Graduation Day for Linux
Graduating to the Next Level

Brian Proffitt
Building labs has been a huge success for K12LTSP. The Portland Public
Schools (PPS), which have had two of the labs and are activating two more
this week, are certainly impressed with the technology. According to
one representative of PPS, 16-17 more labs will be installed
system-wide by this coming Fall.
In Riverdale, Nelson and his students have been working to take the
lab network scenario to a new level.
"My high school class just built our first cluster this
spring. We're experimenting with it to see how it works," he explained. "Our goal is to
explore a cluster-based pool of application servers for a new high
school we'll open in September. We'll be installing 65 new K12LTSP
thin-clients for that building. "
The cluster work was developed with the K12LTSP+ OpenMosix HOWTO
posted out on k12os.org, he added.
Nelson was also very quick to add that much of the success of K12LTSP
has come from having a very strong local support net.
"All of the training we've done has
been with the help of volunteers. No one ever has to pay for anything.
It helps when you have the best Linux User Group in the country. That's
how I feel about our group, PLUG," Nelson
stated.
The open-source nature of K12LTSP has also been a reall boon for the
project, as constant user feedback has only served to improve the
project more rapidly.
"Many of these [improvements] are showing up in our newest K12LTSP 2.1 version that will be released next
week. The final release candidate is out right now," Nelson said.
As for the future? Nelson and Harrison have no plans to remain
focused on just the Portland area.
"We've had enough success with Linux that other school business managers
are asking twice about paying for licensing," Nelson said. "We've moved beyond simple
awareness in many circles and we're now laying down the road map for
migration. We're working on a Software Freedom Day on July 4th that will
pair local Linux User Groups with schools around the country for
software demonstrations. We're also working with Red Hat to further the
support program they've started in NC.
"We are close to the point where it is politically incorrect to use
proprietary software in a public school, at least in the server
rooms," he added.
And perhaps on clients as well, if the success of K12LTSP is any indication.
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