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Free Software for Cybercafe Management?

SantiagoRoza asks: "Hello, Slashdot. I am asking for your collaboration because someone I know needs a software to manage his (small) Internet cafe. Ideally, we're looking for software that is free/libre and multilingual (with a Spanish version), but I'd gladly take free/gratis and English-only. Additionally, the software has to work on Windows. After searching the 'net, I've only been able to find CafeTimer, which doesn't impress me. Nothing else out there looks like it will support more than 2-3 computers. Might you all have other suggestions?"

12 of 30 comments (clear)

  1. SCO licensing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Ideally, we're looking for software that is free/libre

    That leaves out Windows (copyright of Microsoft), Linux (copyright of SCO) and MacOS (copyright of Apple).

    You might want to get your friends to write a new completely free operating system from scratch, that's really your only choice at the moment.

    1. Re:SCO licensing by MindStalker · · Score: 3, Funny

      BSD?

    2. Re:SCO licensing by JVert · · Score: 2, Funny

      Does tux racer run on BSD?

      Thats what I was holding out for before I switch.

    3. Re:SCO licensing by endx7 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Does tux racer run on BSD?

      ..Actually, it does. (Well, I know for FreeBSD at least)

      Me, I like the golf theme for it.

  2. Windows??? and Linux too... :) by advocate_one · · Score: 5, Informative

    CybOrg, the Cybercafe Organizer and it's Spanish/English to boot!!! what more can you ask for???

    --
    Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
  3. I don't have a clue... by growlydog · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Are you looking for something that will allow you to manage users and give them passwords and stuff to log on, then look to see how long they used the connection and that kind of thing? To manage your subscribers? Some friends of mine had a plan to sell to cafe-owners who wanted to have the Internet available and part of that plan involved Knoppix. I am not positive how they intended for it to work... And since Knoppix is really a version of Linux I would imagine that it would not meet your requirement of "Compatibility with Windows". But, shouldn't there be some software out there that you could install that would allow you to administrate a Cyber Cafe that would allow Windows clients to connect?
    Pardon me for my most likely useless contribution to this discussion... Like I said, I don't have a clue what I'm talking about. All I know is they were gonna use Knoppix and install it on a computer for someone to use in a Cyber Cafe and make the computer a wireless access point that managed who logged on and who didn't.

    Please expand on this if you have an idea what you are talking about! :)

    BTW, Knoppix is a version of Linux that runs completely off of a CD. So you can plug it into virtually any x86 computer and boot into a fully-functional version of Linux with certain Apps pre-installed and ready-to-run.

    I seem to remember that this was one of the only convenient ways that the US Army was able to demonstrate their 64-bit edition of "America's Army" by running it off of a Knoppix install. Could just be my imagination though.

    --
    my sig was dubm so i took it out.
  4. You gotta be kidding... by Korgan · · Score: 2, Informative

    Couldn't find anything? Didn't try very hard. :|

    One search alone generates quite a few apps that fit into your stated requirements. I'm sure if I tried I could find you a lot more.

    http://freshmeat.net/search/?q=cafe&section=projec ts&Go.x=5&Go.y=14

  5. "has to?" by Apreche · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the software has to work on Windows

    Ok, most of the time I see this as a requirement there is an obvious reason. Sometimes there is an existing system component that is in windows already. Sometimes the target is all platforms and windows can't be left out. Usually you can hold all the linux zealots back with a very good reason why running on windows is a valid requirement.

    In this case, I do not see such a reason. Why can't your friend's cybercafe run on linux? If you did run on linux not only would this problem of cybercafe software be relatively trivial, but the other advantages including security, would be numerous obvious and unecessary to enumerate. I'm not saying that there isn't a reason the cybercafe must run windows, I'm just wondering what it is. And saying the customers want it or need it in some fashion is not a good reason. Neither is lack or knowledge on the proprietor's part.

    Oh, and to answer the question, there really isn't free cybercafe software for windows. Even the pay software is easilly cracked. The best bet is hardware control. you can get dongles with timers that cut off the mice/keyboards/monitors and allow them to switch on for set amounts of time. Some are coin operated also.

    Also, with vnc you can make a hacky solution. Just set a passwords on all the boxen. Then to unlock them vnc into them and do the deed. Set a timer and lock them again when time is up.

    --
    The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    1. Re:"has to?" by itwerx · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why can't your friend's cybercafe run on linux?

      Er, games? :)

  6. Openkiosk works w/both Lin and Win. by geohump · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://openkiosk.sourceforge.net/ This package may do what you want. It has clients for both Windows and Linux boxes. I believe that it may need a Linux server to control things, but I'm not sure.

  7. Make it. by JVert · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Replace your windows shell with some nice snazzy fullscreen interface, use flash even. All you need to do is setup some login system, username and password would... work, but fingerpring scanner would be cooler (which still needs the login as a backup). Launching games is as simple as daemon command prompt mounts. But MOST importantly copy all the profile data from their account (stored on a server) so they dont have to rebuild their keybinds. And safe the profile when they are dont. By profile I mean the .cfg files for the different games, not the windows profile.

    Another thing, decorate the hell out of the place. Gameworks is really cool and I bet you can get some really great looking stuff if your creative about it.

    Chicks serving drinks in elf suits is important too, I only bring this up last because I assume you already planned for that. But in case you didn't...

  8. WTF does that have to do with it? by leonbrooks · · Score: 3, Informative
    I whomped up a Linux-based cafe system called lincaf, going to be uploaded somewhere public soon (weeks) and it's GPLed.
    • While we were testing it, two girls who had never seen Linux before trotted up, sat down, and edited up their CVs, one on OpenOffice Writer and one on KWord, and they never noticed that it wasn't MS-Word they were using. They were especially happy to be able to turn their CVs into PDF on the spot.
    • While some sites require MSIE (and we don't provide it), one customer was delighted to report that while his bank rarely worked for him using MSIE at another establishment related to the one using lincaf, it worked every time using FireFox and telling it to lie about who it was.
    • Another random customer who deals with GIS was absolutely floored that we were able to provide GRASS for him in a matter of seconds. No, hah, hah, not that kind of grass, got it off your chest now?

      He added GRASS-on-Linux to his resume and got a job the next day (with a firm that, oddly enough, doesn't use Linux).

    This Linux system, despite being highly prototypical, is already far easier to maintain than the comparable MS-Windows systems at peer establishments, which regularly break, and regularly hand out free time despite being heavily locked down and Sherrif carded.
    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing