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Educational Software To Donate With Laptop?

SlartibartfastJunior writes "I will be sending my four-year-old laptop to a school in Uganda this fall. I plan to load up an older version of Windows (or something free), and I need suggestions - what should I load on it? I need suggestions for educational games, educational software, etc. that won't drain my battery too much (since the computer will only be able to recharge at night), won't require a CD (since my drive doesn't work 80% of the time), and won't be too America-centered (most of these children have never been more than ten miles out of their own villages, and wouldn't understand "Oregon Trail"). Also, any great ideas on where I can acquire copies of this software?"

11 of 332 comments (clear)

  1. Openoffice by ishamael69 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    OpenOffice or something of the sort would be nice. An office package is always useful.

  2. Civ and SimCity type games by TedTschopp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Give them a couple old versions of Civ and Sim City.

    Those are educational and addictive enough. And are not American centric.

    Ted

    --
    Fantasy remains a human right; we make in our measure and in our derivative mode... -- JRR Tolkien
  3. My own experience by SIGALRM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Years ago I set up a punch-card scanner for a correspondence school in Kumasi, Ghana. The staff had never really worked with a computer much; I was suprised at their level of interest in the computer itself (just a P3).

    I had loaded a copy of Microsoft Encarta on the PC and they absolutlely loved that!

    --
    Sigs cause cancer.
  4. While you're at it... by lamz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...replace the CD drive.

    --

    Mike van Lammeren
    It will challenge your head, your brain, and your mind.

  5. Do they speak English? by Grant29 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You might spend all your time creating a nice load, but if they can't speak english youre probably wasting your time. Are you sure they don't have any IT people over there that will put a base set of apps on the machine? They might just format it and start from scratch.

    --
    Only 5 Gmail invitations left!

  6. Came with a license? by phorm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They're not, but most laptops came with windows, so I'd say it's probably licensed for at least 95 (supposing that the license wasn't therafter used on another PC).

    1. Re:Came with a license? by JPriest · · Score: 4, Insightful
      At the point where MS started tying copies of it's operating system to a hardware ID, if I give someone an old computer, they can have the copy of windows and the license with it.

      If MS does not like that, I will get them a spoon so they can eat my ass.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    2. Re:Came with a license? by bishiraver · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Linux / Mac/OS installs (like either of those would run on a four year old Toshiba)
      Linux, at least, works on old laptops. I don't know the manufacture date of my old Dell laptop, but the Pentium 3 500mhz was released in 1999, so I'm guessing the mobile version came out in 2000. Which makes it about four years old, maybe a tad bit less. I run a 2.6.6 kernel on a debian machine with a light window manager (fluxbox unstable), and get about 2 hours battery life out of it doing office apps. If I stayed in console, I could get a lot more time out of it.

      If you put gnome on it, with a nice shiny interface and easy to use buttons, etc, I'd say linux is the best way to go with this. It'll last the longest, use the least ammount of battery, and if you keep the root password (unless they for some reason have a linux guru, who asks for the root password) after installing everything, they can't delete any system files on accident.

      The same does not go for any version of Windows before NT.
  7. The question here is... by maggeth · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ...what is it they need?

    I know it sounds silly, but you should ask the people you are donating to what specifically they need. It is much better for them if they get something they don't need to make any modifications to whatsoever. They will have some experience in the field and will have dealt with many people like you. Maybe they are more concerned about the shape of the hardware (perhaps they will format it as soon as they get it and put their own stuff on it).

    So ask. :)

  8. Send Learning, Not Technology by hardpack · · Score: 3, Insightful

    After spending some time in Eastern Africa, at times dealing with technology concerns, most villages don't have the resources to take advantage of software applications in reality. For example, what good is OpenOffice if they don't have a printer, toner cartridges, and paper? Also, climate control might be difficult for them, so just keeping any of this stuff operational is going to be a huge undertaking.

    Maybe give them an archive of Wikipedia or HowStuffWorks would even be better! What good is Celestia when they need to learn how to fix a motorbike or a radio? Or health information?

    Especially if the equipment isn't being sent to a *large* city, then the dust, humidity, shipment, and general treatment is going to send the equipment to the graveyard pretty soon anyways.

  9. Software in Zaire by electronikthot · · Score: 4, Insightful
    My mother, a computer geek, lives in the Democratic Republic of Congo (ex-Zaire) and volunteers her time in various ways in hospitals and recently said this about computers and the DRC.

    If you're going to donate software, just remember that most people in Africa do not speak English.

    1. Outlook and a browser would be first on the list. Congolese want to explore and the most impotant thing for them is exploring the world through WWW and keeping in touch with loved ones.

    2. Second on the list is antivirus and anti-spyware. After various worms like Blaster receed here, they persist for months in the RDC because no one protect their computers. I often hear about the crippling effect viruses have on computers there.

    3. With few printers and no projectors, Powerpoint, Excel, and Word are possibly over the top.

    4. RPGs, Strategy game would just not make sense . Sport, Racing, and first person shooter would be a better choice.

    She says that the situation there is dire. The school system is rudimentary and most have never seen or touched a computer. The average person there finishes school before 6th grade to work. Most work laborful jobs, the lucky ones work as maids, sentinels, chauffers, and other service jobs making $30-$50 a month.

    With computers costing twice as much there than here and Cybercafes charging several dollars an hours, very little of the population can afford computing of any kind. FYI, With almost no phones lines, everyone uses cellular phones and to connect to an ISP, you need to buy a $1000 transmitter that gives you about 6 Kilobytes max a second. The monthly charge is > $100 a month.

    In 2003 and then in 2004, They had an Internet Festival aka "Fête de l'Internet" . The most popular booth was by far the President's booth. He had some computers with free internet access and there was apparently a line around the corner to use this access.

    A craigslist for RDC called infoCongo was started and this is one of the most popular sites there. Unfortunatley, with a small amount of user base, what's popular there looks quite void to US Standards.