OSSDI to Distribute OpenOffice.org in Schools 133
Xampper writes to tell us that the OSSDI (Open Source Software Distribution Initiative) is a new organization that has cropped up to help not only spread the word about Open Source Software, but to help distribute the OpenOffice.org office suite starting with less fortunate school districts. The OSSDI describes their current status as still being in its "infancy as an organization. Because of this, all of our current resources are focused on gaining supporters, raising funds, and recruiting volunteers. Plans are under-way for our first software distribution, but we must first cover our operating costs. We are also interested in becoming a registered not for profit corporation so that donors will receive tax breaks for their gifts, but the registration process can also be very costly and time-consuming."
Oy. (Score:5, Informative)
OLPC Software (Score:2, Interesting)
Training costs, or, "why change is always bad." (Score:3, Insightful)
Those are the people who need to be "sold" on Linux or even other OSS projects like OO.org; in my experience it's a lot easier to get management on board with a solid presentation highlighting the cost savings and feature parity, but it can be quickly scuttled by the rank-and-file if they're resistant to change.
A few
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My dad works for school districts. He said back in the early 1990's teachers were furious that they were told they had to use this new fangled e-mail instead of network mail. All of the teachers were complaining about how complicated this new e-mail would be. They wanted their network mail. Finally, after some heavy pushing from the district, they submitted to this horribly complex e-mail. Now they obviously could never go
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The biggest personal advantage one can give a novice:
"You don't have to spend $250.00 on MS Office 200x of your own money to use the formats that we will use at the school. Here, take this disk, or here let me put this install file on your USB drive... double click on that and off you go."
(Sure, they get the educational edition... it's only $120.00 at Amazon. Many teachers have to work an entire day to take home that
Doth protest too much, I think. (Score:2)
Where would we be without Windows and Office? It's hard to say, but I don't think either one really brought along a whole lot of features that wouldn't have existed elsewhere. The main thing they brought to the table, is the creation of a de facto standard, but I'm entirely unconvinced that this wouldn't have happened in their absence. Obviously, having a standard format in whi
OPM = BIG EVIL (Score:1, Insightful)
as a naive child, i thought i'd buy the same vehicle the city police used b/c they obviously invested lots of time evaluating vehicles based upon MERIT and surely bought the best vehicles available.
isn't that funny
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Schools get extremely steep discounts, and aren't exactly Gentoo-ish in their upgrades. I doubt if there's a huge amount of money to be saved.
As for OLPC, their distribution scheme (selling hardware only to people with no money, relying on children who have never seen a computer before as software developers) is so bizarre, it's
This Might Be More Cart Before The Horse (Score:1)
Yay first post... :) (Score:1)
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You are lucky! My fingers do that even with brain supervision.
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less fortunate school districts? (Score:3, Funny)
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My thoughts exactly (aka. "me too!")
Another case of euphemisms gone wrong.
Re:and when no district can turn down a FREE offer (Score:3, Insightful)
However, with the default file format of OpenOffice being an open file format that anyone can use that will mean that if OO ever becomes the most common office suite then other office suites can still easily compete because they can implement the same file format everyone uses with OO, instead of the way it is now where competing office suites have to scrap to attempt to emulate a closed format. Right no
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Yes - and it's not like OpenOffice is leading in every part of the ODF format either. For example, take this from October 2006 [blogspot.com]: "The formula editor of KOffice now supports OpenDocument and MathML and uses it as its default file format. It also surpasses the equivalent component in OpenOffice.org, scoring 70
Come back when you've grown up (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Come back when you've grown up (Score:4, Insightful)
What's the difference if they do that or not? I'd rather have them be an unregistered social club that gets the job done than worry about being registered as a non-profit.
Unless they are looking to avoid paying taxes and sales taxes, there shouldn't be a real need for that anyway.
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Re:Come back when you've grown up (Score:4, Informative)
I briefly looked into (and gave up) applying for non-profit status for an open-source project - the main reason being so that people could deduct donations on their tax forms - and found out that it can be a real pain that distracts from your goals. After all, it dips into Uncle Sam's (in the U.S.) revenue, so they aren't motivated to make the approval and appeal process simple. And it isn't free, either, although the fees (was it $135/yr?) aren't too unreasonable. Most organizations have their lawyers set the thing up, although it can be done without a lawyer if you're willing to do the requirements research and paperwork.
An alternative that I started to investigate, that is apparently much easier, was to seek what's called "fiscal sponsorship" from another organization that already has an approved U.S. 501(c)(3) nonprofit status. There are very strict rules about the nature of financial transactions that can take place between the two entities, but the basic idea is that donations are made to the sponsoring entity, which then decides to fund the subsidiary according to what they perceive it needs. The main advantages are that donations are tax-deductible and donors supposedly have some assurance that their funds aren't personally enriching the donee instead of being used for the project. (I didn't complete the process of setting this up for other reasons, though, so that's all I know about it.) Anyway, that's what I would recommend that the story submitter look into.
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IANAL (I think this is the first time I've ever used that):
You're confusing two different things here. You can be a non-profit 501(c)(3) but not be tax-exempt. Does it serve any purpose to become a 501(c)(3) and not be tax-exempt? Well, for most groups probably not...
The process to become tax-exempt via the IRS is a bit of a pain in the ass and it involves some paperwork and
Distribution on CD? (Score:2)
I'm not sure I understand the reasons for CD based distribution. Don't most schools (even inner city schools)
have a connection that could download OO? The complete distro is 93 megs. Am I so naive to think that most
schools don't have at least some access to broadband and a CD burner somewhere in the building, or among the
staff/community?
Most Americans of course, are still on dial-up, or without computers/access altogether... but most schools/communities?
That puts our current state of connectivity in a pr
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Hmmm... but that shifts the focus of the project from one of 'granting access to software' and 'enabling students to overcome prohibitive costs' to one of evangelizing a specific platform.
Which isn't what it says on your site:
"OSSDI believes that commercial software costs can be prohibitive for students in impoverished regions. We also believe that no child should be prevented from fully utilizing technology to further their education."
Re:Distribution on CD? (Score:4, Funny)
For a minute there I forgot we were talking about OO.org CDs, and not drugs.
Re:Distribution on CD? (Score:5, Funny)
"I don't know. My dad says to stay with Microsoft Office"
"Come on! It's free!"
"But at school, they said that OpenOffice is a gateway program, and that I'll soon be hitting the heavy stuff like Linux"
"This ain't linux! What's wrong with just trying just a little bit of OpenOffice"
"But my friend Jimmy started on just a little bit of OpenOffice, now he spends all of his time trolling forums and posting in Vi vs. Emacs threads. I wanted to play some Quake with him last night, and he said that he was too busy rebuilding his Gentoo system from Stage 1 with some really cool flags some guy gave him on the internet." *Starts Crying* "I don't want strange guys on the internet giving me flags!"
"what are you, some kind of wimp?"
"I'm going to walk away now. Friends don't let friends use Open Source"
This message brought to you by Open Source Abuse Resistance Education. Just say no to Open Source
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Slashdot quotes of old:
"Re: Hooked on Crack ($200 M$ Windows for $50 offered to users of Lindows Linux)
[It's] Like the friendly neighborhood drug dealer, Bill says, "Here, have this first taste on me..."
-- Anonymous, Tuesday June 10, 200
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I hate to be a Negative Nelly, but I think it's far more likely that the teachers and other adults at the school will continue using whatever is loaded on the systems, because that's what they've learned to use, that's what they've been trained on, and they're probably going to be fairly resistant to change. What's the reasoning that makes you think that having the CD means anyone in the school is more likely to give it a
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schools don't have at least some access to broadband and a CD burner somewhere in the building, or among the
staff/community?"
Yeah, I'm afraid so. While I can't truly speak for 'most schools', the ones where I grew up are quite unlikely to have even dialup in the school, let alone broadband internet. The library at the school MIGHT have some form of internet for research purposes only.
That doesn't mean they couldn't just go home and burn it on their home computer, of course
Re:Distribution on CD? (Score:5, Insightful)
Have you ever wondered why AOL sent so many CDs instead of telling people that the program is on the internet?
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No, I can say honestly that I have never wondered that.
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Actually yes. And the conclusion was obvious: they are selling internet access. Asking customers to download the software AFTER connecting to the internet, when what they want, after all, is internet access, would be pretty dumb.
Imagine that you wanted to go from NY to LA, and the air company told you that they will only issue tickets at the final destination, in your case, LA. That means you wou
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Have you ever wondered why AOL sent so many CDs instead of telling people that the program is on the internet?
Because AOL is an ISP and without their software their targeted users wouldn't be on the internet to download anything?
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Handing out CDs is not enough (Score:2)
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OO.org has got to be one of the easiest bits of software I have ever installed, what better place to start teaching kids the basics?
Scam (Score:1, Offtopic)
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Less Fortunate Kids (Score:1)
Which version of Office precisely? (Score:2)
Now, how much steeper is t
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This is really important!
Training school kids in the specific software applications of today is a dumb idea to begin with. Trying to argue that they need to be trained specifically in the current version of the exact software that you personally are using at work is even more absurd.
This new version of Microsoft Office doesn't look much like the old version, and that's just one revision. I'd be willing to bet that GUI environments will look pretty familiar in 5 years. I'd say that we'd still have "buttons
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Ideally you would teach them the ba
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If it were up to me, I'd take this even further and teach a course in "Using Modern GUI Applications". I know how to use a GUI, and as a result I'm perfectly capable of sitting down and using (at a basic level) any application that's followed the style guidelines from any OS vendor for almost 20 years.
I'm pretty sure that this is a skill that can be taught. I'd probably try to cover topics like the following:
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One more really important one: Prediction. "What will happen if I do this?"
Another: Recognizing basic feedback. "Why did the mouse pointer just change into a diagonal double-headed arrow?" "Under what circumstances would that arrow instead be horizontal?"
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Learn to check their grammar? Oops, sorry, cheap shot.
But you might want to take a look at what is happening at ground level.
Here, in the Rust Belt, MS Office skills are marketable and taught everywhere there is a classroom. Employers aren't demanding the idealized regime you ask for and until they do no one else is going to pay for it.
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There's a saying for this... (Score:2)
There's some validity to teaching MS office, since the $8/hr secretary jobs all require it. They don't care that you know OO, they want you to be able to sit down and type a memo without having to send you to a class. That costs money, which is probably not budgeted.
OO should be in all the high-tech schools where the graduates will eventually go on to be mangers looking for $8/hr secretaries.
(mod me down, but those of you that work in the real world know it's true - 80%
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If one can use MS Word, one can use OpenOffice Writer. Especially at the level of an $8/hr secretary. Besides, you and I both know that the company won't pay for any training, anyway!
Really, schools should teach WORD PROCESSING, not MS-Word OR OO-Writer. Good document formatting is a con
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You see, to use any full-fledged program causes problems in transition. You expect certain things to be in certain places (Alt-I,P,F will insert an image in Word, btw) and will be very inefficient
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OMG- I know EXACTLY what you mean. Codes were the best thing ever, and it is what made WordPerfect the best word processor of all time. I still use it when possible, but the Linux binaries are aging and buggy now. Oh, if we could just get OpenOffice Writer to use and display codes. No more mysterious documents with lack of control.... oh well.
h [openoffice.org]
"word processing in an office environment" (Score:2)
There's some validity to teaching MS office, since the $8/hr secretary jobs all require it. They don't care that you know OO, they want you to be able to sit down and type a memo without having to send you to a class. That costs money, which is probably not budgeted.
If you have "word processing in an office environment" on your resume, the keyword scanner picks up "word" and "office", and if you understand the conventions of the WIMP GUI (which really haven't changed much over the two decades since Apple introduced Macintosh), you can probably wing it enough to make it past the 90 days of probation.
No names (Score:1)
There may be an excellent reason for this, but it just seems strange to me. Oh well, maybe I've become overly paranoid in my old age when people are asking me for my money
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The goal certainly is worthy, so every little detail that may encourage people to send money will certainly help you reach your objectives and help those schools even more.
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Will this be OpenOffice for Windows? (Score:4, Interesting)
Because there's something very strange about providing a free office suite that runs on an expensive OS.
Why not distribute a Linux distro bundled with OOo?
Otherwise the overall mission seems compromised by the platform.
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Supporting Windows makes sense as it lowers the barriers to migrating the OS too.
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What do you have a for hardware? A Pentium II and 64 megs of RAM?
Any decent computer sold this century (except perhaps some 2001 era Dells with 128 megs of RAM) should run OpenOffice fine. If your computer doesn't, I'd consider a hardware upgrade or a move to a complete resource-optimized OS / Software stack like Xubuntu + Abiword.
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Preloader? (Score:2)
Are you making sure to use the same preloader setting for both products? If you don't turn on OpenOffice.org's preloader, turn off Microsoft Office's.
Why just Open Office? (Score:4, Insightful)
But why just Open Office? Why not do something with (or like) Edubuntu, and distribute an entire platform that has the administration and management tools built in? People are definately hesitent to change, but if they are going to learn something new (in this case Open Office), it might be a good time for them to jump right in (especially if you, or a group of local volunteers can spend time training them).
-dave
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Using Ubuntu, especially *managing* Ubuntu on a large network, is VASTLY different (and harder) from doing the same thing with Windows. It would be a major undertaking for a school/district to switch to Ubuntu.
Edubuntu/theOpenCD (Score:2)
This gives you the best of both worlds -- Windows versions of open source programs plus a good education-oriented Linux distro if one decides to experiment with Linux.
If they don't want to promote Linux, they should likely stick to theOpenCD (http://www.theopencd.org/) since it's already done the hard work of picking a good set of Windows comp
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training fud .. (Score:2)
Like what 'support' are you refering to. You put the CD in the drive and click on INSTALL, click next etc, and that's it.
was: Why just Open Office? (Score:4, Insightful !!!! ???)
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-dave
It will take the full class period just to load... (Score:1, Troll)
How about some old copies of Office 97 instead? That still runs snappy on my mid-1990's Toshiba laptop...
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Do they need more than a word processor? (Score:2)
Do spreadsheets, databases, slide shows, and Internet electronic mail get used often in K-12 schools? They didn't where I went to school. Sometimes a word processor is enough.
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Awareness (Score:1)
This is exciting to hear, as it's amazing how many people have never heard of 'open source' or even specifically Open Office.
It's a concept that is generally segregated to those already in 'the know' and not so much Joe User. As awareness grows, use will grow, and the entire open source community will grow.
That's my theory, at least.
If Only... (Score:2)
I think the true strength of open source is not in the apps that mimic some Windows app, but in the many little, lean and mean apps that are totally _different_.
This is not to knock the good efforts that seek to promote open source. I think they are commendable. I just wish people would see that open source provides so much _more_ than just the same apps that people alr
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The very simple fact is that you don't need Word, Access, Outlook, Powerpoint, Excel or any clones of them to accomplish any legitimate work. Heavyweight word processors are seriously overkill for most tasks they're used for, and not well equipped for more complex tasks like document processing and desktop publishing. I'm still not sure what the niche for Access is supposed to be; either you're a programmer and need a scripting language and SQLite or you're not and need to hire one. Outlook is sort of bloat
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Exactly. Not to mention unstable. And some computers don't even have enough RAM to run it at all.
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Hardware requirements? (Score:1, Insightful)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't "less fortunate school districts" usually having some really old hardware? Is OO.o going to help, given that it supposedly takes ages for any of the bundled apps to start even on fast machines due to high hardware requirements? I mean, if you're installing OO.o on a machine with 128 or 256 MB RAM, this probably isn't going to go well. Again, correct me if I'm wrong, b
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This Windows machine reports 326 MB. Open Office opens and runs just as fast as msOffice, if you use the quick start option and increase memory cache. "I don't even have a clue on how much memory MS Office apps need. Can someone provide some numbers, please? KOffice too, if possible..."
While the system reports that Open Office uses more memory this can be misleading as a lot of msOffice gets loaded
Schools Should use Open Source (Score:1)
Open Office? (Score:2)
I think that the OSSDI is definitely on the ri
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The purpose of targeting one application, in this case Open Office, is strategic in nature. I think the OSSDI wants to bring to market a drop-in replacement for M$ Office. The best way to encourage this is so get as many people
misunderstanding (Score:1)
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