Please take a look at the new forum for the opensuse-edu project.
http://forums.opensuse.org/obs-projects/obs-education/
Hopefully the start of a lot more communication and growth!
Please take a look at the new forum for the opensuse-edu project.
http://forums.opensuse.org/obs-projects/obs-education/
Hopefully the start of a lot more communication and growth!
This week I attended SELF (South East Linux Fest) at Clemson University here in South Carolina. It was a great day! I met and worked the openSUSE booth with Joe Brockmeier aka “Zonker”. There were lots of enthusiastic attendees both from the Linux and Education communities. All of the Educators that came to visit the booth where extremely pleased with the work the EDU team has completed and If I had been able to supply them, many would have taken copies of the EDU Li-F-E disk and Sugar disk that I had running on my laptop. Cyberog and the team really have hit a home run! I had with me a thin client setup and did several demonstrations on the ease of installation and setup. Kiwi-LTSP is one of the most exciting products for Education I have seen in a long time. Easy-LTSP, the openSUSE configuration utility for LTSP, is by far the easiest configuration utility available to LTSP users. Combine Easy-LTSP and Italc (a computerlab monitoring suite) and in 5 minutes a teacher can setup a computer lab and either display the lesson on each\all screen or capture a students screen for display to others or simple monitoring of all screens.
I sat through a couple of presenters and I was most excited to hear Chad Wollenburg from VA. Chad is a kindred spirit , he has been slowly moving his district to open source for a few years now and he started much the same way most of us have, his school district could not afford to relicense Microsoft office. He too, had to show that Open Office was compatible and comparable to MSOffice and explain the over 200,000.o0$ savings to his district using small steps and insider advocates as his method of operation. I am glad to meet so many people dedicated to reducing the “criminal” costs of licensing.
Our project itself past another milestone this week, I am proud to present the OBS-Education forum. http://forums.opensuse.org/obs-projects/obs-education/ Please feel free to post questions specific to openSUSE Education development, bugs, enhancements, etc.
We are hoping to have students, young people, professors, teachers, and professionals from many fields as well. Actually everyone is welcome to attend the event. We’ll have presentations, stands, gaming, and of course the fun install fest (openSUSE 11.1). And yes, you can have an original openSUSE 11.1 Live DVD if you are one of the first 400 people to get there 😉 (Thanks Zonker!).
Where? Meet us at Universidad Andres Bello (UNAB), Campus República, República 239/Subterráneo R3. Check the map here.
Time? 10 AM though 8 PM.
Talks:
See you there. Join openSUSE and have a lot of fun!
RadioTux – the german Linuxradio – are present in LinuxTag Berlin. The following Community-Guys would be interviewed:
* Joe Zonker Brockmeier – openSUSE Community, SUSE Community Week, SUSE Summit
* Cornelius Schuhmacher – SUSE Studio
* Brent McDonnell – iFolder
* Jan Weber-SUSE Education.
If you have any Questions, you can submit the Questions to: live@radiotux.de. Then we’re using your Questions Live at LinuxTag.
The program committee has extended the deadline for participation in the openSUSE Conference 2009. Find the updated Call for Papers document at http://en.opensuse.org/OpenSUSE_Conf_2009/Call_for_Papers. This gives you nearly two more weeks to come up with a proposal for a talk, a panel discussion or a birds of a feather (BOF) session.
The current plan is to have a preliminary detailed schedule of most talks around June 26, 2009.
PSA sent to opensuse-gnome@opensuse.org, opensuse-project@opensuse.org, opensuse-announce@opensuse.org
Please join us for the openSUSE-GNOME BugDay code named “Community Effort” tomorrow
(Friday 14 MAY 2009) at 1100EDT/1500UTC.
We’ll be squashing blocker, critical, and major bugs in 11.1 related to GNOME.
More information can be found on the wiki:
http://en.opensuse.org/GNOME/BugDays/20090514
A Gobby session will be announced at the beginning of the meeting to assign/close
bugs. Should you have any questions, feel free to ask in #openSUSE-GNOME on Freenode,
or email me directly.
We hope to see you there!
—
Christopher M. Hobbs [chobbs@siloamsprings.com]
Network Administrator, City of Siloam Springs
Yesterday from 10:00 to 20:00 UTC the Weekly News Team holds an Session: “How to make a Newsletter?”. The Team prepared 2 Presentations:
* How to make an Newsletter and
* How to translate a Newsletter? (Thanks to Satoru).
So the Visitors can get an Overview about the Project. In an integrated Question and Answer Session Visitors can recieve Informations. We had construct an Special Edtion from the Community Week. The Special Edition merged the Blog Post, other Posts to one Site. You can see our Result: http://en.opensuse.org/OpenSUSE_Weekly_News/CommunityWeek2009.
The activity in the Channel was low. We hope that today more Visitors come to #opensuse-newsletter. For first Introductions we placed the Page: http://en.opensuse.org/OpenSUSE_Weekly_News/CommunityWeek .
If you would like to learn more about Translating you can visit us today from 12:00 to 14:00 in IRC: #opensuse-newsletter @ Freenode. The German Translaton will be held on #opensuse-de.
We hope to see you today …
Your Weekly News Team