM). No additional license costs for: server client licenses, imaging software, and virus protection. For $500 I get an unlimited OS X server license.

    Years of Service: We can usually get 6-7 years out of a Mac. The 5400s in service all have at least 32MB of RAM and G3 upgrade cards.

    For our PC lab I made the decision to move to K12LTSP. These machines were aging PII with 32MB of RAM. a $2,500 dual xeon machine brought this lab back to life for around $100 a machine. I use IceWM as the window manager and installed a XP theme. They run OpenOffice.org. I had one student ask if it was Linux, the rest just blindly use it. :-)

    Most of the administrative office uses Windows 2000.

    The best tool for the job.

    --
    What, me worry?
    1. Re:From the trenches... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Years of Service: We can usually get 6-7 years out of a Mac. The 5400s in service all have at least 32MB of RAM and G3 upgrade cards.
      You know Acorn RISC PCs would have given at least a full 10 years of survice :-)
  129. Money by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    I have been helping a rural school in Colorado (~1000 students for a K-12). Out here, we are losing are tax base and probably looking at another couple of bad years (Colorado is beaten only by california as having the worse governor).
    I have been helping the school convert over to Linux in the server space. So far, we have only converted a few items, but they are saving 10K / year. One of the things that they found very attractive was the ability of the Linux server to keep running. The MS and Novell kept requireing attention. The Linux ran flawless.They are now in the process of moving over to Linux for the entire server space.
    I am now in the process of showing them diskless Linux combined with a large amount of OSS software. They are now exploring the idea of moving to linux on the desktop.
    The easiest way to sell it:Do you wish to spend the money on your teachers and students or send it to MS?
    You would be surprised how practical rural communities can be.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  130. Support yes, Integration ? by TheBillGates · · Score: 1

    I was one of those paper MCSEs (20 years in IT but no hands on NT) who was hired by my private college to do all their Mac support.

    From the support side it is cheaper to use Macs. I maintain 400 Macs and I'm rarely needed for problems. My Windows counterpart maintains about 90 PCs and is constantly flooded with work. From the tech support side its obvious that Macs are cheaper than PCs

    Integration? I'm not sure on that aspect. Our IT department went to a proprietary Mirapoint LDAP solution. The Macs play with LDAP beautiful, but it's been a headache to get the Win2K server's users to authenticate correctly with Mirapoint and thus get their shares mapped on the Mac RAID.

    So the Apple engineer can't get decent answers from Mirapoint and is now trying to "hack" SAMBA to make up for Mirapoint's inadequate tech support and knowledge base.

    I brought up using OSX's LDAP, but no! Got to have that Mirapoint. Oh hell, I give up. Someone get me a beer!

  131. Opposite happening at the University level by Sans_A_Cause · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm a University professor in the U.S. who is a longtime Mac user. Mac OS X has made life really great in my lab. We do research that tends to be graphics-oriented, and much of the scientific software that used to require overpriced SGI boxes (and licenses) to run, we now run either on Macs or Linux workstations. The nice part is that for the students in the lab, OS X and Linux look exactly the same, so figuring out one makes it simple to switch to the other.

    Obviously, the Mac GUI is much better than KDE or Gnome, so most people want the Mac, and on things like our Beowulf cluster we use Linux (I'm not paying for 32 copies of Mac OS X). I don't think I'm alone. I've talked to other colleagues who are moving to Macs for these same reasons: easy integration of OS X and Linux.

    I took a tour of campus last week as part of an orientation group. The university had just purchased hundreds of iMacs! There are G4's in almost all of the graphics labs, or anywhere that graphics demands are high.

    This high school may be preparing kids better for "industry" with MS products, but it doesn't seem to me they're preparing them well for college, given the trend I see.

  132. Computers are not to blame for miseducation. by AntiOrganic · · Score: 1

    This isn't a problem with computers: the fault lies entirely with the American educational system, and specifically with radical minority-centric pressure groups from the left.

    The past 30 years or so have been a unique time for education. Over this period, the focus of teaching in schools has not been actual facts or skills. Pressure groups from the left have modified the curriculum in many ways to make the focus of education "multiculturalism" and "critical thinking" rather than the teaching of facts and skills. There are many reasons for this; however, some are subversive and rather reminiscient of Vonnegut. I'm sure you've read the story of Harrison Bergeron in early high school. This is much like what our educational system has become. In catering to minority students in underfunded urban environments, the schooling system has cut everyone's education down to their level, because overtly stating that impoverished children are, by definition, inferior academically, is "elitist," in addition to the obviously inherent racism.

    You need look no further than the selections outlined in most districts' literature curriculums to understand the depth of this issue. Whereas previously, many classical English writers would be used to populate the curriculum. A strong sampling of English writers have been dismissed by the left as "Eurocentric," and in modern times the typical literature curriculum consists nearly fifty percent or more of works by minority authors such as Maya Angelou, and most of these will have a strongly either anti-European or pro-diversity message. This is all good and well, but literature is literature, right? Guess what: this multiculturalism has found its way into every facet of American education. Some math textbooks will detail African American achievements for no reason. And history textbooks will often completely distort the truth in favor of minorities, choosing to omit facts that do not lean in their agenda's favor; how many people do you know who are fully aware that Africa actively engaged in a slave trade with the Middle East before those dastardly Europeans showed up? But knowledge is no longer a requirement either for history. Standardized tests, like the New York State Regents Examinations, rely upon "document-based questions" and graphs in which only several pieces of outside information even need to be presented (I believe 2 pieces of outside information is required for a 5/5 score). This is to stress "critical thinking" and knowledge is a bias. Harrison Bergeron indeed.

    Additionally, content censorship from the left prevents exposure to any unclean ideals. Birthday cake cannot be eaten in a story about a party because cake is not nutritious. Witches cannot be mentioned because they may offend children with Christian sensibilities. Would children rather read about witches and birthday parties and cake, or ocean currents and the migration paths of sea turtles? Sensitivity and bias committees have ruined the American educational system, and when our children are too dumb to vote, there will be no turning back. The truth is that school has now become so banal, boring, and focusless that there really is no wondering why students are caring less and less.

    Computers are not the problem. People are.

    1. Re:Computers are not to blame for miseducation. by AntiOrganic · · Score: 1

      I just realized that I left out one strikingly important detail on this matter:

      These pressure groups are not content to meddle only with our childrens' educations, but also with their health. If you want to see how deep the bullshit descends, take a look at the food pyramid. I'm certain most of you are aware that years ago, the most commonly-taught diet-balancing scheme changed from a fair balance of the four food groups to a pyramid, consisting of mostly grains. Do you know why this is?

      Grain is considered a "farmers' diet"; the food pyramid was concocted because leftist sensitivity committees ordained that impoverished (I'm sorry... that's a dirty word... "disadvantaged") children cannot afford expensive meats. Additionally, since many on the left are also vegetarian or vegan, they will, like all other pressure groups, push their own agendas through subversive means such as educational textbooks. The importance of meat is downplayed, often being intentionally portrayed as much less healthy than it really is.

      The real problem with this is that most people's grain consumption comes from processed grains rather than whole ones. Processed carbohydrates, such as white bread, contain little nutritional value but reasonable caloric content. Many people will remember the food pyramid and continue to eat these in excess, and this will do nothing but contribute to our nation's already rampant obesity problem.

    2. Re:Computers are not to blame for miseducation. by DuBois · · Score: 1
      Computers are not the problem. People are.
      I'll say a hearty Amen to that. And note that the real problem is that most of the people engaged in "Education" are paid with coerced money (taxes), so they can always blame the "taxpayers" for not paying them enough.

      For another look at this, check out John Taylor Gatto, New York State's Teacher of the Year for 1991 (and three time winner of New York City Teacher of the year.

      --
      The IPCC has purposely engineered a massive scientific fraud.
    3. Re:Computers are not to blame for miseducation. by b1t+r0t · · Score: 1

      You didn't even tell the best part about the "food pyramid". I heard that when it was realized that the thing was total crap that someone pulled out of their ass, they went ahead with anyhow because they had already printed up the glossy 4-color propaganda to go along with it.

      --

      --
      "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
      "Open source is evil." - Microsoft
    4. Re:Computers are not to blame for miseducation. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL -- I love it when people think the left wing runs "the conspiracy." Good luck with that one ;)

      *peels of laughter*

      *ahem.*

      Now, fuck off.

  133. Hmm-Panic button. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "And if you really really want to be nasty... drag the top edge of the task bar so as to turn it into one that's only a few pixels thick as well..."

    You joke, but I knew a guy who accidently did that. Came running to me for help. Where's my taskbar?

    1. Re:Hmm-Panic button. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only one? I've had people do this any number of times (although usually what they do is make the damn thing so wide it covers a good part of the desktop!). Funny thing is, it tends to be the same people who do these things over & over again. . .

  134. Amen! by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    Go take a hard look at your school budget sometime, if they even will let you see it. When you are finished with that, ask yourself why the ratio of administrators to students is as high as it is.

    Take a hard look at what they all do and you will begin to wonder why so many of them are required.

    In my district, the teachers ask for bulk paper as part of the school supply list, yet the administration exists in high numbers and in offices that are as good or better than found in many corporations.

    In Oregon, we have a big bit of waste called CIM / CAM. This is the state mandated standardized testing program. Not only do they spend a lot of money on custom out of state testing companies to develop their tests, they place such a high emphasis on the scores that teachers are sharply limited in what they teach.

    They offer financial incentives to businesses and colleges in an attempt to buy recognition of a program that is a solution to a problem that does not exist.

    This is all under the heading school reform.

    Given the existance of already working standardized testing programs, this whole mess is foolish and costly.

    This same district is trying to use Linux to cut computing costs, but only for the money, not because the kids might need the diverse education later in life. Home of the LTSP project which is a good thing.

    Elsewhere in this same administration, (ESD) growth is out of control. Full of highly paid coordinators, directors, public relations, and other fluffy positions that consume money that could be spent directly in the classroom.

    The running joke here is that if you cannot work in the schools, you go to work in the ESD.

  135. The proper title is "Apple is Dying" by Sans_A_Cause · · Score: 1

    Please remember this for next time.

  136. I used to support this field by onyxruby · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I used to support this field for a couple of years. I've worked with schools through the US and Canada in every state and province. I've talked to hundreds, if not thousands of schools, so I've run into this. The product I supported runs on Macintosh as well as various Windows, DOS and Novell flavors. We were even experimenting with Linux, with mixed results (server side would work fairly decently, client side was very difficult to get to work right under wine). Thus, understand from our standpoint, we were pretty OS agnostic.


    The short of it is that Mac labs were dissapearing accross Canada and the US at an incredible rate. The schools on the whole hate the Mac's. They had support issues that easily were as great as Windows labs, debunking the myth that Mac's don't need support. They were proprietary and not what the students were going to use in the real world (outside advertising / graphics). For schools and teachers that actually do want to prepare students for the outside world, this is an issue (yes some teachers really care). Hardware that could run on the mac was always more expensive, at least 10% more, typically could run up to half again as much. This is for companies selling the exact identical piece of kit.


    This also doesn't take into account that appletalk is so chatty that they had to buy a dedicated router to keep them from crapflooding the rest of the network. This gets expensive very quickly. Now that apples have finally joined the realm of TCP/IP, it's not the problem it once was - but the damage was done. This problem got so bad that about the first thing I had to do was check and see if they had a mac lab, regardless of whether or not out software was running on it!


    Software for the mac tends to be much more limited in selection, and often more expensive. Since most vendors don't make mac versions, the few that do feel free to charge more due to a lack of competition. The mac's themselves are also expensive. They can buy a lab of wintel systems cheaper than a lab of mac's, and they don't run into all the proprietary issues that mac forces on it's users.


    It's not a case of apples school days are numbered, it's a case of a few leftover mac labs waiting for the next budget to become available to replace them with wintels. Frankly, mac labs were very rarely ever replaced with macs, and then only if their was a rabid mac lover in decision chain. For perspective, roughly 3% of replacement labs that used to be Novell were replaced by Novell, and this was far more common than a mac lab getting replaced by a mac lab.


    You might be thinking I'm some kind of rabid windows evangelican at this point - I'm not. I've got and use Linux & Windows at home, and am about to start school for SUN. To be honest, I see more Linux labs surpassing mac labs in schools in the very near future if it hasn't already happened. Certainly linux is starting to penetrate into school for file servers. Remember that many of these mac labs only originally got installed in the first place because Apple sold the computers at a loss or simply gave them away to schools.

    1. Re:I used to support this field by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why on earth would they replace Mac labs with Linux? At least with Windows they can argue that kids need to be trained on a specific domintant platform. (Even though this claim is lame, who says windows will be what people use when these kids graduate). Linux is considerably harder to manage and set up than Windows or Mac, how would this save them money? Do you think most schools and businesses use Linux because it is free? They don't-they pay the support contracts because at the end of the day they want it to work. They don't care that they can see the code and fix it themselves and they aren' building their own boxes and downloading isos to save money.

    2. Re:I used to support this field by cluckshot · · Score: 1

      Excellent Post. Probably the most realistic regards the reasons people actually do things. However; There are several problems regards the issue of computers in the classroom that have been kind of skipped over.

      I ran a cabinet shop for 18 years. Every time we upgraded computers, we had to rewrite the software that handled our data. This made the machine the least expensive part of the process. We were running Apple Machines. Apple suffered from wanting to have its proprietary friends (Claris etc) have all the access to any decent programming tools. This made reworks really hard.

      At the same time we tried to have feedback on technological changes in the industry to the trade schools in our area. Honestly we found the schools allergic to any updating.

      The "Rational" choice of a computer platform for use in training students would include among other criteria the ability to upgrade while not causing obsolecence of the software and the hardware. Microsoft does not do this! The "Rational" decision would pick Linux but just as our attempts to cause technical education to change to modern realities met with failure, education authorities are reluctant to change in the area of computers too.

      This problem of avoiding change had the tech schools teaching old technology in cabinetry while the need was in the new technology. It is clear from employment data that Microsoft Systems are rapidly coming to the end of their market as skills someone can earn a living at. (California alone has 3.8 Million unemployed with this skill set) Even in India and China they are going to Linux. These people are replacing Americans in the market. This is where the future is going. But just like Apple still domininating school markets even though they are essentially out of the Job market, I expect us to have very well educated Microsoft Operators and Programmers long after Microsofts market dominance is history. Schools are usually the last to adapt to new tech.

      The best solution would be for schools to teach the on coming tech. Don't expect this any time soon.

      There is another problem in schools. Computers are best illustrated by my father's rule for teaching kids how to use slide rules. He said, "When the answer is more important than how you got the answer, I will teach you to use the slide rule." I learned slide rules just about the time the first calculators came out. It was astounding to me how students would get really exact numbers and have no idea what in the world they ment or if the answer was even related to the problem when they used calculators. This is the problem with Computers. We have kids turning in papers of astounding detail on facts etc that frankly they have not a clue what it all means.

      My Father's rule when I used a calculator allowed me to have a fair idea if I had keyed an error or not. It remains good sense. Kids who use computers before they understand how the information is gotten and what it really means turn in fabulous papers, they get good grades and they are absolutely hopelessly worthless in the work place. This is the principal reason other than tax incentives for the "Outsourcing" and H-1B and L-1 Type events that are crushing the careers of IT People in the USA.

      Those of us in IT should try to force out of schools except as assistance tools to the teacher any computers until the students break into the 10th grade or so.

      If you are tempted to doubt what I am saying here, note: The top computer skill that is in demand in the USA is Inventory Management associated with Retail Sales. While it does not have much glamour, it represents at least for a time 80% or more of the employment of High School graduates. Does anyone anywhere know of a school system teaching this skill to most if not all of their HS Students. It usually involves the base of the HS Grads work for about 5 years or more. It is pretty Important!

      Inventory Management stuff is the scanner operations and inventory processes associated with Retail Sales. Frankly

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    3. Re:I used to support this field by onyxruby · · Score: 1

      Why on earth would they replace Mac labs with Linux?

      Good question. In my personal ancedotal experience, the short answer was "license audit". For schools that often have old computers, rampant theft problems, changing admins, donated equipment, and no records organizational system - a license audit can be a financial disaster. Unable to "prove" that they have licenses for software, they can be forced to fork over untold thousands to buy what they already own. Usually this results in the years IT budget getting wiped out, and always results in massive headaches.

      The other answer is one of hardware cost management, as Linux can run on older hardware that would otherwise need to be disposed of. With financial shortfalls in many schools, there often is no other alternative. They can also save money on licensing software upfront. Options do exist. The flipside of this is that Linux has an overall marketshare roughly equivalent to Mac (depending on Gatner vs whoever else did study). Since the overwhelming majority of the world uses Windows, this is the most appropriate platform to ready students for. Now if Linux manages to change this in several years with MS continuating customer alienation campaign proving successful, than my answer would be that Linux is the appropriate thing to teach kids.

      Yes Linux is considerably harder to setup vs Windows or Mac, so the schools that are doing this are utterly dependent on having an in-house *nix expert available. Since so few people in education do know *nix, it's a major stumbling block. Frankly, the overwhelming majority of the educational institutes I dealt with would be dead in the water if someone gave them a lab of computers on the condition they run Linux. Meanwhile, the servers, which the students should rightly never touch, are starting switching to Linux - especially for file servers.

      In short it's a transitional period right now for Linux on the desktop. I don't think it's ready yet - and desktop marketshare surveys excunuate my point. Now, all of this would change if Apple would ever get off their but and release their internal Athlon build of Jaguar! With their OS now running on BSD based Unix, many of there software interoperability issues are starting to be taken down. If they released their OS for the Intel platform, I believe that they could rapidly bring their marketshare from about 2% to about 10%.

  137. No, it wasnt a 'dying' troll post by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Im being serious here.. Though i really really hope I'm wrong and they survive, as i DONT want them to fade away..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  138. Yeah, Microsoft Reality Distortion Field at Work. by twitter · · Score: 1
    The reporter has done a good job describing some institutional problems, but has missed a big chunk of recent history that can account for some of Apple's "loss of market". While describing the Microsoft Reality Distortion Field that seems to have gripped know nothings in the upper echelons of public school administration, he seems to have caught a little of it himself. Reality favors Apple and free software.

    The author has done a great job of describing the mindset of upper administrators. It's instructive to read about dummies who want "a single platform" regardless of price or performance. It's also good to know that they have hired people who are ignoring actual teacher needs. He's presented their reasoning as flawed and it is. Great stuff, crap begets crap, but he's missed some interveening history.

    People are not chucking their Macs, the pie has grown in the last five years. Schools, like everyone else, had a spending binge over the last five years. Busineses donated all their old boxes for tax credits and many districts decided that they had to have PCs in every classroom. PC's for most of this period were cheaper and won out for the "internet access" need. I know schools that begged their students to take home old donated 486s and what not that they had no place for, but I don't know of any shcool that ever did the same for Macs. So, what you have in schools is a surpluss of PCs that no one asked for in the first place eating up resources schools no longer have. Missing this history is the author's first big mistake.

    The author's next mistakes are to assume that parents have really bought into it all and that the supposed trend is irreversible. Both are wrong.

    The public at large is just learning the joys of Microsoft "upgrading" for themselves and it's doubtful they will really want to spend PC money in their schools sytems that they don't want to spend at home. Sure, there are a few vocal dupes out there that did not live through the dissapointment of the win3.1 to win95 transition, and Microsoft will be sure to pay others, but that does not make a majority of parents. For every vocal M$ supporter, I can show you a free software advocate AND a Mac advocate. The vast majoryty of parents don't care about computers at all.

    All real trends favor Apple and free software. Purchasing has ground to a halt. Attrition favors machines that last and have a real use. PCs, which no one asked for will simply rot in disuse. Local administrators will discover the joys of free software for the PC's they actually need before they get money to replace win9X. I expect peopole with real needs will get what works best. Microsoft's only advantage is that it talks to Microsoft and other DRM gimped junk that dissapears in 2 years. Students have no such needs, and faculty's needs extend only to reading central dirctives that make no sense anyway. When it comes to programming, science, internet access and running a network, free software rules without question. When it comes to out of the box video editing, Mac rules. I predict these M$ central planners will soon find themselves without a budget and nothing to do. Schools don't need the tools they would push.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  139. Mod Parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Just because we are computer literate and most people aren't doesn't make them "pretty fucking stupid". Quit being such a god damned elitist. The fact is most people know only one OS, if any. All others seem foreign and unusable to them.

    I have no idea why you were modded up as funny.

  140. Reality Check by jdhutchins · · Score: 2, Informative

    I've read some of the comments, and most people don't seem to get it. 99% of kids don't WANT to learn C, C++, terminal usage, etc... To most of the kids in school, computer = WINDOWS. They've heard of Mac, maybe Linux, but they don't care. And for the most part, windows is what will be used in whatever their future job is. The small portion of people who want to use linux will use it at home, and have no problems switching to windows at school.

    At my school (high school), there are a kabillion windows machines. The newspaper area uses macs, but other than that, it's all windows. People know how to use it. Computers are almost like cars these days. You don't have to know how an engine works to drive a car. Most peole don't want to know how the engine works, they just know "there's the steering wheel, the brake's on the left, gas is on the right, and the shifter is somewhere". Like it or not, Windows is by far the most dominant operating system on desktops today, and that isn't likely to change. People don't care what OS is on their computer, and they'll take whatever the manufactor gives them.

  141. Platform Makes no Difference by TheBillGates · · Score: 2, Insightful

    One more comment before I leave for the day.

    Platforms and programs make no difference teachers! I have a hell of a time driving this point home with them. Why are you so concerned about teaching the latest version of Office? By the time they graduate they will see a different version in the work industry. What you should understand is that you should teach them concepts, not a program.

    Some bitch because I have photoshop elements in the labs and they want photoshop. Let's see, $21 per license versus $150? Guess which wins folks? I tell them once the students learn the CONCEPTS of correctly adjusting color balance and brightness/contrast it doesn't make any difference what program they use in the industry. They would do just fine using an open source Linux graphics app.

    I tried to sell our IT director on moving from office to openoffice to save lots of money. His response was that people want MS office and it's not worth the bitching we'll hear. Grrrr! I could really use that money we would save on licensing to buy a new RAID and a cluster.

  142. Mandrake by jbolden · · Score: 1

    Mandrake probably has the same problem as Apple or AIX. With the drake wizards and mandrake control center you end up not learning how to unravel all those nasty configuration messes.

  143. Article is BS by salesgeek · · Score: 1

    I really take exception to articles that try to write off decision making as "lemming effect". It's a trash-can excuse. Let's look at the brutal facts of reality:

    1) Enterprise Software Availability favors Wintel.
    2) The dominant use of computers in american schools is NOT IN THE CLASSROOM. It is in the school/district office and on the teacher's desk.
    3) Teachers are poorly equiped to manage technology assets. IT managers do that. Single platform lowers cost for IT managers.
    4) Outside design and AV, Apple is at best on equal footing with Wintel.
    5) The internet works fine on either platform. You might say it even works better on Wintel thanks to MS embrace and extend.
    6) Price != TCO (total cost of ownership).

    --
    -- $G
  144. Computer science vs leo by jbolden · · Score: 1

    I agree with you in principle. Here however is the other side.

    In highschool they used to have a concept called "LEO" ~ Law Economics and Occupation. Essentially it was all the day to day skills you needed to function in society:
    how to use a checkbook, how to cook, a basic understanding of american law... The idea was a broad overview of society.

    If the schools see the computers as part of the LEO curriculum than the purpose is to get students to understand the platform and the applications that as Americans they can be expected to understand; not to understand computer science.
    Conversely if they see the computers as part of a computer science type approach then obviously they can use virtually any platform.

    1. Re:Computer science vs leo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what happens when computers completely change? I bet that detailed DOS knowledge is doing the students of a decade ago a heck of a lot of good now. Technology CAN'T be tought using the LEO style because, unlike checkbooks and cooking, it won't be the same 5 years from now. The user-interfaces change, the concept (comp-sci) remains the same.

      In the first place God made idiots. This was for practice. Then He made School Boards. --Mark Twain

    2. Re:Computer science vs leo by Xrikcus · · Score: 1

      Well what I'm thinking more is, say, teach a child the principles of WP, of Spreadsheets, why they can help you. A very basic understanding of relational databases (none of the real theory, maybe at later stages some SQl..., but an idea of how tables interrelate) - and that that's not the only way of databasing. A rough idea of what an OS is, not really how one works, just what one is, why it's important, that there isn't only one, and that others can do the job equally well.

      All sorts of things like that. I think it would be considerably better for a child to know why they do formulae in a Spreadsheet, than merely what Excel's syntax is (though it might have to be taught in excell.. fair enough).

      It's not a matter of understanding Computer Science, it's a matter of learning the ability to be flexible in what you use, and being able to learn new things rapidly.

    3. Re:Computer science vs leo by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Again LEO would be as general as the school views society as needing it to be. So if Excel knowledge is what society wants.... Its about quick facts. Sort of a "you have 1 hour to explain to X from Zimbabwe..." type scenerio, not liberal arts style education

    4. Re:Computer science vs leo by Xrikcus · · Score: 1

      I can see what you're saying. Not at all sure it's better for society in the long run though.

    5. Re:Computer science vs leo by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Too much leo style education is a disaster for society. Too little and students are unprepaired for real world issues. How much you need is very dependent on how much you expect them to get from home, which turns out to be a very subtle school by school issue.

  145. But PC's are not mono-culture... by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

    PC's are not mono culture. PC's are extremely diverse. Just because many PC's run Windows does not mean that is all a PC can do.

    I used to run a Mac Notebook. Gave it away. Why? Because it was too limited. With my PC I can run; Linux, Windows, FreeBsd, Solaris, etc. On top of each OS I can run X*X*X applications.

    My Mac essentially has two choices OSX or Linux from Yellow Dog. Software apps is even worse. I once asked a company selling Linux software to do a simple recompile for OSX. No-go.... While Open Source is great not all packages will configure and build for a PPC chip. It is just oo frustrating...

    Nope, it is the Mac world is that mono-culture...

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    1. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by multiOSfreak · · Score: 3, Informative
      My Mac essentially has two choices OSX or Linux from Yellow Dog.


      Heh? Actually, your Mac (if you still owned it) has more than just two choices. In addition to OS X and Yellow Dog Linux, you can also choose from GNU-Darwin, NetBSD, various linux distros (including Gentoo, LinuxPPC, Debian, and Mandrake) and let's not forget good old MacOS 9 and older versions. On top of that, you can run (basically) any X86-based OS via Virtual PC.

      Limited? Only by how much you know (or don't know, in this case).
    2. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by Pray_4_Mojo · · Score: 2

      PC's are not mono culture. PC's are extremely diverse. Just because many PC's run Windows does not mean that is all a PC can do.

      You're right. A PC can do something other then run windows: It can be used as a doorstop. You can use it to break windows by throwing it through them. Just because something can be done, doesn't mean it should be.

      The point I'm trying to make here is against the IT-environment myth: Mono-cultures solve problems. Mono-cultures are easier to administer. Since all PCs can pretty much do the same. So why not just buy all one PC? Just because you can tool out a PC to be flexible, doesn't mean the IT eejit will. Most networks take the "Personal" out of "Personal Computing".

      I used to run a Mac Notebook. Gave it away. Why? Because it was too limited. With my PC I can run; Linux, Windows, FreeBsd, Solaris, etc. On top of each OS I can run X*X*X applications.

      Um....Macs can run X*X*X applications. With Fink, most open source packages can be recompiled and run on a Mac just as if it were linux. You forget that OS X is BSD based, and its compatibility is increasing with every update. Techically, if UNIX is UNIX is UNIX and LINUX is LINUX is LINUX, you weren't limited, except in thinking how to accomplish things. Why not check out OSXguide.com and learn how to handle all the ticky installs. I mean, it shouldn't be much harder the installing a complex software package on Solaris, Unix, Linux, BSD, etc, right?

      My Mac essentially has two choices OSX or Linux from Yellow Dog. Software apps is even worse. I once asked a company selling Linux software to do a simple recompile for OSX. No-go.... While Open Source is great not all packages will configure and build for a PPC chip.

      But the majority will. And OS is nothing but a tool to run software applications. And with the ability to run X apps, as well as Mac apps, Mac users have more software choice then EVER. And more then just a typical *nix user.

      It is just oo frustrating...
      Nope, it is the Mac world is that mono-culture...

      The FBI to this day still gives its field agents PowerBooks. You want to knoow why? Because they're the most flexible laptops in the world. They've had X windows clients/servers (X is not a *nix feature, its a protocol, it can and does run on nearly every platform. people forget this.) It can run Windows (virtual PC), and its had Applications like Tenons Mach Ten (sort of a propritary version of Cygwin) to run Unix apps before OS X had a BSD underbelly. There's nothing that a mac couldn't do that a PC running *nix or windows couldn't.

    3. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      >> With Fink, most open source packages

      That says it all, MOST, not all. So that means if I get a Mac OS-X box I get most of the functionality not all that I could get with a PC. Then if MAYBE the app runs on a MAC, then like you said it is a TRICKY install...

      Macs run a few apps, not MOST. Here are some apps that are not available on a MAC, Visual Slick Edit, Komodo, XMLSpy, etc. These apps run on both Windows and Linux, even with Wine. I bought CrossOver Office so that I could run all of the Windows apps that I use on Linux.

      Maybe I can run Windows apps through some wierd modulation, but most of the time it is slower and does not work.

      Mac OSX notebooks look slick and they have a cool interface. Having used one I am not even against the Mac OSX boxes. BUT, and this is the clincher, when I buy a PC box I can run Windows and Linux, which runs 100% of the applications that I want. So tell me why go from 100% to 80%? Get me MacOSX on Intel and I will buy it...

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    4. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by SerpentMage · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ok, fighting fire with Fire...

      On the PC box I have:

      Windows, Linux (essentially all flavours), BSD's (Free, Open, etc essentially all flavours), GNU Hurd, OS/2, AtheOS, BeOS (many flavours), Plan9, Minix, QNX, Solaris, etc...

      The list goes on for miles and miles and miles... The x86 instruction set is king, it has won hands down. That I think is the essential problem of OS-X. OS-X is a great OS. It is what many OS's should be. Because it is only available of PPC, it becomes a secondary OS.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    5. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Ok, fighting fire with Fire...

      Or just blowing smoke around without any logic...

      Windows, Linux (essentially all flavours), BSD's (Free, Open, etc essentially all flavours), GNU Hurd, OS/2, AtheOS, BeOS (many flavours), Plan9, Minix, QNX, Solaris, etc...

      The list goes on for miles and miles and miles...


      What the heck does that have to do with anything? Especially since a good chunk of those run on PowerPC's?

      The x86 instruction set is king, it has won hands down.

      Uh, whatever dude. I suppose you also think IDE is better than SCSI because its more common?

    6. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by multiOSfreak · · Score: 1

      With all do respect, I don't think anyone will be dissapointed that they can't run AtheOS, Minix, Plan9, or QNX on their PPC machines (and BeOS and OS/2 are of questionable importance).

      Yes, there are many more obscure OSes that you can run on X86 over PPC. But I wasn't arguing that. I was refuting the original statement that there are only two OS options for PPC-based machines.

    7. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by monoqlith · · Score: 1

      I think when people say "OS X is inherently sub-par because it only runs on one platform" they fail to understand Apple's business strategy. OS X is an OS, yes. But Apple doesn't make much(any?) money off of OS X(open source doesn't seem like a good capital investment strategy, really). They make money off of hardware. Apple is not trying to gain market share. They are trying to streamline their entry into key markets, and sell as much hardware as possible to those markets. If they ported OS X to other platforms they would be shooting themselves in the foot, so to speak, because they make all of their profits from hardware systems sales. The bottom line is OS X works beautifully with Apple hardware. It is probably the best system for kids to learn on because Apple had the strongest hand in the principles of modern user interface design, they have tight integration between hardware and software, and it works so fluidly that maintenance is extremely low-cost. We'r enot trying to make kids technological and electrical geniuses(when they grow up, dare I say a much samller amount of people will have to deal with the nitty gritty details of hardware and software.) We just want them to function in a modern world with modern technology using modern design principles. OS X is perfect for this, because most windowing systems, etc function similarly(but not as well.)

    8. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by MacGod · · Score: 2, Funny
      OK, fighting your fire with fire:\

      On a Mac, I have:

      • Mac OS X (who knew?)
      • BSD via Darwin or OpenBSD if you prefer.
      • Linux (Suse, Mandrake, Yellow Dog and probably more that I've missed).
      • BeOS for PowerPC
      • And, of course, good old Virtual PC which, despite being now owned by Microsoft is still a great product, and allows you to run *any* x86-compatible OS on your Mac. And since most of the other OSs you mentioned (OS/2, AtheOS etc) are either old or low-resource, there will be negligible speed hit

      In fact, I would go so far as to say that the Mac is the most-compatible platform out there. Personally, I have six different OSs on my Mac right now (Mac OS X, Mac OS 9.1, 9.2.2, Mandrake Linux, Win98 SE and PC-DOS). And that's not even breaking a sweat.

      --
      "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one " -Albert Einstein
    9. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      >>> What the heck does that have to do with anything? Especially since a good chunk of those run on PowerPC's?

      That is why we do not see eye-to-eye. Why should I pay for something that only gets me "MOST", or "a good chunk". What is the point? If I can get all the diversity I want, 100% with a PC, why should I step down? Nobody has answered that question in all of the posts...

      >>> Uh, whatever dude. I suppose you also think IDE is better than SCSI because its more common?

      No I do not think IDE is better than SCSI. Never said that x86 is better than PPC. I said that x86 instruction set is king because there is much more of it.

      Is IDE king in comparison to SCSI? Absolutely. I like SCSI and use it in one of our servers. But not anymore. With and IDE RAID I have a cheaper more effective solution that SCSI could ever offer.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    10. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      >>> With all do respect, I don't think anyone will be dissapointed that they can't run AtheOS, Minix, Plan9, or QNX on their PPC machines (and BeOS and OS/2 are of questionable importance).

      Aha... So if an OS is of questionable importance then it is should be not considered? Hmmm...

      I do hope you realize that you just said since Apple has only about 2-3% of the annual sales market that a PPC is of QUESTIONAL importance. Since my hardware platform is essential the rest of the market.

      Glad that we can come to an agreement...

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    11. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      That is why we do not see eye-to-eye. Why should I pay for something that only gets me "MOST", or "a good chunk". What is the point? If I can get all the diversity I want, 100% with a PC, why should I step down? Nobody has answered that question in all of the posts...

      Alright, I'll answer it. If you really want to have the option to run a wide variety of operating systems but stick with x86 you are limiting your choices, not expanding them. There are thousands if not hundereds of thousands of operating systems out there, and many of those don't run on x86. You're cutting yourself off from Mac OS X, Irix, AIX, True-64, and thats just the OS. If you complain that Irix and AIX are big bucks, get a used one off of Ebay, it'll probably smoke your current PC in i/o. The PC industry went with x86 because it was cheap, not because it was better; everybody else avoided it and IRQ problems at the same time.

      No I do not think IDE is better than SCSI. Never said that x86 is better than PPC. I said that x86 instruction set is king because there is much more of it.

      Same logic.

      With and IDE RAID I have a cheaper more effective solution that SCSI could ever offer.

      Thats just it, computers are tools for the job. But you seem to be as much of an x86 fanboy as any Apple evangelist is for the Mac platform.

    12. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And hence you start down the ever-present argument for PCs. Which is, succinctly:

      How many word processors do you need?

      You apparently feel that you need a million WPs. That even that isn't enough. And that you need the ability to run them all. Removing the ability to even not run ONE of those WPs is a travesty, and there's just no possible way you can use a computer without being able to run every last one out there (which is ultimately a lie since there are tons of non-x86 WPs, much like every other category out there).

      To which I, and most Mac-friendly people in the world, virtually always reply:

      Focus on accomplishing the task at hand, not at how you accomplish the task.

      The software is only a tool. If you actually take the time to think about what you're doing, you'll find you don't need 500 racheting wrenches - you only need 1, at most 2, to get the job done. Because it's a wrench, for chrissakes, and not using the shiny nickel-plated one you've fallen in love with will not cause the end of fscking world.

      If you actually look at the current OSX application offerings you will find that, when it comes to accomplishing a task, not just playing a whiz-bang gee-whiz going-to-be-on-the-shelf-for-30-days-then-gone-for ever game, OSX can do what you need, and you don't even need to contribute money to the OS monopoly either.

      And remember, I said current. Just because you looked at the state of affairs back when 10.0 came out doesn't mean you know WTF is going on nearly 3 years later.

      What good does having OSX for x86 do if there's no applications? Nobody is going to write software for an x86 OSX. Period. BeOS already went down this road. See what happened to them? Didn't study a lot of history in school, did you?

    13. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by multiOSfreak · · Score: 1
      So if an OS is of questionable importance then it is should be not considered?
      Anything can be considered. But in the grand scheme of things, only important things are important. Does that make sense at all?

      I do hope you realize that you just said since Apple has only about 2-3% of the annual sales market that a PPC is of QUESTIONAL importance.
      I hope you realize that is the most illogical statement I've heard in months. I said nothing of the sort. Yes, a 2-3% market share is less significant than 95%+. But 2-3% is also far more significant than .00004% market share. It's all relative.

      At any rate, this little pissing contest is not what I intended to get into. The bottom line is that there are more than 2 OS options for PPC. Can you agree with that statement?

      Since my hardware platform is essential the rest of the market.
      Well, it's mine, too. I have an X86 machine (2 of them, actually) and a Mac. I like both platforms quite a bit.
    14. Re:But PC's are not mono-culture... by phoenix_rizzen · · Score: 1

      Uh, he wasn't saying that PC's are a monoculture ... he was saying that running a single OS in the entire school (monoculture) was bad.

  146. lemmings. by twitter · · Score: 1
    Riight. You don't like it, so everyone doing it is a lemming. If everyone we buying macs on the other hand, they would definitely not be lemmings.

    Who did Haddad describe as a lemming? Let me refresh you:

    Art Rainwater, superintendent of the Madison (Wis) school district, told the local Capital Times. He conceded that Macs outperform PCs, but he didn't care. "We want a single platform," he said. "We're trying to get there using the carrot, or blackmail, or rewards, or whatever you call it."

    Someone who does not care about price or performance for a given application but wants "a single platform" defined as single vendor, because that's what everone else has, is a lemming. The only advantage M$ has is that it acts like M$ and M$ does not play normal communication standards. That's not a real advantage and it fills no real needs, like getting real work done.

    Haddad has noticed a national trend where dumb central planners in public education are ignoring their teacher's needs and requestes in order to make sure everyone uses Microsoft shit. It's a good article with only a few minor flaws eminating from M$.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  147. I think you need some new friends.... by MadAnthony02 · · Score: 1

    If your friends judge your sexuality by what hardware and operating system you use, I think it's time to get some new friends.

  148. Try $300 Off a $1299 DVD-R Machine by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

    That is our educational discount on Superdrive equipped eMacs (1Ghz/256/80). I just bought an iBook 12"/900/128/40 for $1099 with an Airport card and got an iPod for $69 more ($200 rebate). Our price on the 867Mhz TiBook is $1799 with Airport and an extended warranty. That is a $629 discount.

    --
    It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

    -James Baldwin
  149. Schools *do* kill young learners early by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    As a kid in school, the trend was to "just pass the test". I never got answers to many hard questions, unless I went digging for the information myself.

    I remember clearly the day I learned to think for myself:

    Third grade, about the middle of the year. At home, I had been getting interested in magnets and electronics. Took apart some of electronic toys wondered about all the little bits inside. I asked about these things, but did not get many answers. (Not the teachers fault, they really did not know either!)

    One day during a trip to the library, I wandered into the "big kids" section. Just was not in the mood for another "Space Cat" story. Saw lots of good books and was interested. During this time, I happened to stumble upon a book titled "The Boys First Book of Electronics". "Man, this was the book for me", I thought on the way to checkout.

    I was told, I was too young for that book. Could not possibly read it, so I can't have it. I was told I needed to check out one of the same sort of books the other kids were. They fsking knew I was interested in these things because I got into trouble many times for having them in class. (Batteries, motors and such.)

    We were all shown the dictionary and how to use it. New words were not a problem, you just looked them up. Keep doing that and the text will become clear. Isn't that what we are supposed to be doing? I explained some of this, thought about the rest and was in general confused and very angry. I remember thinking these people really don't give a shit as long as you get what they need you to get done.

    Fuck that. I stole that book and read it cover to cover. I still have it. Sometimes I see it and remember why I took it. --It still pisses me off.

    I spent many hours reading and re-reading that book, but it was worth it. The following year, I fixed several fans, and other simple electronics I found broken around the house. Things went pretty well from there. Had a HAM license, learned to program computers, and even helped develop classroom plans and deliver instruction to my peers in computer classes using LOGO and Pascal.

    My High School experience was good however. They let me do all sorts of things I found important provided I tow the line on responsibility, citizenship and ethics. Things are not all bad, just spotty.

    Our computer teacher found us programming and messing with the machines instead of using the programmed instruction disks. (He let us see the manuals.) Instead of slapping us down, he told us to let him know what we were trying to do, then made us get it done if we could. Our grade was an "A" provided we were learning something. Given the newness of computers at the time, this was an interesting approach.

    Did us a lot of good too. Learned to program in assembly (6502 Apple II). Before I left school, I knew that machine inside and out.

    I feel the damage happens when people are young. Strained budgets, mandated instruction, and the schools inability to deal with problem kids due to potential lawsuits all combine to produce an environment of such boring conformity, most kids die inside before they reach age 10... I see signs of it in mine. My math experiences are similar to yours. (Why do they show that goofy stuff when the tried and true methods will always work just fine?)

    I was one of those problem kids. Just stubborn enough to make my own way. All the trouble was worth it for me. Funny, all the "problems" went away when the environment changed enough to allow creative learning to happen.

    I always wanted to be a teacher because I want to help young people learn without the hassle I got.

    What stops me?

    The sorry state of our schools today. (Not the teachers --most of them are good people trying to do their best.) Better to get kids involved after school when they have a chance to get some real learning done.

    I am not sure you could pay me enough to deal with that mess. It is highly likely that same mess is why your classes are the way they are.

  150. ...tap....tap... Ummm... I did. by hexhacker · · Score: 1

    Umm.. I did. Of course, I didn't have OSX to learn on, but I had Slackware. and FreeBSD, and the Solaris copy I got for the cost of the media. I learned enough about *NIXes, and their imitators, that I was able to consult right out of high school, doing system admin type work for a few local companies... (tuning, maintenance, a few bash scripts here and there).. I can honestly say that my first year out of high school, I pulled six figures, and I owe it to the availability of free (or reduced-cost) UNIXes, and variants thereof. Kudos to apple for spreading the *nix-lovin... More power to 'em.

    --
    ----- Serious people have few ideas. People with ideas are never serious. - Paul Valery
  151. Arguement for P.C. in school is weak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I learned on Ti99, Commodore Pet/64, and Apple IIe.. When it came time to learn something new, it wasn't hard to pick it up at all.

    Really a shame, the worst thing Apple has going for them is price. I switched to Linux last year when I need to upgrade and found that I could save close to $1500 on a new decently built AMD system with amazing graphics and huge harddrive/memory. I'm not a graphic designer so being tired to Adobe products wasn't an issue. I miss BBEdit the most but have found suitable replacements for most of the apps I used before. One of my favorite pasttimes before was hacking the UI with resedit. The level of customization is much high (and needed to make a usable desktop on Linux).

  152. Something everyone is missing... by evilviper · · Score: 1, Troll

    I don't think anybody is thinking about this the right way at all... Teaching students how to use a computer (or a computer program) should not be a goal, in and of itself.

    Teachers should be teaching their students how to create a spreadsheet, the fact that they are doing it with Excel should just be a footnote, and even the fact that they are using a computer to do it should not be a primary factor at all.

    A better example: The goal of teaching students how to use iMovie should be to teach them how to edit movies... The software that they use to do it matters very little, the operating system matters very little, and even the fact that it is being done with a computer shouldn't matter much at all...

    With that said, if teaching students how to edit video, create a spreadsheet, etc., is easier on a Mac than a PC, then why should a PC even be considered? Should I be forced to write with a #2 pencil just because everyone else does?

    Learning Excel for the sake of learning Excel is the equivalent of high-tech masturbation. It's as if your only goal in life, is to have a goal in life... There is no sense to it at all in public schools.

    The public school system is not a 13-year-long trade-school. The goal is education of an individual, not marketable corporate skills. Maybe that's one of the primary reasons the U.S. education system is FAILING. Instead of actually educating kids, they teach them to memorize and recite facts. The education system is in a poor state, and this idea of computer monoculture is a great example of the symptoms experienced by a school with a serious problem. It is likely a school where the administrators don't undertand what their jobs are, and students aren't actually being educated at all.

    Even if we are to believe that schools legitimately wanted to provide students with experience on the systems used in corporations, and suspend logic to believe that it was a laudable goal, then we still run into the question of why are schools using Windows 98 instead of 2000? Win 98 certainly isn't popular in companies at all, so what's the point? Also, why are they locking down computers so tightly that students can't actually get any experience on computer, if that is really the goal? And why aren't they teaching any useful and valuable skills, instead of crap like Word and Excel?

    I think uniformity, and "using what's used in corporations" is a red herring, and much of this comes down to simple payola, and other Microsoft lobbying efforts that convice educators that is might be reasonable.

    Disclaimer: Much of this content comes from some of my replies to other comments. I thought the content was important enough that I should give it it's own thread, and more exposure on the main thread, rather than less-trafficed areas. Please moderate/reply to this one, and ignore the others.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  153. Lab Usage by Darth_Burrito · · Score: 1

    I've been out of high school for six or seven years now, but one thing I remember from back then was that students and definitely some teachers did not like using the Mac lab. During my three years at the high school, I spent maybe a total of two hours in that lab. Each time a group would visit the lab, they would spend the first several minutes trying to figure out how to do simple things like locate the web browser. We never had enough exposure to those machines to develop any skills with them and our lack of skills tainted the usefulness of the time we had with them. At least in my mind, it would be impossible to construe that lab, which contained the only new computers on campus, as a success.

    On the other hand, we did have some more successful computer labs. For instance, the intro programming courses (basic and pascal) were taught in a lab full of old 486's. Since we spent an entire semester working with these machines, they became extremely useful. Incidentally, I went on to major in computer science, spend two years working in industry, and am just now returning to grad school.

    Another semi-successful lab we had was a writing lab populated by old 386's and 486's with word perfect installed. Like the Mac lab, we didn't go here very often. There were maybe one or two class trips there and a lot of before class printing out of essays and papers. Word Perfect was what I had used at home for several years so for me, it was a breeze to go in and get out quickly. Other classmates without wp experience might not have shared my enthusiasm for this lab but surely you can see the utility of familiar software.

    I guess what I am trying to say is, there is a place and time in school systems where it makes sense to have particular operating systems. If computers are incidental to the course, then they should run systems the students will be familiar with (cough windows). If computers are central to the course, then perhaps they should run whatever operating system would be best for the courses they are used for. I would recommend linux for programming and maybe macs for graphic classes.

    Note, I think if you work on a campus where students constantly use computers, it would be ok to standardize on a non windows platform for general purpose computing needs just so long as the amount of time spent familiarizing oneself to the system is trivial compared to the time spent using the system. Of course, with the improvements in usability over the past six or seven years, maybe these things aren't that big of a deal anymore.

  154. people by jbolden · · Score: 1

    The problem I find most techs have with Macs are the same thing I see they have with Linux and other 'minor' OSes...they are dumbasses that have only ever had to deal with one OS their entire life discarding every other machine out there. Instead of learning how to use an operating system, they learn how to use Windows by rote. Well you ALWAYS do blah by blahing it. No sense of learning how to do something or figuring it out on their own. Problem solving is not something that most PC / Windows users are good at.

    That's true of most people in most professions. Understanding why to do X is much more difficult than how to do X so most things are learned on a "how to do" not a "why to do" basis. IT techs are not system administrators. So his questions is not unreasonable at all.

    zOS doesn't market itself as an easy to use operating system. Mac does.

  155. Hadn't heard of MacsBug by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *Sigh* And you probably stuff every freeware piece of crap known to man into them... which is likely -causing- the problem. Same for games. Load old games on a Mac OR a PC and you're in for a ride from hell. Mismanaging any platform causes trouble - period.

    1. Re:Hadn't heard of MacsBug by zenquest · · Score: 1

      And you probably stuff every freeware piece of crap known to man into them... which is likely -causing- the problem. Same for games. Load old games on a Mac OR a PC and you're in for a ride from hell.

      Yeah, that's what I'm doing with our production systems here. I didn't think the kids had enough Flash web games, so I thought I'd load up some more. Actually, the apps that give us the most grief are MS Office, especially Equation Editor, and Inspiration.

  156. "info-tech managers" gaaahhh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "That led to the rise of today's modern info-tech manager. His or her mission was to impose uniformity, ensuring that every computer bowed to the all-powerful network."

    What's Apple doing to reach out to these people?

    I've been buying nothing but macs for my school for years, and our local Apple Education rep is a TOTAL IDIOT. It's like the company is telling you that they just don't care at all.

  157. You don't need to use Windows to learn it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was a Mac-exclusive user until 6 months ago. I wanted a machine to play games with. After spending a month learning about the various models of computers, I bought an Athlon jobbie with fairly loaded specs. I'd never had a PC at home before then, but I thought it'd work out somehow.

    Learning how to change the settings, mess around with the start menu, change the registry, set up printers and a wireless network, put Firebird in place of IE, etc, took approximately 3 days.

    Then I started reading the futuremark forums, and updated my VIA drivers, learned how to overclock my processor and RAM and all that fun stuff, optimize the computer for gaming, etc.

    Now I know more about PC hardware than I ever wanted to. I'm still not that confident of my windows programming expertise, but hell - you're not going to learn how to make programs with GUIs in high school, anyway.

    Basically, I learned enough to be a Windows System Admin in about a week. Windows isn't rocket science. The lessons you learn on the Mac side can be carried over to the PC side and vice versa. Programs change so quickly that if you train yourself on a specific program, and don't generalize, you'll be rendered helpless when the program gets updated. People should be exposed to as many different operating systems as possible, and work on as many different systems as possible, so that when the new stuff comes out, they'll have no problems adjusting. I mean, heck, the gap between OS 9 and OS X is bigger than that of Mac and Windows right now.

  158. Obligatory Simpsons Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Two "independent thought" alarms in one day? Willie, the children are overstimulated. Removed the colored chalk from the classrooms!"

  159. Apples and Oranges by serutan · · Score: 1

    Computer usage in classrooms is very different from computer usage in offices. It's nice from a management point of view to have one set of maintenance skills, but consolidating functions doesn't always make sense to do that. You have facilities people who work on heating systems and you have facilities people who work on landscaping. You might be able to find people to do both things, but you don't manipulate the heating system or the landscaping just to make that possible.

    Or maybe a better example would be that school district HR departments don't handle student discipline and tardiness problems, even though they do handle those problems with employees.

  160. Richman's "Separating School and State" by JimBobJoe · · Score: 1

    I would recommend reading Sheldon Richman's book "Separating School and State" as a primer on the issues affecting education.

    It discusses the idea that the model of our public school system is Prussian, a model specficially designed to make children uninterested, fatigued dopes, with a small percentage of them who can thrive in that terribly unnatural environment.

    One of my favorite quotes from it is "The overwhelming evidence shows that American schools have never achieved more than they currently achieve." (Gerald Bracey)

    The book obviuosly has a strong Libertarian bent, you may not like all of it, but the history makes for great reading.

  161. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator by jbolden · · Score: 1

    This is actually a more general problem and not specific to teaching. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) classified people based on 4 variables. People hire people whose personalities are similar to their's. In America the most common female personality is ESFJ and most common male is ESTJ. Unless for some other reason an institution creates bias in hiring within a few generations the institutional personality will always be ESXJ. ESXJs believe in structure, rules, conformity....

    Now what is specific to teaching is that teaching especially in lower grades is biased and attracts SJs so the problem is even worse in schools.

  162. Yes it is a lot to ask. by PotatoHead · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Good points.

    I guess what is missing is K-12 basic computer science. We are showing kids how to get other things done with the computer, but are not showing them anything about the nature of the computer itself.

    Many of the educators today are not really capable of this and they should be.

    In that, I agree with you.

    However, working with a couple different platforms just from a user perspective is a good thing and can be done today. The kids will get the idea of computing by inference, not the details mind you, but the basic idea of differences. It will affect their learning process in a good way.

    Instead of asking where is the start bar, for example, they might just ask how to navigate to the applications. By inference they will understand at some level that applications are different than computing systems...

    Every last one of them should be shown the command line. Again, by inference, they will learn about parts of the computer that will help them in later more specialized learning.

    At the college level, they better damn well be able to show these things, otherwise why pay? (seriously)

    1. Re:Yes it is a lot to ask. by jbolden · · Score: 1

      By inference they will understand at some level that applications are different than computing systems...

      Reread my post:
      Do you teach systems where the OS and application level are seperate or use things like Symbolics or QNX where they are the same?

      Applications and computing systems aren't naturally seperate. They are identical for analog computers, many embedded systems. In some ways in the 1980s they really weren't different. On PCs in effect you had people who ran WordPerfect OS or Lotus OS. GUIs confuse the issue much further. Is KDE and application or an OS?

      My point about broadness is that what seems obvious to teach isn't the moment you actually try and teach it and very quickly you'll go over the heads of what teachers are capable of teaching.

    2. Re:Yes it is a lot to ask. by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

      Fair enough.

      Again, I go back to basic stuff. Lets say we frame it this way:

      Lets take a couple different platforms. (K-12) Things that are in general use. (Linux, win32, OS X)

      If they understand on some level what the parts of those are, understanding other things later will be easier. They do not have to get all the parts exactly right, nor do they need to understand each part.

      Each of these topics you present have a *lot* of depth. Just don't cover it! Present a couple well chosen *easy* models to learn from and go from there. (Pretend that they are seperate for instructional purposes. It won't hurt them at all.)

      If the kids ask really hard questions, there is always Google for both the student and the teacher acting as mentor for the learning.

      --It will do them both good. This synergy is exactly what happened long ago when I started. Rather than pretend to know all, our teacher guided the learning while learning himself. --Next years class (Ours was the first) was a whole lot better.

      I am not going to disagree with you in that your core argument is sound. Teachers by and large cannot really teach this stuff. And it is hard to teach.

      I will however hold this position:

      1. It needs to be taught at a basic level being careful to avoid the depth that will need to come later. Think of it as basic K-12 computer science to go along with other general science. Taught the same way. Just enough to give a kid some ground rules to work with, without really going into the depth required for full understanding of the topic at hand.

      2. Our teachers are behind the curve. The current body of common knowledge includes examples of each of your topics. Maybe not with the diversity you indicate however.

      3. We really should do something about 1 and 2, because it can be done and would do our kids and teachers some good to go through the experience.

      Again, at college level, they should be able to cover these sort of things; otherwise why pay? Google is only a netconnection away...

  163. MacOS X School Labs by ghibertii · · Score: 2, Interesting

    (Note: I do know that many of things below are capable on other platforms)

    I am a consultant that supports numerous K-12 schools and one of my clients, a High School, is very happy they standardized on Mac OS X. The school had used cheap PC's in the past running Windows 98 and were looking to upgrade. They were getting no support from the district and the machines barely ran and were constantly infected by virus and students P2P software. The teachers pushed to have Apple systems purchased and the district finally obliged. They received 250 new machines and hired me to get everything functioning.

    There are 1800+ students and 65 faculty that I support by myself using a combination of Mac OS X Server and open source tools. On the server side I use Apple's Admin Tools, Apache, PHP, MySQL, Radmind, (a suite of Unix command-line tools and a server designed to remotely administer the file systems of multiple Unix machine), Moodle, Carbon Copy Cloner, NetRestore and PHP iCal. All of these items are free or ship with OS X Server which saves the district a lot of money. Their are four OS X Servers that are all administered remotely which helps save them money by not having to have me at school all day long. They have a problem, they e-mail me, I fix it.

    All of the client machines are running 10.2.6 and a variety of proprietary, shareware, freeware, and open source software. The school really likes the amount of free and or shareware software I have installed. Here is a brief list of some of the freeware apps I install, Aquatomic, Franklin, EdenGraph, Physics 101, Trade Strategist, Stop Motion Studio and there are so many more but I won't bore you. (they also utilize all of Apple's free apps including iCal, iMovie, iDVD, and iPhoto) I manage all log-ins, downloads, apps that can and can not be used, who can use which machines, and mount home directories all from the OS X Servers. This set-up saves the schools bandwidth by not allowing students to download, install, and run their P2P software.

    I am not going to tell you this is a perfect set-up, or that everything works the way it should, but I can tell you that using OS X in a large school setting is a cost saver in terms of IT support when done properly. The district cannot believe how easily I manage all of these machines and is now considering implementing similar set-ups in other schools.

  164. Need a redesigned education machine by tknn · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I agree that one of the main problems with the eMac is expense. The integrated monitor is also a major problem for most IT departments, they already have an investment in a bunch of monitors, why can't they use those? And contrary to most people's statements here, there are two things that everyone is going to do with these machines that matter: word-process and surf the web. Yes, schools teach photoshop and maya and whatever else. However, it is easier for Apple to sell them specialized hardware in fields where they are strong. Apple gets screwed by not having all of those cheap word-processing machines. Once cheap Windows boxes start taking over that field the administrators start thinking how to get them to do everything.

  165. Apple Reality Distortion Field at Wor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, and the Apple Reality Distorion Field comes out . . .

    People are not chucking their Macs, the pie has grown in the last five years

    Perhpas, but people aren't buying Macs, either.

    Macintosh sales, in absolute terms, have declined since the peak under Michael Spindler. Apple was selling 4 million units a year in 1994/1995/1996; since then it's been selling roughly 3 million units a year, with one outlier in the maximum year of the Internet bubble (2000).

    1. Re:Apple Reality Distortion Field at Wor by twitter · · Score: 1
      A silly AC posts the strange claim:

      Macintosh sales, in absolute terms, have declined since the peak under Michael Spindler. Apple was selling 4 million units a year in 1994/1995/1996; since then it's been selling roughly 3 million units a year, with one outlier in the maximum year of the Internet bubble (2000).

      Don't forget to add ipod sales, close to 4 million units in 2002. It's the thing that has Apple revenues higher than anytime in the last 4 years or so.. If sales units are down and revenue is up, great. Me oh my, revenue up in a stagnant IT market more than it was in the "buble" market? Yep, this is the Apple rebound.

      Expect it to eat M$'s lunch. Between free software for routine office work and xterminals, Apple for digital media and xterm work, where is Microsoft's nitch? The M$ damb was breached years ago, there's little to hold it up besides DRM and no one wants that. Where you going to go when the levee breaks? Flush goes M$.

      --

      Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  166. Tutoring math... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Sometimes I tutor the 7th grade son of a friend of mine; he has pretty major trouble understanding (pre-)algebra and I've become totally convinced it's his math teacher. The teacher has his own usually very unusual and confusing methods for solving problems, and every time I try to teach the kid a different method he can understand, he complains to me, "But this isn't how the teacher showed us how to do it. If I don't do it his way he'll MARK ME DOWN!" How much of a self-obsessed a*hole is the teacher that that HIS methods have to be the One True Way? (his methods tend to mirror the CPM book they use - I remember these same books because they got their inaugural test-run in MY 7th grade class - and they were such pieces of crap they were universally hated). In the middle of the last school year, I helped this boy study for his end-of-semester math final. We spent two entire days working on math, and by the end he was VAGUELY beginning to get it, but I had trouble completely unteaching his teacher's stupid ideas. His end-of-semester report came home from the teacher two weeks later:
    "Billy is a hard worker and though he has some problems paying attention in my class, he's usually well-behaved. He has always had trouble with pre-algebra, but I'm glad to see he could pull it together for this final. His average for all the other tests this year was a D+, and that was with corrections [side note - this teacher lets them take tests home after they've been graded to REDO the problems they got wrong - they essentially take each test twice, once at home with their books and notes, so there's no drive to LEARN the stuff for the tests] and on the final he got a C, without corrections! I'm impressed! Unfortunately I also see he seems to be learning things that are not being taught in class, and I'm afraid it might confuse him or other students. All the important ideas can be found in the class textbook and the notes, please remember to study those."
    You can imagine how much I want to go wring his neck... I've tried to explain the stupidity to his parents, but they can't believe there might be a flaw in his expensive (very) private school education (They also have a math tutor at the school that the boy uses to help with his homework: more than once while I was trying to TEACH the kids so he could understand what he was trying to do on his homework, his reply was "Why can't you just give me the answers like the tutor does?").
    1. Re:Tutoring math... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ah, CPM. College Preparatory Math -- the math that in no way prepares you for college. If your class, or your child's class, uses these texts, I'm sorry.

      For the unfamiliar, CPM believes in teaching with word problems. EVERYTHING is a word problem. Also, if you don't understand the problem, you should first ask your group, since all students care about learning things correctly, right? And the testing system, "sig tests," allowed students five or six tries to get any particular test problem right. It was a system designed to pull up the slow students at the expense of the average and above-average students.

      The books relied heavily on in-class instruction to explain the material, with the consequence that concepts were rarely explained thoroughly. One could not read ahead, since a chapter that hadn't been explained in class was worthless. On occasion, a problem would ask the student to solve a problem, such as a logarithm, using algebraic skills, only to reveal on the next page that the problem was impossible and required a new skill. It only frustrated the students more.

      I took algebra in 8th grade and skipped it in high school, so I was amazed to see how weak the geometry students were with algebra. Small wonder -- you have to do a lot of algebra by rote to let it sink in. So if the math book never explains the concepts and uses word problems exclusively, how are you supposed to grasp abstract concepts? In geometry, at least, there are tangible shapes to be looked at. The one thing I learned from CPM was how to draw functions by looking at the equations.

      We couldn't get rid fo the program, since the Algebra II instructor was the editor for at least one of the books. In trigonometry, we were the pilot group for their trig/pre-calc book. I remember one chapter that said it would start to introduce us to college-level teaching -- by using the same writing style we hadn't seen since eighth grade! And then, when we were short on time, the teacher decided that we should skip the chapter dealing with vectors and matrices (who uses those?) and do a SECOND chapter on logarithmic shortcuts. Unfortunately, some of us had asked a friend's dad, who showed us the simple shortcut to logarithms. We were no worse for leaning it, except when the teacher told us we couldn't use it because we hadn't "learned" it yet.

      CPM is a mire of crap from front to back. It exemplifies every lazy, misguided practice in mathematics teaching. And it looks good on tests because the students get plenty of chances to fail, then pass later. What that meant in practice was that students could fail every problem once, see the correct answer, and copy it for every subsequent test to get a perfect score.

  167. Reason for not looking ahead by bluGill · · Score: 1

    Did you ever ask why the hard way was tought first? In calculis Derivitives are taught as limit problems for the first week, even though that is the hard way, because it is much easier to understand derivities in application as a limit problem, than by using the short cut. (If all you knew was the derivitive of x^2 is x, you know nothing even though everyone does it that way)

    Third grade has the same problems, just on a diiferent level. Sometimes you need to know the hardway first before you can go to the easy way.

    1. Re:Reason for not looking ahead by admiralh · · Score: 1

      Um, the derivative of x^2 is 2x .

      Your friendly neighborhood pedant.

      --
      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
  168. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  169. Damned if you do, damned if you don't... by Infonaut · · Score: 1
    As this opinion piece from 1996 indicates, the education market is a market that will never be more than a niche in the overall computer industry, much less in the whole "information'' sector.

    The author lambastes Apple for putting too much emphasis on the education market, and misunderstanding that the opportunity cost of dominating that market was too high.

    Ironic, innit?

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  170. The word for an actual IT admin in a school by falcon5768 · · Score: 2, Informative
    Apple is staying put here, but not because of my boss!!

    See I as have my other techs, have always felt Apple was the absolute BEST platform for elementary school students. The abuse those machines get (three CD's in one drive, Juice box gunk in the keyboard) and yet on adverage we lose maybe 2 or 3 iMacs a year (all bondi blues surprisingly, I have only lost one slot load to an actual motherboard getting fried, although I have had to replace 5 or 10 cd-rom drives, my favorite, no you cant put your ham in the CD-Rom, no I do not kid!!!)

    For a long time we we where a tri-platform school, Windows in the high school and with the secretaries, macs in the middle school and elemetary school (with a few in the highschool for video and graphics courses.) and two machines running linux for a management software called SAMS.

    In comes our new tech adviser to help us expand everything, what does he do, tries to get rid of all 2500 iMacs we have and buy computers from Dell, to supliment our 250 PC's. Yes thats right trash BRAND NEW computers in some cases just to make everything two platform (he tried to trash the linux boxes but was hit with a block when we showed him SAMS only works good on linux)

    Its not IT people who make these desicions, its administators, some of whom have never taught in a classroom (this guy doesnt even have a degree in education) who make stupid decision without asking "why are you running things like that?"

    After seeing that we only had one part time IT member for the Mac's though and 3 full time and 3 part time staff members for the PC's( in all fareness we all do all three platforms but we have specializations I the mac guy, and everyone else specialized in some perticular way with a part of the OS or network admin), the board of education made him back down or risk getting his contracts ripped up, and as it is after its up he is probably not comming back, but still this is the situation you run into, and IT staff sometimes gets little more say than yes sir no sir.

    Heck even when I suggested getting eMacs cause they where cheaper (we could buy more software or equipment for the teachers, or dare I say TRAINNING since they where using OS X instead of 9) I was turned down cause they wanted the fancy iMacs that my assistant super. had. Forget I ever try to save them money again!!!

    Itrs annoying, but you just have to play the system.

    --

    "Slashdot, where telling the truth is overrated but lying is insightful."

  171. Apple school administrators are stubborn by kylef · · Score: 1
    OSX works very well with Windows and Unix network shares meaning no third party software to provide such support. OSX Server is very well priced per client than Windows Server 2003 or 2000 Server. The OSX Server can also provide services for Linux, Unix, and Windows systems as well as Macs.

    I spent about two weeks trying to help a small private high school (about 200 students) near Memphis, TN get their systems online because the school year had already begun and they couldn't get their new infrastructure to work.

    The school was tech-heavy. Every student was issued an IBM Thinkpad with WinXP, much to the chagrin of the school's IT director, who was an Apple "distinguished educator" (she had requested iBooks but the Board of Directors had vetoed her, citing numerous parental complaints).

    But here's the curious part. When it came to servers, she decided to go with 3 OSX Server machines, to the tune of almost $5000 each. They were to run file shares, email servers, a web server, and some library database software the school already had.

    To make a long story short, it was a mess. She and her assistant had no clue how to administer the Windows laptops. They had no idea what a domain was. Their experience setting up Appleshare networks with AtEase for authentication just didn't prepare them for administering a real heterogenous network.

    The file sharing was the real problem. The IT director eventually broke down and bought a Win2k domain controller for the Windows machines for authentication and print services. But the OSX file server could not seem to use the Windows domain controller for authentication. The students not only needed a domain account, but also needed separate OSX accounts just to get to their file shares. The problem lay in Apple's LDAP authentication implementation, which did not integrate with Samba very well. Authenticating the OSX users over LDAP worked, but it refused to authenticate the WinXP users. And this was a problem because the students needed to access the file shares from their laptops. Apple did not have a nice, GUI way to configure such a situation.

    The whole time this was happening, I just kept thinking how her $15,000 could have been much better spent buying a few PCs and a few copies of Win2k Server. They probably would have had a few $thousand leftover to send her assistant to some Windows administration classes. Her decision to buy Apple OSX Servers was more like a stubborn attempt to get back at the Board of Directors. At each problem that came up, she always blamed the Windows machines because "she'd never run into such problems in her old Apple lab." Nevermind that her old Apple lab was trivial...

  172. and on to my University tail by falcon5768 · · Score: 1
    Yes I know this is TWO replies, but the kids saying they only wanted to use windows spurred me to write a second response.

    Back when I started college (im going onto my 5th year thanks to NJ's education schooling laws, I can have a 2.0 in general education to be a doctor but have to have almost a 3.0 in general ed to be a teacher, despite having a 4.0 in your respective field AS a teacher. btw I actually have a 3.4 in gen ed, but it was more cause I had to take my classes spread out among the 132 credits NJ requires)

    anyway, when we started out, my school had 5 OS's!!! Windows was number 1 ovbiously, with Mac OS 8/9 (they really didnt keep up admin on them) with Solaris, Red Hat, and one other *nix I cant remeber (think it might have been IBM's)

    Well to use your email, which you really had to do, you NEEDED to learn unix, cause guess what everything was done in telnet/terminal on PINE!!!! Wanted to use a graphic freindly program??? FUCK YOU IT said we aint helping you you need to lear PINE.

    Well things have changed and I think for the worse, we have a webmail server now, and a lot of our nix's have well been nixed, and you know how the student population is now? DUMB SHITS!!!! they have trouble logging into a computer when before they were forced to learn they dont even care.

    Trust me your going to be a goddsend when you come to college (if you do) if you learn Mac, Win, and at least two good *nix's, you will never want for a job cause your friends and teachers will PAY YOU to help them (I make 200 a week easy thanks to friends refuring me to help them cause IT is so swamped)

    So dont buy into the one platform phil, get good at a few, trust me you will be happy you did!!!

    --

    "Slashdot, where telling the truth is overrated but lying is insightful."

  173. Here's what you're missing. by dbirchall · · Score: 1

    Yes, yes, of course people are doing the Linux thing when they need a compute cluster, render farm, or whatever. (Well, maybe not the render farm, since OS support for the Mac's 128-bit vector processing unit might sway things a bit in that case.)

    But... people, be they K-12 students or scientists, generally don't have cyberpunk neural implants directly linked to those compute clusters, render farms, or whatever, just yet. That means they use one of those things we quaintly call a (fanfare) desktop computer.

    Unlike a compute cluster node, that so-called desktop computer typically does all sorts of silly things that would make it a lousy compute cluster node. Like running one or more displays, handling a GUI, spending lots of time waiting for user input, and so on.

    And, be they students or scientists, odds are those users want to do various and sundry things with those desktop computers. They probably receive documents, or have to create documents, in a format that Microsoft Office likes (whether they want to or not), so being able to handle that is important. And they probably either know, or should learn, how to use Windows. But they probably also know, or should learn, how to use a Mac, and to some extent, UNIX. And their best bet for doing all those things on a single box is, currently, a Mac.

  174. Computers are like cars . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... They are great tools, but, they don't belong in the classroom.

  175. Best to have options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My wife is a high school counselor. Last week everyone of their windows boxes had to be shut down due to the nice little wormy that is freaking everyone out. The only computers up and running were the iMacs. This was also during registration -- the busiest time of the year for their computers. Apparently one of the tech support guys really did not appreciate my wifes constant razzing -- "If we had more Macs this wouldn't be a problem!" (I have taught her well!) I don't see them going to all windows anytime soon.

    It also goes to show if you put all of your money on one thing -- when that one thing breaks -- you are screwed.

    Scott
    "Let the Wookie win"

  176. argh by SHEENmaster · · Score: 1

    I'd move to Australia, but you guys would probably evict me within the year. How much could trans-continental shipping of 30 computers cost?

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
  177. And then there is pezophilia... by douglasq · · Score: 1

    An unnatural act with a PEZ dispenser.

    --
    "Form should follow function...unless it's just plain ugly."
  178. one big problem for Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At my university, the IT people have left a bunch of original G3s up and running with no maintenence. Most of them hang and crash constantly from years of misuse. Meanwhile, Dell gave a bunch of brand new but crippled machines, so even though I'm a mac user, I have to go to the Windows machines to actually work.

  179. Also in North Carolina. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, the school situation isn't the only reason, but it is one of the reasons. I am not so sure I could be that successful a parent with all the screwed up influences and problems.

    I'm the AC who urged you to have kids, and I'm also in NC.

    There isn't a better place on the face of this earth to raise kids: Get yourself a farmhouse out in the country, with maybe 10 acres of fields, and forests, and streams, and kiss those big city screwed up influences and problems goodbye.

    I assume that if you're a /. regular, both you and your wife have college degrees. Who do you think would do a better job of raising your children: You and she, or some rigidly idiotic career bureaucrat from the government schools?

    Have kids! The world needs more of them. Teach them yourself. Hell, they'll be reading by the age of three, doing algebra at eight or nine, graduating from high school at twelve...

    Why anyone would want to lock their children in some government school hellhole, filled with drugs, pregnancy, STDs, sexual predators, bully-ism, illiteracy, government propaganda & disinformation, and the overbearing peer pressure to underperform, is beyond me, as is the answer to the question of how any parent could possibly part with their children for six, eight, or ten hours a day.

    Have kids! Teach them yourself. Enjoy life! It's the best thing there is.

    1. Re:Also in North Carolina. by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      There isn't a better place on the face of this earth to raise kids: Get yourself a farmhouse out in the country, with maybe 10 acres of fields, and forests, and streams, and kiss those big city screwed up influences and problems goodbye.

      We live out in the country on 3.5 acres now. Most of my neighbors are just as weird as the people in Greensboro. Although I love and prefer the country, its not much safer or different. I just have more space between me and the nuts around me.

      I assume that if you're a /. regular, both you and your wife have college degrees. Who do you think would do a better job of raising your children: You and she, or some rigidly idiotic career bureaucrat from the government schools?

      I am a regular from way back, but neither of us have degrees, even tho both of us are educated. I have always had problems learning in a structured environment, yet I am self taught, and run a marketing dept for a manufacturer, and a fairly good IT man. I have spent a great deal of time furthering my own education. My wife runs a pawnshop we own, and is quite bright. I agree we would do a better job than public schools could do, just as I don't want someone working for $7 an hour at a daycare having the responsibility of instilling moral values in my kids.

      I agree that I would not want my kids to be in the schools here near northwest of Greensboro (which is considered the nicer part of this area by a large margin). I just don't know that I can overcome all the influences here. Its not low selfconfidence, its the reality of what parents are up against here.

      I'm a hardheaded conservative about some things, such as one of us staying at home with the kid until the child starts school. I would consider home schooling, but that is a sacrifice that would come back to haunt us later when it became time for the child to go to college. I don't believe in "hoping for a scholarship", I believe in saving and preparing. If the child received a scholarship, all the better, but don't bank on it. So, having half the income (or even 2/3rds) does make it harder to save for college. I guess I would probably consider private school first because either of us can more than earn enough to pay for it. We live on half of what we make now, save the rest, we would just save less if paying for private school. Also, the value of interacting with others kids is real, as long as it is in a good environment, like a private school can provide (ie: no drug dealing at school, less violence, etc)

      Also, I don't think I would make a good teacher, to be honest. I have respect for those than are good teachers. I would be involved with the child's studies but that doesn't mean I would be a good teacher. I have no problem with home schools, and support your right as a parent, 100%, and I KNOW home schooled children do well later in life, often because of the motivation of their parents to provide a firm foundation.

      But I'm still not gonna have kids ;D

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    2. Re:Also in North Carolina. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fundamentally, the lack of desire to have children comes from lack of alturism, despite what other alibies one gives oneself.

    3. Re:Also in North Carolina. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I wanted to say that, but I thought maybe I should just keep my mouth shut.

  180. Do you want to know why Apple lost the schools? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    One word Skully.

    During the mid and late 1990s I worked for a fairly big Apple authorized dealer. In fact, before Skully this particular business made several million dollars worth of Apple sales per year.

    Back in the day, before Skully, schools made their purchases from Apple authorized dealers. Apple deeply discounted the hardware to the dealers who were making educational sales so that they made a profit margin on the equipment. Schools got better prices than the soccer mom who was going to the same dealer.

    Skully thought that if they eliminated the middle man, Apple could sell equipment for the same price and keep the profits that had been going to the dealers.

    His plan backfired. Schools had already developed relationships with the dealers. Though it is true that Apple was keeping more of the profits from each sale, the total number of sales fell through the floor. When a school had come to establish a relationship with a dealer that they trusted and that dealer could no longer sell them Apples the schools were interested to know what hardware the dealer could sell them.

    Instead of Apple, Apple, Apple. Dealers (like the one I worked for) started to push Compaq, HP, and whitebox solutions. Not because they didn't think Apple was good anymore, but because they couldn't make any money unless they were selling something else. When I was trying hard to get a sale from a school, what I would do is emphasize the cost savings of purchasing 200 Compaq Deskpros over 200 PowerMac 7300s. I'd tell the school how they'd save so many thousands of dollars up front, and many more over the life of the equipment. When the change took place, Apple was still using SCSI exclusively on their 'professional' level machines. So that was another areas where I could illustrate a cost savings by going with Compaq or HP. SCSI vs IDE. 10 HP printers vs the cost of 10 Apple Laserwriters was a losing proposition for Apple as well.

    Apple lost the educational market ~10 years ago when they tried to screw the dealers who were generating sales on their equipment. Pure and simple.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    1. Re:Do you want to know why Apple lost the schools? by jeffreym · · Score: 1

      Amen. Living in a university town, Lawrence, KS, and having been a PC user from 1980 and a Mac user from 1987, I remember distinctly the prophesies of local VARs when Apple's policies changed in the late 80's and particularly the early 90's. They have come to pass and it's a huge freight train that will take a long time for Apple to counter, if indeed they can.

      I'm not sure Apple will try and "keep" what they've basically lost in mindshare and competitiveness as it pertains to the schools. They may try a different angle. I think they are going after the mindshare like key namebrands have done for the past two decades. You don't have to be the ONLY best, but you try and convince the public that you are consistently, unquestionably, among the best of the best, PLUS you add a pride factor or must-have factor.

      It won't, of course, stem the tide of PC purchases. However, mindshare is critical for long term viability. If students feel they are "forced" to use a particular product, they will likely "rebel" against that at a later time. They will strive to own the "desired" product that their state-run school deemed too "elite" for their needs. I know a lot of "kiddies" felt forced to use Apple IIe systems or older Macs and so when they "grew up" and got their own license to drive, they went out and got a "real computer", one that has it's own custom BSOD, etc. Maybe Apple should work their magic and show their smaller market share as a position of strength, rather than looking at it as a sign of weakness.

      However, it's a tricky game and not everyone can play it and survive. I hope Apple continues to thrive, and I would love for them to have a 10-15% market share; but frankly, if it were some huge share of, say 40%, I'd probably be looking for the "next" Apple to come along. The best products are rarely the most dominant in numbers; rather they dominate the wish lists.

  181. Apple cuts Prices 60% , everybody gets iBooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting


    The writer of this article should take notice of the schools handing out Apple laptops to all the teachers and all of the students:

    "The 240 students and 40 teachers each will get an Apple iBook laptop computer for class- related use at home and school. Virtual, paperless education, when students are able to access text books online, may not be too far in the future", said Edward Bernetich, principal of the new school.

    http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index. ss f?/base/cuyahoga/106085858141010.xml

    Also, Apple's Mac OS X District License Program has been extended through September 27, 2003. This adoption solution for K-12 school districts "takes the hassle out of upgrading, includes Mac OS X software, training, technical support, and applications, and -- most important -- cuts more than 60 percent off Apple's already lower education licensing price." (But, only districts with 1,000 or more Mac OS X-capable systems are eligible for the offer. )

  182. Here is why Apple is failing in schools... by neiffer · · Score: 1

    I am a teacher. I've taught in two districts, both interested in technology and I've seen Apple's sad attempted at continuing to play to schools. Some thoughts: 1.) OSX was a killer for some districts. Often, district have restrictive license agreements for application software that allow install of a certain version of software. Sure, you can run pre-OSX software on OSX with compatibility mode, but it's a dog and prone to crash. 2.) Ignorance has scared away districts. I'm not sure why, but none of the happy promos for OSX were directed towards districts. The high memory requirements for OSX definately scared schools. 3.) The Business Week article implies that the EMacs are as inexpensive as PC's. Dell and Gateway are practically giving PC's away, especially in the past 12 months. Why switch to Macs (with their more limited software availabiltiy) when you can continue with PC's? I like OSX, I have it install on my PowerBook. But I use PC's everywhere else. Until Mac starts giving it away (Linux!) or starts selling bargain (under $500) PC's, they will continue to be a dog.

    1. Re:Here is why Apple is failing in schools... by BostonPilot · · Score: 1
      I don't understand your comment about Classic. I run several older applications including Photoshop and the driver for my Epson photographic printer, and it is fast and I can't remember it ever crashing. Classic is not an emulator, it is simply running OS 9 inside a Unix process (i.e. it will run computational jobs at 100% speed). There must be some overhead talking to the network and the filesystem, but reading/writing 30Mb photoshop files... I just don't see it.

      Is it really that problematic for you? (I run it on both an 800Mhz TiBook, and also on a 266Mhz G3). What programs were you trying to run under Classic?

  183. Mod parent down by mrklin · · Score: 1

    I am a Mac user too but I cannot defend the above poster's blatant ignorance. I mean, who pays $130 for a 32MB radeon card and $210 for a 17" CRT! A quick search on Pricewatch shows $30 for a Radeon 32MB card and a 17" monitor is easily $70 and under. Even if we were to factor in a 100% premium for extended warranty, installation, brand-name factor, falt CRT, etc, at $200 the price would still be less than the $340 quoted by the above poster who is clearly a zealot.

  184. Good Practice For Woo-ing IT by buckhead_buddy · · Score: 1

    It's not at all news that Apple is on the decline in education. They've been in that position since 1995 when Win95 made the big splash all over mass media and it became cool to get Windows even if (and maybe especially if) you didn't know computers particularly well. The news is that Apple has kept as much marketshare in schools as they have considering it took 3 years to get a response together (after Steve Jobs return) and 6 years to make the hardware (iMacs, eMacs & iBooks) and software (OS X & Powerschool).

    Apple may have learned a few things about their market. Maybe their's a lesson or two for Linux proponents to see as well.

    Price is the top consideration. If you're not in the 15%-20% price ballpark, you won't be considered no matter how many arguments of ease of use / less maintenance / more durable / you can make. Apple has back room sales pitches that are well developed for large markets. While Linux has an unbeatable hardware and software price point, they don't have anyone who can make a persuasive, simple, and aggressive sale.

    Ease of use is very important. A labful of systems should be maintainable by a person with little interest in running a lab. Apple and Windows help are available in computer section of your bookstore, in online help (not man pages), and easily found among like-minded groups of people to ask for free advice. I've even heard of Apple offering special training to secure large contracts; it's pretty cheap for them to do so. In the case of Linux, training and support are often where the money is made so making self-supporting communities will make people uncomfortable.

    Be able to offer a killer app. Apple has PowerSchool software for managing schools. It's the mass market equivalent of grade book / roster management / school admin software that schools used to pay to develop in the past. They will sell it to a school for many thousands of dollars, but because it's software that's already developed they can offer a huge discount as a deal clincher. And once you get a school district's data, they will have a hard time moving off your platform later on.

  185. Exposure to diversity by antimuon · · Score: 1

    Diversity costs more because people aren't exposed to diversity. I know my lack of diversity in OSes has slowed my migration down to another platform.

    I used to think like you until someone said they tried to learn one new programming language a year. Why? Because different programming languages have different concepts, strengths, and weaknesses. It's like a toolchest, a hammer, a saw, a screwdriver. The more you know what tool to use for what job, the better off you are.

    As for training students to use it, the first thing schools need to train kids in (before they ever sit in front of a computer) is logic. Logic is useful outside the computer lab.

    Personally, I feel kid shouldn't be in front of a computer at school unless they are learning computer concepts, and in that case there should be as many different operating systems available as possible (multiple flavors of linux, multiple flavors of bsd, windows, mac, maybe even Plan9, BeOS, and some RTOS). The only other place computers may have a place in school would be in the library for research (for the kids who don't have internet connection at home).

    Still, it is more important to teach kids logic than "computers" and alot the kids I know don't even have that - even if they do know how to use a mouse. Teach kids to think for themselves and when you do teach them computers, give them a diverse set to evaluate and come up with their own opinions (instead of forcing down their throat the "one true way").

    Ok, rant mode off. hehe

    1. Re:Exposure to diversity by zangdesign · · Score: 1

      I feel kid shouldn't be in front of a computer at school ...

      I agree to a certain extent - they shouldn't be put in front of a computer until they've learned the basic three R's. Save the computers for high school - they're not helping much at the lower levels, IMHO.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    2. Re:Exposure to diversity by antimuon · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Heck, I know I waste enough time on a computer myself. :D

  186. To the contrary by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2, Informative

    The problem that I see with home schooling is that done wrongly, it doesn't prepare the kids to deal with different people.

    I mean I did go to public school and I had to deal with smart kids, stupid kids, social kids, anti-social and outright aggressive kids, kids from rich families and kids from welfare families. Exactly like it will be in the real world.


    As a homeschooling parent I have to disagree on two counts. 1) While there is a lot of diversity among the students in a public school classroom I never saw much evidence that the kids learned to deal *in a healthy way* with those that were different from them. Just go into (or think back to) a junior high classroom, all the bullying, cliques, hostility between different groups. Sure some kids learned to bridge the gaps or to accept those that were different but it is the exception rather than the rule and often being friendly to the "wrong" kid could put your own position with you peers at risk. I hesitate to say it but I suspect those kids most able to trancend the petty differences that divide school kids were those that had the kind of healthy relationships with their parents that homeschoolers tend to have. I hate to say it but rather than a nirvana of healthy diversity public schools often seem to have more in common with Lord of the Flies

    2) Another aspect of public school classrooms is the extreme degree of segregation by age. All your friends (and enemies, and those to whom you are merely indifferent) are ALL your age. All your interaction is with kids the same age, your teachers are generally distant authority figures, even kids relationships with their parents becomes increasingly alienated. These kids are intensely peer dependant. Who cares what my parents or teachers think? Who cares what *I* think? What really matters is what my little clique thinks, to loose their approval is to suffer tragedy. (all of which is feeding into my first point)

    Homeschooled kids tend to be dealing with siblings of different ages and friends of different ages as well as dealing with adults (their parents and friends parents). And the parents (who presumably are more mature in their own socialization) are more actively guiding the childrens socialization in healthy ways. I don't know any homeschooling parent that would tolerate the kind of nastiness that is wearily tolerated or not even noticed by the teachers in your typical Jr. High. Even when it reaches a level or is done in plain sight where a teacher must act since the children are so peer dependant the poor opinion and disciplinary actions of the teacher for beating up the funny looking kid is insignificant next to the approval of your peers egging you on.

    In my experience homeschooled kids are far better socialized & capable of dealing with peoples differences than their public school peers. As an adult I have never experienced the kind of sullen or insecure silence from a teenager that I commonly experience from public school kids. The homeschooled kids are perfectly comfortable interacting with an adult. Most public school kids are completely out of their element having to deal with someone like myself that is 15 years older. Sure there are homeschooled kids and families that really do poorly interacting with others but I doubt those same kids would do any better in a public school and I suspect they would do a great deal worse since their initial social failings would be compounded by the harrassment of their immature peers.

    1. Re:To the contrary by Eric+Ass+Raymond · · Score: 1
      Well I, in turn have to disagree on the following points:

      deal *in a healthy way* with those that were different from them. Just go into (or think back to) a junior high classroom, all the bullying, cliques, hostility between different groups.

      I'm sorry to sound cynical, but that is the way of the real world. Bullies don't disappear they only become less transparent, cliques only strengthen and hostility is prevalent if you're successful at what you're doing. You've just got to know how to deal with that crap in practise and at a personal level - especially if aim at a managerial or executive job. Your Lord of the Flies analogy is actually pretty accurate. How does a homeschooled kid deal with this raw assault when he/she grows up?

      In addition to being vulnerable to abuse from the adult bullies, I suspect a homeschooled kid will not be able to deal compassionately with the less fortunate (money, IQ, whatever...) kids.

      Another aspect of public school classrooms is the extreme degree of segregation by age. All your friends (and enemies, and those to whom you are merely indifferent) are ALL your age.

      When I went to school I had friends from two grades up and I don't see why this should be any different these days.

    2. Re:To the contrary by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How does a homeschooled kid deal with this raw assault when he/she grows up?

      My experience with homeschooled kids is that being less peer-dependant and secure in their identity and relationships they are less vulnerable to bullies. More importantly they are less likely themselves to *become* the bullies. You may view that as a liablity in fields that tend to be "dog eat dog". However, my personal experience with homeschooled kids is that the confidence that comes from being raised in a nurturing rather than a "lord of the flies" environment is a sufficient compensation for the lack of harsh lessons in early childhood.

      In addition to being vulnerable to abuse from the adult bullies, I suspect a homeschooled kid will not be able to deal compassionately with the less fortunate (money, IQ, whatever...) kids.

      This is an area where I think you are actually contradicting yourself. Being hardened by a "lord of the flies" environment may make you less vulnerable to "raw assaults" but it is unlikely to make you any more sensitive to the suffering of others. In fact the hardness necessary for your own survival in a harsh environment is quite likely to make you a great deal LESS sensitive to the suffering of others. Besides which I think the vast majority homeschooling parents would view compassion as one of the healthy ways that they are teaching their children to respond to others. Which scenario is more likely to produce a compassionate adult 1) Being part of a clique in Jr. High and in your own insecurity going along with the crowd that picks on the funny looking kid and reinforces that attitude with their laughter and acceptance? 2) Being the kid that is picked on and harrassed on every side? or 3) Having a parent nearby that immediately punishes you for displaying such cruelty towards your siblings or friends and protects you from the same?

      Perhaps it is a result of the fact that a large percentage of homeschoolers are motivated by religious convictions but I get the feeling that homeschoolers are more involved with charity and ministries than is the norm. We take our kids to volunteer at a shelter and they spend one day a week cleaning their great-grandmothers house for her. Our oldest helps her get ready every morning. That's just us but most of our homeschooling friends seem to have similar family traditions.

      When I went to school I had friends from two grades up and I don't see why this should be any different these day

      Umm... actually the fact that you think that kids only two years older than you were not *essentially* the same age as you basically makes my point. Sure there are friendships which form between peers that are going through the same things and are at about the same level of development but I am often astounded at the level of awkwardness and discomfort of kids (particularly teenagers) when they have to deal with adults. Homeschooled kids of my aquaintance don't seem to have this peer-dependant hang up. They are are perfectly happy to talk with the adults, or play with the toddlers or hang out with each other.

    3. Re:To the contrary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've spent my entire life in public schools, from kindergarten to grad school, and I've loved every second. I loved kicking ass on tests. I loved shoving this down the throats of idiots. I loved getting ridiculed and punched in the gut for being such a smartass. I loved becoming bored with the intellectual bankruptcy of today's classrooms. I loved the afterschool football games, the scuffles, the comradery. I loved forming rivalries, both friendly and unfriendly.

      I loved not quite understanding the Mexican kids, and treating them as second class citizens. I loved later befriending them, and learning to look beyond stereotypes. I loved invitations to various churches. I loved the first hand experience of appreciating them all, whether as unique discourses or the same crack-pot. I loved my romances with girls of very different cultures from my own; I loved finding that Jewish girls give excellent head and Japanese girls get freaky. I loved the girls who cheated on me, and I loved facing shame in the very public forum of high school students. I loved passing notes around class, and talking shit on my teachers. I loved getting caught and facing the humiliating consequences. I loved chatting with the potheads in the parking lot. I loved constantly fearing what others would think of me.

      I loved running to the bathroom between periods so I wouldn't have to piss during class. I loved running home everytime I needed to shit--those toilets were nasty. I loved the scuffed up textbooks. I loved the computers that were never properly configured to do anything.

      I loved putting my foot in the face of anyone who dared fuck with my autistic brother. I loved testifying against the school district because teachers mistreated him badly on a particular occasion. I loved giving the superintendent, responsible for defending those acts, the finger before thousands of spectators instead of taking my honors memorabilia. I loved getting no encouragement, no respect, and no slack.

      I loved the whole incredible crisis, and no measure of homeschooling could ever hope to match it. The rage, the anger, the fear, the hormones and sex, the booze and late nights cruising, the competition, the love, the homeboys.

      I loved getting in touch with the world. The world is full of assholes and idiots, I loved learning to just love them all. I loved spending years across the globe, dealing with strange people in fundamental humanity, hostile or no. Judging by the tone and content of your masturbation, you are not, did not, will not. I wouldn't be the man of good character that I am today if not for public school, an experience which should not be compromised for the ramblings of some religious/washed-out-intellectual dolts. The majority of parents do not have the time or money for homeschooling; they're too busy working two or three full-time jobs just to be broke.

      Instead of making ourselves feel better than the average people of America (your obvious penchant), perhaps we should all work together by raising the standards of all, starting with the public school system. Why take your kids to help at shelters if they're too good to benefit from other basic social services? It's like metaphoric oligarchy.

      Alright, this is losing focus. Time to go associate with crackheads and hookers.

  187. Moronic comment by inkswamp · · Score: 1
    For any supposedly educated person to say something asinine like "We want a single platform" only proves how ill-informed some of the people making these decisions are. Why would a single platform be a requirement? Do they get all their school supplies from one vendor as well? What's the benefit? This attitude is also strikingly shortsighted. I mean, does the guy pick up a newspaper at some point in his day? If so, how could he possibly not be aware of recent (and not-so-recent) events pertaining to virus infections and security issues as well as some of the licensing fiascos that MS has foisted on its users. It would seem to me that a diversity of platforms would be in order to avoid the inherent traps in computing monoculture. It appears that some administrative types think "diversity" in computing means Windows 98, NT, 2K and XP.

    --
    --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
    1. Re:Moronic comment by nagora · · Score: 1
      Why would a single platform be a requirement?

      Bulk buying is cheaper, also only requires support from one company.

      Do they get all their school supplies from one vendor as well?

      Probably do, yes.

      If so, how could he possibly not be aware of recent (and not-so-recent) events pertaining to virus infections and security issues as well as some of the licensing fiascos that MS has foisted on its users.

      Those are reported on the news as "computer viruses"; as far as he's concerned they happen to everyone that uses computers. Also, he probably doesn't care.

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  188. How the hell is parent "informative"??? by phillymjs · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So you say your high school is almost all Windows because "People know how to use [Windows]."

    You then go on to say that computers are like cars-- cars have the brake, gas, shifter, and steering wheel. You assert that if someone can drive one car, they can drive practically any car because they have a grasp of the concepts of its operation.

    So by your own argument, anyone who knows how to use Windows should be able to effectively use a Mac or Linux (with GUI) system with a minimum of effort, because it's just a GUI with applications, operated by a mouse and keyboard-- just like Windows. Yet your position appears to be just the opposite, that Windows is what should be used/taught in schools because that's "the dominant operating system on desktops today" and that "is what will be used in whatever their future job is" (I guess none of your classmates are heading for careers in the media, then).

    An education is about teaching concepts and reasoning, so the accumulated knowledge can be applied in many situations. Teaching a kid how to use Microsoft Windows and Microsoft Office instead of teaching them how to operate a computer and basic productivity applications is to do that kid a disservice.

    Example: Someone who graduated high school 10 years ago was probably taught DOS and/or Windows 3.x. By the time the class of 1993 made it out of college, however, those had been supplanted by 95 and NT, which were *completely* different-- any Windows 3.x-specific knowledge was almost completely wasted. But the basic knowledge of using a GUI and applications was still viable.

    ~Philly

  189. used to have an Apple //c and a macintosh classic by zpok · · Score: 1

    at home but school taught me how to "program" and to strangle DOS, do partitions, format floppies and use those weird wordprocessors (wordstar and stuff).

    I've applied for a public highschool exam to try and gain one year, and the day of my computer exams I had to program a database on incredibly quaint pc's. I told the guy I couldn't do it since he didn't have filemaker installed. He started asking me about the dbase projects I had done in a company as student-job (was clueless when I started out, but did get some nice -flat as a pancake- dbases going that have been used for more than 10 years).

    Based on that conversation he gave me 60%.

    I have read the point being made kids shouldn't learn about an OS, but about computers and stuff in general. If that's the case, give them Apple's.

    --
    I think, therefore I am...I think.
  190. Who needs a brain? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Yeah, I was mistaken.


    I was mistaken to think you might actually be able to synthesize. Let me spell it out for you:



    As an aside, Jallings records the students on video and then puts it on the Mac. The Capital Times [madison.com] reports "Rebecca Jallings, a theater teacher at Madison West High School, shoots video of her students as they learn to act. If they're "doing that swaying thing again" during their monologue, she said, she rolls the footage on her Macintosh computer and can prove it to the student immediately."


    Quite how that's superior to using a video camera alone is beyond me.



    The statement declared in the final sentence provides an easy clue towards what the entire goal of this "aside" was. Discredit valid usage of the Macintosh computer systems for educational purposes.


    And since you obviously need a clue:


    innuendo


    • 1. An oblique hint; a remote allusion or reference, usually
      derogatory to a person or thing not named; an insinuation.


    Try dict.org sometime.
  191. Don't give up on yourself so easily. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But I'm still not gonna have kids ;D

    Original AC, again: Quit with all pessimism, will ya? The world needs more children, and you sound like you'd be a great dad.

    And look how far you got in life without a sheepskin. Just like Honest Abe, and Thomas Alva Edison, and a whole host of great Americans who didn't give rat's ass about the formal education establishment [which is not to say that they didn't care about education itself].

    As for scholarships, who do you think is gonna look better to an aid officer: A 14 year old homeschoolee with a 1500 SAT, or a 17 year old government school attendee with a 900 SAT?

    Besides, it's not at all clear to me why we're in such a hurry to ship our kids off to college, anyway. My opinion of the average college/university diploma is right down there with my opinion of the average primary/secondary school education.

    1. Re:Don't give up on yourself so easily. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The world needs more children? Are you kidding me?

      Yes, the world needs more intelligent, well-rounded children, but there's way too many mouths to feed, the Earth can't handle us.

  192. Re:LIES!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  193. Really were going all mac! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In our schools the super is sick of viruses, people complaing about crashes. Were going all emac and ibook mobile lab. First of all the e-macs we get for about $600.00. If the emacs work like old macs we'll have each one for about 8 years! The dells we were buying were about $900.

    Also macs with osx are the best to configure, upkeep and install software. They come in we net boot em, install the image and their ready to roll!

    As for upkeep all the hardware addresses are kept in ldap and we manage printers and setting for labs that way. Its the fucking best!

    We have network home directories going for all the students.

    No viruses, computers that last forever, easy to use, easy upkeep. 100% OSX is where were headed!

    Jamie

  194. How do you drive your car today... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    do you drive via the rear view mirror (Windows, or yesterday's technology) or do you look through the windshield (Linux and the future).

  195. Re:Winshit compatible? Try Virtual PC. by Nurgled · · Score: 1

    If they use Virtual PC, do they not then need to buy not only a copy of OS 9 for every Mac they have, but also some kind of Windows licence?

    That'll cost quite a lot, and that's before they've even got any applications to run on either.

  196. So what you're saying is that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple is dying/dead/will die/prone to repetitive death disorder.

    Yet again.

    (This comment could have been posted in '88 and still be valid, btw)

  197. Curiousity by Nurgled · · Score: 1

    All of the relationships I had with other children in my early life was a result of the public school system. What were your experiences with regards to meeting and forming relationships with other children your age while you were being home-schooled? Did you find it harder or easier to maintain relationships with your peers in the home-school environment versus the school environment?

    1. Re:Curiousity by GlassUser · · Score: 1

      I was in a private school for kindergarten and first grade, and actually knew several (four I think) of my future fellow home schoolers. It also helped that our parents were friends in high school and members of the same "home school support group". These support groups exist all over, and are basically a place to foster social activity where there would inherently be little or none. We did things like go on field trips and have group parties (back to school stuff, monthly meetings, and such). It got a little rouger when my parents became way too involved in a cult that leeched off home schoolers, and we lived alone on a farm (this was while I was from about 13 to 15), I had almost no social interaction outside my family (except for yearly meetings at the cult headquarters, I was lucky to leave the property once a week, and then only for the grocery store). It fell apart after a few years, but it was something of a hell, and I think it contributed significantly to my antisocial tendancies.

      In a more abstract sense, I think that for families in otherwise similar situations, home schooling provides about the same level of social interaction. Here's a quick rundown of a typical week:
      Sunday 0900 to noon: church, noon to 1500: group sunday dinner out or at church with peers, 1800-2100: church small groups or park evening
      Monday 0600 1100: science tutoring in large group, 1200 to 1600: math tutoring in large group
      Tuesday 1100 to 1900: canoeing/physical education tutoring in large group
      Wednesday 1000 to 1300: spanish tutoring in large group, 1800 to 2100 church study or outing with peers
      Thursday 1200 to 1400 band in large group, 1400 to 1700 drama in large group
      Friday private tutoring for deficient areas, independent study (like other spare time), individually coordinated social interaction, or group coordinated activities (home school field trip)
      Saturday same as Friday

      This is typical of, say, my sophomore year in high school. Note that most of the large group classes have lead time and cooldown time where we study, catch up on homework, and wait for a ride. Since each family often has a relatively large number of kids (I'm the oldest of eight, last night I was the house of some friends who are second, third, and fourth of thirteen), the parents will often pool resources, and pick up two or more sets of younger kids from a younger kids activity, and another will pick up several sets of older ones. It's not at all uncommon to wait at the driver's house for a hour or two, being social and such, while you wait for your ride home. Other opportunities often present themselves: for example, I was my section's leader in band, and coordinated twice weekly practice with the seven members of my section.

      Like I said, properly executed, it can lead to plenty of social interaction. My parents biggest mistake was the cult. Otherwise, I think it would have worked out much better than the average public school. I guess this is partly because it allowed me a very strong focus on my preferred areas of math and science (I went through college calculus 3, college chemistry, and college physics - of course these weren't recognized by the school, except for the calculus AP exam, but it made almost a full semester's worth of classes pretty much blow off).

  198. os doesnt matter by dfj225 · · Score: 1

    let me start off by saying that i have just recently graduated from high school. having that said I don't think that the os that you learn on has anything to do with how computer savy you become. I remember the days when my dad showed me some dos commands to run my favorite games and I used packard bell navigator over windows 3.1. today I would consider my computer skills very much above average (well guess that is obvious considering what site this is) and almost all of them being self taught. while I would consider myself best with windows I can work all computers in general. I have installed linux and comped my own drivers with only help from help files. at school I used os x on apples to edit movies for class. I even teach my great aunt how to us os 8 on her old mac to send email even though I have never used that app myself. apparently having learned on windows has not affected my ability to pick up new systems. on another note, my high school had a mixed pc / mac network. the video editing la

    --
    SIGFAULT
  199. Win2k Is Not UNIX! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windows 2000 is not UNIX, very far from it. It's nice that you don't limit your students and faculty to a single platform and use what's best for each particular job.

    1. Re:Win2k Is Not UNIX! by Smurf · · Score: 1
      Windows 2000 is not UNIX, very far from it. It's nice that you don't limit your students and faculty to a single platform and use what's best for each particular job.
      No, no. He (vergil) ment that all the PCs are at least dual bootable to Linux.
  200. don't upset the pc users by danrudolph · · Score: 1

    as a recent highschool graduate, a lot of my friends are getting ready to buy new comps for college. early on i told everyone to get a mac, having just purchased a 17" imac. like most folks, they refused citing classic arguments. one button mouse, ugly ui (mac os 9), no office apps, and so on. this led me to believe that most people are comfortable with what they have used all their lives. unfortunatly at school most graduates these days have only used macs with mac os 8. apple's penetration into the education market could be enhanced if only they could get the fozen bondi imac images out of everyone's head. i know the reception i got as a mac user was not always fond. luckily my old school just bought a boat load of emacs and ibooks.

  201. OK, this is just BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sorry, but this is just flat wrong.

    I can't offer any specifics to respond to the statement "if you stick a young child in front of a PC they're lost". To counter, I offer the stereotype of the kid that fixes his dad's PC.

    I have a coworker whose five-year-old happily plays on a PC while her father games with his friends.

    And, frankly, I don't think it's that necessary for a third-grader to learn how to use a PC, either. What's wrong with books, for pete's sake? And I'd much rather my son pick up a pollywog than look at one on the Internet, too.

    Teach your kids how to learn. They'll encounter the Apple Reality Distortion Field soon enough.

  202. Joined the realm of TCP/IP? by MacDork · · Score: 1

    Where have you been buddy? 1991? Mac's have had and used TCP/IP since System 7.5.x over 7 years ago. Apple posted the whole damned operating system to their FTP site 4 years ago. If the schools didn't upgrade, it isn't Apple's fault. Your whole post is FUD flamebait. Your assertions about support costs go against every credible study ever done on the subject. Your 'hardware costs more' line is a blatent lie. Your tired arguement about software availabilty is just that.

    The reason Apple is losing ground in schools is the same reason your post got modded 4 Interesting. Too many people who don't know any better just nod and accept the total BS that someone like you spews in their general direction. Go ahead Wintel drones, Mod me to -1.

    1. Re:Joined the realm of TCP/IP? by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      I liked the part where he was going on about how proprietary the Macs were compared to Windows PC's.

  203. apple licks balls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i hope apple rots.
    they are over priced and underpowered.
    their user interface seems very tedious, was in apple store a few months ago. granted this may be my pc bias speaking here.
    as fas as the educational sales go, they should eb giving pc's away to schools for free. remember when jobs sent all those macs to a landfill site? shows what a nice company apple is. they would rather throw their products in the trash, than let the end user get a good deal, let alone help someone who is very needy.
    but then if you want an apple who am i to say no. hope you like paying double. paying double for you pc, paying double for upgrades.waiting twice as long for software to come out (if you are lucky) and yes you guessed it, paying double for it.
    wake up ppl apple = thief.
    i really cant imagine owning an apple com-pu-TOR heowever. i'd feel like the one kid on the block with a sega, when everyone else has a nintendo

  204. Schools need Betamax! by Ravensign · · Score: 1

    We need diversity! Get Beta in the schools now! Down with the VHS hegemony!

    --
    "Sig free in '03!"
  205. Maybe it's a location thing, or maybe... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...your Mum's job involves dealing almost exclusively with problem children, because my experience has been completely different. I have seen (Western Australia) countless children screwed up by their State schooling - unquestionably by their school environment - and at least 19/20 of the homeschooled children I've seen are happier, more outgoing, more inquisitive, more inclined to do and figure things out for themselves than their State-schooled counterparts. This is completely aside from issues like the absolutely hopeless basic literacy in many (not all) State schools. If the HS kids have a fault, it's that they're too precocious (a flaw also found in their privately schooled peers, who seem to fall about halfway between the two camps) and self-important. I personally know a handful of families who homeschool in self defence, because the State schools - despite having a budget for such things - were completely failing to do anything constructive with their learning-disabled (and in some cases physically disabled) children.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Maybe it's a location thing, or maybe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you are seeing the wrong cause to the effect.

      Home schooled children are encouraged by a loving family. If you spend that much time with your children you obviously love them. And that sort of affection is what is missing from most of the children in the public education system. Rather than spend time with the family they spend time in front of the tv.. or worse.. slashdot

    2. Re:Maybe it's a location thing, or maybe... by phoenix_rizzen · · Score: 1

      It's probably due more to the one-on-one experience that home-schoolers get, compared to the 30-students-fight-for-1-teacher's-attention that public school students go through.

      Home schooler's basically have their own personal tutor that they can pester whenever they have a problem, issue, concern, etc. They don't have to wait for Little Suzie in the back to figure out the excercise before starting. They don't have to worry about Johnnie creating a fuss and wasting time. They can just get to work, get it done, ponder things, ask whatever questions they want without worrying about what others think.

      IOW, they have a better learning environment than most public schools offer.

    3. Re:Maybe it's a location thing, or maybe... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      Home schooler's basically have their own personal tutor that they can pester whenever they have a problem, issue, concern, etc.

      The problem with this reasoning is, that no matter how much the parent(s) love their kid(s), the parents aren't necessarily competent teachers. Even teaching 30 kids, a competent teacher is going to do a lot better for those kids than an incompetent parent is going to do home schooling their own kids. (I think we can agree about the bad effects of an incompetent teacher, however.)

      For home schooling to be effective for the kid(s), either the parents have to have teaching skills, or the kid(s) have to be damn intelligent & be able to act on their own initiative.

    4. Re:Maybe it's a location thing, or maybe... by phoenix_rizzen · · Score: 1

      Not all home-schooling is done by the parents. There are home-schooling groups where 4 or 5 neighbourhood kids meet up to be taught by a single teacher/parent/whatever. There are also professional home-schooling teachers and tutors. And so on.

      There are good and bad sides to home-schooling, and to private schooling, and to public schooling. The goal is to find the balance between all of these methods.

      Not going to hold my breath waiting for the public school system to improve, though.

    5. Re:Maybe it's a location thing, or maybe... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      There are home-schooling groups where 4 or 5 neighbourhood kids meet up to be taught by a single teacher/parent/whatever. There are also professional home-schooling teachers and tutors.

      In other words, paying for private schooling? Probably works okay for those people who can afford competent teachers, but allowing rich people to "escape" the public school system doesn't exactly set up for a society based on equal opportunity.

      Not going to hold my breath waiting for the public school system to improve, though.

      It sure won't happen if the people who have the resources to do anything about it prefer to watch it collapse instead. Why should they worry? At least _their_ kids will get a good education.

  206. Are all you guys posting from Utah or something? by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    Actually, in my experience, home-schooled children are poorly prepared for life outside of the home.

    I just don't get it. All of the homeschooled children that I know personally are exposed to a much wider variety of social interaction than sitting in rows (or bunches) of their peers in front of one or a few instructors every day. They are typically much better prepared to deal with strangers than a random child of similar demography is, and make such interactions rewarding for the other party and enriching for themselves. Do you guys have a particular problem with people "home schooling" when all they're really doing is isolating them? WHat's the missing ingredient?

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  207. You pick up a scroll of Make Computer Useful by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    I would sell my soul to have all of my XP boxes turn into Macintoshes.

    I see you've found a use for all of those otherwise wasted hours between midnight and dawn.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  208. Our Superintendent Says... by Rick+Richardson · · Score: 1

    When I questioned the way a new "technology levy" was going to be spent, I got this gem in an email reply from the superintendent...

    "I have never believed that Apple products were appropriate purchases, but many
    school districts continue to purchase them."

    -- Dr. Dennis Peterson, Superintendent of Minnetonka Schools

  209. gimme a break by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I've seen a number of PC computer labs in the past couple years, Gateways, Dells, and HPs have been most prevelent. In most of the labs I'd say a good 5% of the machines were down at any given time from hardware failure. Each of those failures required one of the lab adminstrators to at the very least diagnose if not fix. A suprising number of times I've seen entire computer labs entirely screwed over by the latest Windows VotW (Virus of the Week)."

    oh, come now, you have a 5% failure rate?

    I am a net admin of a 1200 seat call center and we have roughly 1300 client pc's and have never had any more than 2% client PC's out of service at any given time

    these pc's range from 5 year old compaq P3 500's to 2 month old P4 IBMs. Average PC age is 3 years old

    If we can maintain less than 2% failure rate with such old machines, with machines on 24-7 people doing REAL work for 18 hours a day im sure anyone can

    I think that speaks volumes about your network and technical capabilities

  210. Of course that's what suits think by macdaddy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I can't recall how many white-collar executive types in schools I've encountered that think Apple computers are worth a damn. The problem stems from the fact that few of these types of people actually have any actual teaching experience. There are fewer and fewer supers anymore that have actually been a teacher at some point in their career. I can think of more than one that my actual school district has had that had practically NO teaching experience. Instead they came from a business background. Lets face it; Macs still don't have a good foothold in the business world. The early business apps were not on Macs. Once business IT gets it in their minds that Macs aren't for business it's next impossible to change their ways. I've been a Mac guy for many years now and have now worked for 3 educational institutions. 1 school district (primarily the elementary school) and two state universities. Macs dominated the elementary school until I left. After I left the district hired a Novell person who of course switched everything to NT and Novell. Nevermind the fact that the elementary school was one of the first K-6 buildings with every classroom on the Internet. Nevermind the fact that the elementary school had over 175 applications running from a central Mac application server without a hitch and was maintained by a single person (the high school had 8, not counting Solitaire and Minesweeper). Nevermind the fact that those machines cost the district half the price of the PCs the new tech coordinator purchased the year after I left and has had a TOC (total cost of ownership) more than quadruple the TOC of the elementary school's Macs.

    One thing that has always amazed me is how much the elementary school teachers have integrated their Macintosh computers into their curriculum. Those 1995 Apple Macs are still in use in their classrooms today and are still play a key role in the students' coursework. High school teachers in the same district that have had new computers every 2-3 years rarely touch their computers. Computers are what they tell their students to go use when they want to right a paper. Their computers play no role whatsoever in the classroom even when they have a much newer, much more powerful computer than their primary education counterparts. It baffles me sometimes. Strike that. It baffles me all the time. If the elementary school had only half the IT budget the high school gets, the elementary students would graduate from 6th grade with an even richer technology experience. Of course they would be sorely disappointed once they reached junior high at the other school. Still I think it would benefit them in the long run.

    I can understand how an administrator can initially believe Macs are sub-par. What I don't understand is how a person like that who obviously doesn't have an open mind can stay in a key position such as that over an educational institution. Don't get me wrong. I do think PCs have an intrigal part of a child's education. I also think that Macs have just as equal a part in their education and I don't see how administrators in education can be so short-sighted that they can't see that.

    1. Re:Of course that's what suits think by macdaddy · · Score: 1

      PS, sorry about the horrific grammar mistakes. I should proof read more of my posts. Then again my sig makes up for it.

  211. Re:error: does not compute by bursch-X · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You fail to mention that the computer or system you use in school will most likely be nothing even close to what you'll be using 10 years or more later in your working place (unless you're lucky enough to have chosen UNIX).

    I learned computers on a Schneider CPC (an Armstrad clone). Nobody even knows this computer nowadays, or even 13 years ago, when I got my first job. Your post is pointless.

    When learning a Mac running OS X, people at least have a chance to learn some UNIX basics, which might actually be worth something even in the future.

    --
    There are two rules for success:
    1. Never tell everything you know.
  212. The biggest enemy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...is now Apple itself.

    Try to have a Mac OS 1-9 guy build a secure OS X installation.
    Try to get help from Apple on how to do it.
    Try to build a single task secure walk-up kiosk.

    "I do not like them, Sam I am!"

  213. MOD PARENT DOWN by soft_guy · · Score: 1

    I can't imagine why this would be plus 4 interesting. -1 Troll is more like it.

    --
    Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
  214. Australia Also by lancer93 · · Score: 1

    I volunteer at a state school, which has mostly Mac for the students, but the current state policy is for new computers to be Windows PC's. There are several problems at the school. Some Macs still in daily use are more than 5 years old, pre iMac, which is not good from a PR point of view "Macs are old and slow". The tech guy they employ does not know much about how they work. And they run only classic OS from System 7 to Mac OS 9.1, which is not good from a tech point of view remembering how each OS connect to the network. Any PC they have for the students run Win 98 making it easier to administer. They will be replacing the older beige with PC's which will reduce the number of Mac's for the students.

  215. Macintosh is _not_ inexpensive. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn you, you troll!

    You were going good until you said "Your 'hardware costs more' line is a blatent[sic] lie."

    The hardware does cost more, it really, really does... and nothing you can say, nothing you can say will change the fact that Macintosh costs more.

    I own a PowerBook, so, don't take me for somebody who doesn't want to sincerely believe that Macintosh costs less, but, it doesn't.

    I really hope that we can settle this, right here, and right now, because fans of the Macintosh have plenty of solid, relevant points. That the hardware is inexpensive, is not one of them.

    My PowerBook G4 12.1" cost me just under $4,000 (Canadian). It has an 867 MHz processor, 256MB of DDR RAM and a 40GB 4200 rpm drive.

    A friend of mine bought a Dell.... whatever the fuck it's called. It had a 1.8 GHZ Pentium 4-M in it, or something of that sort.... 512MB RAM and an 80GB 5400 rpm disk... it costs... ...wait for it... ...$3,000 (Canadian).

    Granted, it is made of plastic, and not anodized aluminum. And granted, he runs Windows XP on it... and it was 2 pounds heavier and has crappy battery life... but, in all honesty, it has more computational horsepower than my neat little Apple--megahertz myth or not.

    Now... this example is flawed, only because, perhaps, just perhaps... 2 pounds of extra fat are worth a $1,000 discount in laptop land...

    And, honestly, as far as desktop PCs go Apple can't rely on the economics of space to justify high costs. A G4 is grossly underpowered dollar for dollar to your nearest Intel or AMD based machine... and G5s are just as likely to suffer (though a bit less) on the price/performance spectrum.

    So, in closing, just STFU that Macintosh computers are inexpensive. They aren't, and they aren't likely to be. Macintosh may have once pledged "power to the people" by bringing simple computing to the masses... but, the Apple of today is chaired by a vegan megalomaniac (who is, from all accounts, a complete asshole), has the GAP CEO on its Board (let's not go into the crimes GAP is responsible for), and partners with fucking *IBM* -- the fucking Big Brother they railed against way back when the Macintosh was first introduced.

    We're looking at a boutique machine, with boutique prices. And I say so as a Macintosh user and zealot.

    1. Re:Macintosh is _not_ inexpensive. by MacDork · · Score: 1

      Ok, so I probably shouldn't respond to AC but you called me a troll. I believe the original parent was talking about replacement hardware. Like drives, RAM, etc. To say this stuff costs more for a Mac is patently false. My mac uses the same stuff the PC uses. On the actual system prices, Apple is not out of line. In many cases they beat a comparable system from PC manufacturers by thousands. Look at the XServe vs. Dell's offering. Or go spec out a dual Xeon vs. a dual G5. In a few cases Apple comes out a little more expensive, by a couple hundred dollars at most. But usually you get a lot more for your money. Take the 17" Powerbook for instance. A 'comparable' PC notebook might cost a couple hundred less, but does it come with GigE or the obvious 17" screen? Nope. And my guess is that if you looked at hardware failure rates, the expensive Apple comes out smelling like roses.

  216. Free markets? Pah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Free markets are poor allocative mechanisms where informed consumer choice is desirable. I agree with your comments on fascism, but, you had really ought to look into alternatives to free market economies... the market isn't the axiom for choice and effiiency it's cracked up to be... have a look at a book entitled "The Political Economy of Participatory Economics" or just delve a bit into welfare economics.

  217. Nooo... by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    My first contact with a computer was with an apple 2 at my primary school. They were easy to use and stable. Now we will be spoon feeding our children straight into the borg machine. I'm sure most of the kids have pcs at home so its good for them to use another os and realise there is more out there.

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  218. That's why I left college! by MarcQuadra · · Score: 1

    Seriously, I left college because I'm a learner. I got absolutely shunned for participating in class, everyone thought I was trying to make them look bad. I just felt that if the professor ASKS the class for a response we should offer one. Often in my economics class of 75 students there was NOBODY willing to raise their hand and give an answer. It had the dual-effect of totally disheartening the professor (whom I often chatted with after class) and making me look like some sort of smart-aleck.

    I went to a small private school for most of my school-career (because I was nothing but trouble in public schools), and I was raised to believe that education is an interactive full-duplex operation. I was so depressed when I finally got to college and found out that it was just a big version of high-school with beer and laundry added, I thought there's be more to it.

    --
    "Sometimes, I think Trent just needs a cup of hot chocolate and a blankie." -Tori Amos on Nine Inch Nails
  219. Re:error: does not compute by BJZQ8 · · Score: 1

    First off...the machine of 1993 is remarkably similar to the machine of 2003. At one of my employers, we ran software on our Windows 98/2000 machines that was developed in 1983. In my opinion, things will change...but it's also nice to prepare kids for what they will encounter in the short-term, and that is Windows. Anyway, if things will change in 10 years, why not let them learn on open source Linux distros instead of expensive closed-source Macs? The point of everything people have said to me is to give an "excuse" for retaining the Macs. But I have heard nothing good yet. I am listening, but hearing nothing but the same rhetoric that the Mac zealot teachers give me. "When learning a Mac running OSX, people at least have a chance to learn some UNIX basics, which might actually be worth something even in the future." I don't allow them to have access to the command line...and none of them could figure it out anyway. People (teachers and students) want pointy-and-clicky interfaces, not typie-and-typie. Maybe two or three kids would peck around for awhile, get some error messages, and then go back to their Flash games. You say my post is pointless. Why? I am telling you that I am buying computers that kids have at home for them to use at school. I am saying that when they graduate, they can then move onto the same machines at their employer. What is wrong with that? Perhaps we should be teaching them Esperanto in school, since language is likely to change in the next 10 years! No matter that they speak English at home, and will speak English at work...boy we should really teach them Esperanto. Anyway, by teaching them Esperanto, it will make it easier for them to learn Spanish and other languages in the future. I reject the fallacy that buying them Macs is expanding their horizons in any way...just as teaching them Esperanto would be useless.

  220. If they want it they can have it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally, I will take my Macs over any PC any day of the week. While my fellow PC users were frantic about the nasty viruses last week (LoveSan, RPCSPybot, etc.) I was joyfully working away and had zero problems. As for an earlier comment on network cards being a problem on Macs maybe it is your network. In all of the years (almost 20 to be specific) that I have worked on Macs I have never had a network card go on me.

    If the school districts want to deal with viruses they can go right ahead and deal with them. It is highly likely they are the source for many of them anyway with script kitties running around everywhere.

    To all of those school administrators and principals out there who want a single platform go with Macintosh - your headaches will be fewer.

  221. About the only free thing from Apple: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://developer.apple.com/darwin/

  222. one word: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    Bravo!

  223. Beachwood, Ohio school getting iBooks by germuska · · Score: 1

    This is just one school and less than 300 machines, but a few days ago the Cleveland Plain Dealer reported that Beachwood Middle School has equipped all of its students and faculty with iBooks.

    MacCentral: Beachwood, Ohio school getting iBooks
    Cleveland Plain Dealer: New Beachwood school virtually equipped

    Administrators tend not to like Apple because they look at dollars, and Apples appear to be expensive. I know that when I worked at Northwestern University, we had to continually fight for Apple against that attitude. However, I also know that in NU's public computing labs, one Mac administrator could manage at least three times as many machines as one PC administrator.

  224. Re:Winshit compatible? Try Virtual PC. by dbirchall · · Score: 1
    Virtual PC includes a license for whatever version of Windows you opt for. I bought Virtual PC 6 XP Pro, for example, and I had to type in the frickin' product key and all that when I installed it, just like on a PC.

    Virtual PC costs about $200-$240, depending on which flavor of Windows you want to run on it. Not particularly cheap, but probably cheaper than a PC running anything other than Lindows. And since it includes Windows, it includes the things Windows includes, like IE and media player. It doesn't include extra apps that might be bundled with a new PC, though.

    If you want to do this with a Mac old enough that it didn't come with OS 9 or OS X, and you haven't already upgraded to OS 9 or OS X (almost every Mac capable of running Virtual PC is capable of running OS X) then yes, I suppose you'd need to get OS 9 or OS X as well. I can't really comment on what version of MacOS schools are using, these days.

    From a school's position, an eMac with a reasonable amount of RAM and Virtual PC with whatever Windows OS they like should be under $1K. Given educational discounts and bulk discounts, I'd say significantly under, probably closer to $500 than to $1K, but I'm really guessing. And for that, they get a Mac that runs most or all of their existing Mac apps (hey, if they've got System 5 stuff, all bets are off ;) and Windows, and DOS, and various things from the UNIX/Linux world, yadda yadda.

    (Oh, and of course, once you've got VirtualPC installed, I'm pretty sure you can take whatever OS install CD's you've got lying around for PC's, and set those other OSes up under it, too. I think I've got some Linux CD's somewhere here, maybe I'll put that hypothesis to the test right now.)

  225. Or Better Learning to Build by axxackall · · Score: 1
    The best way to learn what is OS is to build the OS. That's why I would recommend Linux From Scratch as a first part of an OS course, and Gentoo as a second part of it.

    At first part students must understand very deep details of OS design and they have to understand that by practicing: kernel configuration, disk partioning, filesystem choice, init scripts.

    If you will promise your students that OS has a kernel with drivers they won't understand it. If you will shouw the control panel of some driver configuration in Windows they will remember it as a control panel. But if they will configure the kernel in Linux and build it to see the difference between configurations - that will give them a much better picture of the kernel design.

    As for Gentoo, it will be a great step for a student after a lot of manual work with LFS to learn how to automate some aspects of system installation, what are system and application packages. and what is their life cicle. Gentoo's Portage demostrates the most fine-grained control of package dependencies. Making own ebuilds for existing open source applications will teach various application building techniques.

    After playing with many application packages on both LFS and Gentoo a student will have a very deep understandig of what is networking, document processing, databasing, graphics, music etc. A student will remember it in concepts rather than in screenshot images of control panels, like that would be after close-source OSes like Windows or OSX.

    --

    Less is more !
    1. Re:Or Better Learning to Build by The+Herbaliser · · Score: 1

      Very true, but I wouldn't want to try it with 8 year olds. I wonder at what age it would be appropriate for kids to start building their own OS?

      I think I should point out, though, that it is just as easy for student to just learn commands without really understanding as it is for students to just remember control panels without really understanding. People often seem to think that command lines are somehow "pure" and tend to forget that both a command-line interface and a graphical interface are still just interfaces.

    2. Re:Or Better Learning to Build by axxackall · · Score: 1
      Very true, but I wouldn't want to try it with 8 year olds. I wonder at what age it would be appropriate for kids to start building their own OS?

      right after they can read and right. No other limitations and restrictions. Some of my friends was teaching their kids to play chess even before reading/writing skills - very useful to develop abstract thinking. Later it helps a lot with math.

      --

      Less is more !
  226. Apple does have something up in their sleeve, ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    an item especially valuable for the education market.

    HyperCard.

    HyperCard has been a crucial part of their stronghold in education for years.

    Apple just needs to make use of it again. It should go like this:

    Continue to offer and support Classic OS (to keep the installed base in education in place), start giving HyperCard away to Mac-using schools everywhere.

    Bundle HyperCard with OS Classic capable "education Macs" in the eMac price range, not the high end one.

    Support education-oriented user groups wherever you find them (yes, Apple, you will have to go out and look for them) and feed them information, courseware and software generously.

    A very modest investment would probably be enough to finally bring HyperCard over to OS X.

    Just my 2 cts ;-)

    Walter.

  227. Home Schoolers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The majority of home school children live in a Christian home ( but that number is changing) because they don't like how their children are being taught in public schools. Public school teachers have to teach in an agnostic environment, thus they can't bring up religion unless the local school system allows such teaching/communication. What is sad is the lack of religion understanding in our society. I ma in favor of presenting all religions based on how each faith teaches it's followers. I took such a course in an Alabama college and was enlightened on how I view other faiths from mine (Southern Baptist). Schools can't ignore religion; it will be with to the end of time. I won't get into the morale or separation of church and state (because the word church isn't used most religions), but I can say a persons understanding of truth is based on ones religious beliefs no matter how one wants to spin it. Apple, nor can any other company, can never influences what I have said. Apple's education problems are Apple's own doing and they have some soul searching to do to correct there on going missteps. I welcome response.

    1. Re:Home Schoolers by BostonPilot · · Score: 1
      I used to associate home schooling with far right Christians. I think the turning point for me was listening to an edition of "The Connection" on NPR that discussed home schooling. I was especially impressed by some of the kids who are home schooled who called in. They conducted their side of the conversation with an intelligence and maturity that belied their age. They gave many good reasons for home schooling being an advantage over public schools. I won't list them here, because that will turn this quick post into a long one.

      As for Apple's educational problems being caused by Apple... I doubt it. I think it's more a reflection of the computer environment where 95% of the users just assume that everyone wants to use Microsoft... and the IT professionals try to coax, bully, and engineer the remaining 5% into being absorbed into the Microsoft environment.

      All I can say for my own computing preferences: thank god for Apple and Linux...

  228. Wasting MY Time & $$s Re:Why are students so p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey Mr. Chips,
    Most students at a state university are under some pretty strict economic conditions for their attendance. You go to class and you go to work, and the free time you do have is precious. Each time some instuctor (mostly dumb hippies) tries to add something they think is "enrichment" it is actually taking away from the real sylabus, the stuff you need and paid for. Was the sylabus not going to fill every class period? You are cheating your students.

  229. Gentoo! by axxackall · · Score: 1
    Gradually, our student terminals -- PCs and Mac -- are shifting towards a "common platform": Unix. Our Macs are being upgraded to OSX, and each PC (most are Dell Optiplex GX-110s, GX150s and newer 270s) can be booted into either Windows 2000 or a customized RedHat lab image.

    OSX as Unix is very-very different from Linux. Different FS layout, different libraries, lots of compatibility problems. You can gradually shift to the common Linux distro having unified really many things on both. Just install Gentoo/PPC on Macs and Gentoo/x86 on PCs. Oh, and by the way, you'll get a very good tool to combine your proprietary updates with the mainstream from the distro vendor: Portage it's called.

    --

    Less is more !
    1. Re:Gentoo! by vergil · · Score: 1
      Good point, Axxackall. When I referred to Unix as a "common platform," I was admittedly painting with a broad brush.

      Speaking of updates for OSX, I've been pleased a number of ibook/Powerbook wielding staff members (seems as if every other sysadmin has at least one) have been happily using Fink, which closely resembles one of my favorite Linux utilities -- Debian's apt-get.

  230. Re:Here's what YOU are missing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But... people, be they K-12 students or scientists, generally don't have cyberpunk neural implants directly linked to those compute clusters, render farms, or whatever, just yet. That means they use one of those things we quaintly call a (fanfare) desktop computer

    Neural implants?

    Clustered computing on linux:

    1. Install clusterKnoppix CD.
    2. Reboot.
    3. Move to next box, repeat.
    4. Enjoy.

    Unlike a compute cluster node, that so-called desktop computer typically does all sorts of silly things that would make it a lousy compute cluster node. Like running one or more displays, handling a GUI, spending lots of time waiting for user input, and so on.

    How is this different than clusterKnoppix? I'm running 8 desktops, 5 displays, a GUI, no problems with waiting for user input, etc. I have my mail client on desktop one, my web browser on several more desktops, a movie playing on desktop #5, a word processor open on desktop 6, desktop monitoring on 7, cluster monitoring on 8, and various other apps running or parked on the taskbar. Some of the processes are running and using resources locally, and some of the processes have moved to another box on the network that has spare resources available. And my desktop is as zippy as ever.

    And as soon as my desktop is not in use, and has spare resources available, it is available to lend it's resources to other nodes.

    And, be they students or scientists, odds are those users want to do various and sundry things with those desktop computers. They probably receive documents,

    Just as I do on my clustered box...

    or have to create documents,

    Just as I do on my cluster...

    in a format that Microsoft Office likes (whether they want to or not),

    Just as I do on my cluster...

    btw, how is your compatibility between word 95 and word xp? word 97? I'll bet my compatibility in opening/editing/saving word files between word versions is better than yours...

    And you are aware that ms word runs better on linux/crossover office than it does on windows right?

    so being able to handle that is important.

    Yes, I agree. And the gnu/linux community agrees. That's why compatibility between word releases is better on linux. And the gnu tools for converting the word files to other formats are far superior on linux, if they even are available on windows, which most aren't. And unless you are embedding esoteric excel spreadsheets (rare) with specific formatting into word documents, OpenOffice.org is probably more compatible with word xp/2000/97/95 than word itself is.

    And they probably either know, or should learn, how to use Windows.

    Currently taught in grade school.

    But they probably also know, or should learn, how to use a Mac,

    Why? For what purpose? Photoshop? Flash?

    They can take the classic for those specific commercial products at a trade school or community college.

    It seems this hasn't sunk into your head yet. Maybe you need to loosen up a bit. Because otherwise what will happen to Macromedia and Adobe in the next 18-24 months, if they don't have an open source skunk works project underway, may also happen to you.

    Adobe and Macromedia, if they don't get open source religion very soon, will be history. Adobe's biggest verticle market, studios, are abandoning Adobe. While some of the studios are placating their developers by enabling photoshop to work on linux via crossover/wine, they aren't planning on doing this in the future. The studios themselves are developing, and paying for the development, of open source apps like mentioned in a previous post. Their developers may not like Gimp, but they like filmGimp/CinePaint, Maya, and other FOSS tools. And there are some that also use Gimp. So the development will be enhanced directly by those actually using the apps. Meanwhile, Adobe is tucked away in its offices, counting its money from the $

  231. Teach Linux. by HanzoSan · · Score: 1



    We should be teaching Linux because Linux will have over 20% desktop marketshare by 2008 on Desktops http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=4287

    Linux also will be standard for servers, I mean after MSblaster, Sobig, Code Red, etc.

    Who will be using Windows in 2008? No one who is serious about security would choose to use Windows, and even if they did use Windows it would not be the current Windows.

    I think you'd be better of teaching them Linux because unlike Windows, the Linux commands dont change much, Windows was based on Dos, now its not, it keeps changing from 3.1 to 95 to NT and XP, they keep releasing "new" standards, they keep changing formats, the price keeps going up on Windows software which confirms that the majority of the world wont be able to afford Windows.

    So why arent schools teaching Linux, the cheaper more stable alternative to Windows? Well Bill Gates is the richest man in the world, he pays schools to use his software via donations, if someone is offering to donate millions of dollars worth of free hardware if you agree to use their software and only their software on it, it doesnt matter if the mac is better or if linux is cheaper, using Linux wont get you hundreds of free PCs, Microsoft is donating(paying) schools to run their software.

    So theres nothing to debate or choose here, you can run Windows and get hundreds of free state of the art PCs, or you can use Linux on your 486s. Mac isnt even an option because Apple even if they give away macs, wont give away as many as Microsoft can afford to give PC/Windows, and Linux is also taking away Apples core market, people who want higher quality and who want the state of the art multimedia computer to render graphics are choosing Linux now over Macs because Linux allows them to do rendering better and on slower computers.

    I just dont see a market for Apple besides their Ibook series of laptops which I plan to buy. Their Imacs arent as good as the PC spec for spec, their G5 is good but its also $2000, it doesnt support games so anyone who wants the 64bit CPU wont have anything to run on it because most of the games come out for Windows, Linux supports more games than the Mac believe it or not, theres alot of issues.

    If I could give advice to Apple I'd tell them to release OSX for the x86, to stop focusing on hardware and focus on what they do best, the software, and to compete directly with Windows.

    I should be able to go into a store to buy the new Itanium or Clawhammer based PC, and see it running OSX, next to it I should see WindowsXP, and Linux. There is no way that I'd walk out with XP or Linux because OSX is easier to use than Linux while its more secure than Windows.

    So yes there is a market for Apple, just not the education market, their market would be college students and the enterprise where people value security, stability, and polish/quality.

    In school I dont see demand for Mac, people are asking for better games, or more power/speed, I dont see anyone complaining that Windows is too hard to use, at least not the people who are in school today.

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    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  232. Excellent! +1 Informative! (-: by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Thanks for that link, it's currently off doing the rounds. (-:

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    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  233. YAAAY homeschooling FLAMEWAR!!! by wirelessbuzzers · · Score: 1

    Now, I may be more than a bit biased in this regard (my girlfriend is homeschooled), but I have to take exception to your comment. While the homeschoolers I know are more introverted than many of my friends (blame it on the lack of "socialization" if you want, but most of them are geeks and geeks are not generally outgoing), they are certainly not screwed up either academically or socially. Most of them are extremely smart, both in the amount of information they know and in their skills in applying it.

    I'm sure that I'm not typical in my experiences with homeschoolers. Some go to my church, and some former homeschoolers went to my high school. The others I met through math competitions (USA Math Olympiad), or through my girlfriend (whom I also met through math stuff; we both scored in the top 12 nationally on the USAMO). While this is clearly a biased slice, you might notice that homeschooled children have disproportionately high representation in all sorts of academic competitions (national spelling bee, math competitions, etc).

    And yes, many of them have teachers for parents. But I would guess this is true of a large proportion of homeschoolers, as teachers are often critical of public schools and can't afford private ones.

    I googled briefly for numbers, and here's what I found:
    "The average SAT scores of home-schooled students were 568 Verbal and 532 Math, above the national averages of 505 Verbal and 514 Math."

    Unfortunately, SAT scores are a really lousy metric. I wasn't able to find any info on other standardized tests, such as those given in elementary school; these would probably be better indicators. Students who homeschool all the way through high school probably have a better time than those who just homeschool for a year or two.

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    I hereby place the above post in the public domain.