KDE Desktop Trial in US Schools

Linspire has announced that their KDE based operating system is being trialed for use by schools in Indiana state. The Indiana Access Program will provide every classroom with computers for all their pupils. There are already several thousand Linspire machines running KDE in use in dozens of classrooms across the state to explore the benefits of one-to-one classroom computing. Introducing KDE to high school students in this manner will equip these young people with the skills necessary to be comfortable and familiar with the Open Source platform. Many of these students will likely go on to use KDE after school and perhaps even join the KDE project as contributors, helping to spread KDE and GNU/Linux on the desktop even further in North America.

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Comments

by Marc Driftmeyer (not verified)

Some of the bravado on the rate of success is common place for any OS. I hope the feedback the kids give, including the faculty, are invaluable in shaping KDE 4.0 and future incarnation.

I see trouble if students try to install one of the Linspire based software packages onto other Linux based distros. After all, they are both "Linux" in a way, right? The proper thing to do is to also educate users that they are using just one of the more than 100 Linux based distros, and that a software packaged for Linspire might not necessarily work with another distro. An analogy could be made of internal combustion engines using the same gasoline but whose parts cannot be guaranteed to work in all gasoline engines.

by Dick Colclasure (not verified)

Don't you fret yourself over those kids. The hood is not bolted on a Linux distribution like on proprietory operating systems. After all it was kids that put the Oldsmobile v8 in the Mercury, 6 Stromburgs on a flathead Ford, nitro in the tank, nitrus in the bottle. The kids will do just fine, the adults having to keep up with them will be the problem.

Well, other distro's ship Linspire-software as wel.
Like SUSE 9.3, which includes Linspire applications like LPhone and NVU
So I don't forsee much trouble.
Besides, when installing software for Windows, you need to be ware that you pick the right version: win 95/98/98Se/me/nt/2000/xp/vista etc..

Afaik Linspire is still Debian based which should theoretically make it compatible with other Debian and Debian based Linux distributions.

by Daniel Estévez (not verified)

Yes as mixing packages from etch and sid wich are still debian. It's very funny to mess up the dependecies. Other example: sarge packages won't work in Ubuntu Hoary because Hoary has an older libc and if you ever try to install the libc from sarge you'll also mess up the whole system.

Installing debs from other debian based distros is like installing rpms from other distros.

by Anno v. Heimburg (not verified)

"KDE based operating system"? Wow.

I mean, I love KDE and all (no, really), but I wouldn't claim my OS is based on it. In my case, it's based on the Linux kernel and some GNU libraries and tools, and is running KDE.

Where can I get this KDE-based OS?

by Anonymous (not verified)

You're getting too technical.

It's like saying a "Windows-based OS" instead of, more properly, a DOS-based OS. DOS may be at the base of it all and is used for bootstrapping, but what really matters are the higher-level APIs and services exposed by Windows. Same thing goes for Linux. All the Linux stuff is abstracted away in the higher-level KDE API and services. Linux doesn't even have to be there, it could be BSD or Solaris.

Hence it makes sense to speak of a KDE-based OS or at least Operating Environment.

by Davide Ferrari (not verified)

And why would you put the GNU tools in the OS? they are programs in userland, not part of the OS.

by Yama (not verified)

Of course they are part of the OS. The OS won't work without them.

by Vegeta (not verified)

by that logic, the computer is part of the OS. The OS won't work without it....
And for many people, an OS without KDE would be as useless as an OS without KDE tools

by Yama (not verified)

The computer is hardware, not software. The operating system runs on top of the hardware.

A system can run just fine without KDE. Does running GNOME mean you're running a different OS? Of course not.

by Vegeta (not verified)

If I substitute GNU utilities with different ones, do you think I am running a different OS?

Your logic is that things that are necessary for an OS to function are part of the OS, and that is a fallacy.

GNU/Linux is a political and marketing term invented by RMS to get credit for something he didn't write.

by cl (not verified)

> If I substitute GNU utilities with different ones, do you think I am running a different OS?

Yes, it the same kernel but a different os.

by Yama (not verified)

How is an _operating_ system supposed to _operate_ with just a kernel? Not even MS-DOS (which is a very simple OS) works like this. Don't bring politics into this. It's just plain common sense.

by Anonymous (not verified)

You question is nonsense. I could ask you:

How is an _operating_ system supposed to _operate_ without applications? Not even MS-DOS (which is a very simple OS) works like this. Don't bring politics into this. It's just plain common sense.

by Yama (not verified)

"How is an _operating_ system supposed to _operate_ without applications?"

It runs just fine. Do you even know what an operating system is? Here's a hint:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operating_system

"Don't bring politics into this."

I never did. In fact, I said this _wasn't_ about politics (which you should know since you blatently ripped off my own words).

If you are going to troll, at least make some sense.

by koldpete (not verified)

A major deployment (even if its only a trial) in a US school system is huge!

People expect European govnts to do "crazy socialist" things like trial OSS, but something like this in the US is exciting. I really hope the trial is successful, and leads to a real deployment in the future, like GNOME in those Spanish schools.

With a good sysadmin, a linux based OS *can* be as good as a windows based one, with lots of cost savings to boot.

Heres hoping!

I think its too bad RH or Novell have never been as aggressive in getting linux in schools.

Riddell,
This is refreshing!Finally some news We want to hear!
Keep up the good work,man good story!
Keep us posted (hey i made a pun)
I think Linux would teach kids more about computers
in a single semester than all of the
Microsoft Certifications available today(combined)
also,any other scholastic endeavors subject matter as well!
Like Algebra,Quadratic equations,Astronomy,all sorts of desktops are
available to them,they could contain absolutely nothing on
the hard drive,all bootable cds,and the PC's could be recycled,with
no real damage after time!just replace the cdrom drives!