Ubuntu 13.04

I upgraded to Ubuntu 13.04 last month on the day it came out.  I’ve been running it since then, and I figured I should do a little write-up here because I usually do when the new one comes out.

Anyway, when I upgraded, I found that everything… worked.  This, literally, was the easiest Ubuntu upgrade I’ve done.  I usually do a reinstall when I change versions, but I didn’t this time.  I just ran my updater and let it go.  It took very little time to download the packages, and before I knew it, my computer was running 13.04.

I looked around and noticed some of the polish that Canonical has added to Ubuntu.  I also noticed that the upgrade didn’t muck with my already installed apps like Banshee; it didn’t install Rhythmbox and then force me to remove it later.  Same with Pidgin!  Kudos!  The OS has been improved speed-wise, the dash is much more responsive, and I find that apps load a little quicker than they did in 12.10.

Gwibber was replaced by Friends.  I had to install Friends, and I must say that it’s working pretty well.  I also installed Turpial, Polly, and Birdie, just so I could play with different Twitter clients.  Friends is good but has a ways to go yet; I would recommend adding a “@-replies” tab so I can see who’s replied to my messages on my social networks.  Oh, and the messaging menu works better with Thunderbird and it works with Pidgin now (again!).  Another thing I noticed was better support for my Razor DeathAdder mouse.  In 12.10, I noticed that I couldn’t change the speed and it would zoom all over the place if I looked at it wrong.  Now I can change the speed in the mouse settings and it seems to work a lot better now.  I’d just gotten used to the super-fast mouse acceleration, but being able to turn it down is a great thing.  Now, if my new iPod Nano would work…

This release seems to be polishing up the OS.  It’s not a huge mega update, but it seems to “just work” and with the announcements of Ubuntu phone and tablet and the work that’s been done to reduce resting RAM usage, I see it only getting better.

I’m not sure if I’ll run an Ubuntu tablet or phone in the near future (I love Android) but having a unified system is a grand idea; one which Apple and Microsoft are trying and I’m not sure if they’re going to be successful.

I’m still digging Unity.  It’s still got some niggles (I have to change its size as soon as I update) but I like the keyboard shortcuts and how elegant it looks.

All-in-all, this is a great update.  Polish, speed, and simplicity.  Also, the whole upgrade process had no issues for me and my hardware.

Android App Series: My Data Manager

I installed My Data Manager on my old phone so that I could monitor how much data my Spotify/Pandora streaming was using.  I’ve since installed it on my new phone, and I love it.

I love the “Ongoing” section of my pull down bar on Ice Cream Sandwich.  I can swipe down from the top of my phone and see what is going on.

Anyway, this little beauty of an app monitors how much data you’re downloading.  You can set it up to track for your billing period and see how much data you’re actually using.  This is useful if you know you have a cap or a threshold where your carrier will start throttling your speed (mine does; 2.5 gb).  I’ve never gotten anywhere near the cap, and I think I could lower my “unlimited” data to 1.5 gb and I’d be fine.  This is with doing updates, streaming, gaming, and anything else I’d do (reading news too).  I tend to do as much as I can on my home wifi so I don’t use up my phone data.  Which makes sense.

Oh, this app also shows how much “data” you’ve used on wifi.  This is handy too.  I like to know how much my phone is pulling down, but I don’t really care when it’s on my home wifi.  Go to town, phone!  When I tell it to throttle back is when I’m on 3g.  I have plenty of data, but I don’t want to get to the end of my billing cycle and find out that I’m throttled to unusable speeds.

Anyway, this is a great tracking app to see what is using data and when.  It’s also great to track how much data you are using; this potentially could save some people some money as they could reduce the amount of data they’re paying for and use their home wifi network to do all updates and file transfers.

I really like it and I would totally recommend it to anyone who has a carrier who has a cap or throttles their speed when they get to the soft cap.

Android App Series: Swiftkey

Swiftkey is an app that I found that was touted by Lifehacker as the bee’s knees, so I had to try it.  I watched Lifehacker and pretty soon, it was on sale for something like $2 or $4; I cant remember.  So I picked it up.  I started using it on my old phone (an LG) and found that it was better in most ways from the stock keyboard as well as Swype.  So, I started using it more and more.

Cue my new phone.  This app was the first thing I installed, since I had gotten used to it.  It’s updated to v. 4, so now I have “flow” which allows you to slide your thumb around the board and spell out a word.  Swype has this, but it doesn’t seem to be as predictive as Swiftkey is, so I use the title app.

I’ve also installed it to my Nexus 7.  It works fine, although they want you to buy a special tablet version; if that version goes down in price, I would totally get it, but for now, the standard version works fine.

I find that the prediction is awesome and it can seem to figure out what I want to say before I say it.  Other than being a bit creepy (though all these apps and services might be considered creepy), I really like it.  I especially like it when I use the phone in one hand; like when I’m trying to carry my bag and reply to a text.

The following video seems to give a better show of what I’m trying to say.  I’m using a cool black and blue theme; I think it’s called holo.  Anyway, watch the video.

 

This is a great app and should be on everyone’s phone or tablet.  It’s turned into a “must have” for me, and I’m glad that Lifehacker featured it awhile ago.

Android App Series: Feedly

I love RSS.

And because of that love of RSS I was extremely sad when I saw the announcement that Google Reader was shutting down, but that’s neither here nor there as I don’t control Google and have no say in what they keep or get rid of in regards to webapps.

Anyway, I was using Feedly to sync my RSS feeds from Google Reader to my tablet and phone.  Now I’m pretty much using Feedly as my go-to app on all of my operating systems (Win7, Ubuntu, Mac, Android) to keep my RSS feeds in sync.

I really like this app.  It’s got an intuitive interface and is easy to navigate around in.  I imported all of my RSS feeds from Google, allowed it to sync over my home wifi for both my phone and my tablet, and ta-da, I had more stuff to read!

How about a screenshot of the web/browser interface?

Screenshot from 2013-04-06 17:54:35

Pretty clean and easy to figure out.  This is my start page which is the magazine “all” view.

Tablet:

Screenshot_2013-04-06-17-58-04

This is my “funneh” category (hee, category!) that has all my LOLcats and whatnot in it.  Again, very clean and easy to figure out.  I like this because there’s a quick menu in the story view and I can easily share to twitter or pocket or facebook immediately with no hassle.

Screenshot_2013-04-06-18-01-01

The phone interface is pretty much exactly the same except smaller.

Anyway, this is a great app if you want to read news on your smartphone or tablet.  One note, however: it doesn’t download the articles from the web for reading later; you will have to have a connection via wifi or 3g/4g in order to read articles.  If you want something that downloads your articles, look into Currents.

Great app, easy to use, and pretty fast; I’ve never had Feedly crash on me.

Unfortunately, if The Old Reader comes out with an android app soon, I will probably be switching over to it because the web interface is easier than Feedly for browser-based reading.

WebAPP: HabitRPG

I’m no stranger to task apps and todo apps and tracking apps.  I’ve tried a bunch.

And I’m trying another one: HabitRPG.

This takes all the crap you have to do in a day and turns it into a game.  It allows you to define Habits, Dailies, ToDos, and Rewards.

Let’s take a look at my HabitRPG screen:

Screenshot from 2013-04-06 12:48:31My “Habits” section contains the things I want to improve upon.  I have five:

  • Take the stairs
  • Park further out at work.
  • Eat veggies and fruit (I try, dangit but I still need to improve.)
  • Write new receipts in checkbook ledger.
  • Floss (Again, I try so hard but this is something I want to do better at.)

From what I can gather, “Habits” is the section where you can define things you want to do better at and then track how you’re doing, sort of like the “don’t break the chain” method of productivity or whatever.

Next we have the “Dailies” section.  If you’re familiar with WoW, “dailies” are something you can do every day to get a reward (experience, rep with a faction, etc) and you kind of want to do them as much as possible so you can increase your skills or reputation with a certain faction.  I’ve added the following to mine:

  • Make bed (I usually do this but sometimes I need a reminder; whoops.)
  • Read anything non-web for 30 minutes (again, I read a lot but most of it is on the web.  I hope to get through my magazines and books on my tablet this way.)
  • 15 minute Band workout (I’m trying to get more exercise.  Also, 15 minutes is a good span of time.)
  • Call Mom (a reminder for Wednesdays so I don’t actually forget.)

I didn’t want too many dailies because I’d end up just doing chores when I got home from work and things wouldn’t be flexible.  I need to make sure I actually DO this stuff and not let it languish.

Next is the “ToDo” section and holy cow is it long for me.  I’m not going to type everything out, but suffice it to say, it includes some of the stuff up on my board as well as blog posts I want to write.  I think these are things that have no time limit on them, and I think they give more EXP and coins when you complete them, especially if you bump them up to “hard”.  I’ve done this on a couple of the items since I’m not sure how much time they will take.  If it’s a complicated project, you may want to break it down into more steps so it will be easier.

Rewards, of course, is where you can go to spend your hard-earned gold.  Seriously, if you didn’t have something to reward yourself with, then what’s the point?  Anyway, I have some choice things on there.

~~~~~

As you can see, I didn’t put vague things on my lists.  You have to be concrete.  Also, I didn’t put things on there that I already do, like “Do Dishes” as a habit.  I am good with doing my dishes every day, so I don’t need to track that aspect of my life.  I do need to track things I want to get better at, so that’s why I added so few to the habits.  As soon as they become habits, I think I might move them to  the “Dailies” section so I can still track them but they won’t be under “habits” because they already ARE habits.

I think this is for someone who is already somewhat disciplined with their time but needs some more motivation.  I wish we had something like this for work.  I would love to “level up” by doing X AFP grinds or cleaning X codes out of character for model.

I hope a mobile app comes soon because I want to track my food thing and the stairs thing and the parking thing on the go.  I’ve a bad habit of forgetting to log things.

 

Finding a Google Reader Substitute

Reblogged from The Well-Appointed Desk:

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After whining and moaning and crying a little, I went ahead and tried just about every Google Reader substitute I could find. While there is no perfect solution yet that bridges across mobile and web options that all syncs together, I have found my temporary workaround. I do most of my RSS reading on my computer these days so I needed to solve for that first and I've found…

Read more… 169 more words

I really want to like The Old Reader, but till they get a mobile app for Android, I'll have to stick with Feedly. :(

Android App Series: SMSdroid

Texting apps.  There are a lot of them out there and some are good, some are great, and others are a huge pain in the butt.

I used my stock messaging app for awhile on my new Samsung phone but was not happy with it.  The text was too big and I couldn’t find a decent way to make it smaller, there were no options for what it looked like, and I just was not happy with it.

Enter my testing phase.  I tried Handcent, GOsms, and SMSdroid.

Handcent had ads on it that I had to pay for to remove.  It sent and received SMS just fine.  It seemed a little slow, however, and I thought the whole reason for SMS was quick test-based communication.  Also, it had a lot of customizations and I don’t necessarily need it along with the emoji.

I tried GOsms Pro.  I really wanted to like it.  It seemed to be ok, but was rather bloated in that it wanted to seemingly take over my phone and install itself as a chat app as well.  For the record I use Trillian and have no problems.  Anyway, after I got the 10th spam SMS from them, I decided to pay for it.  $5 and there were no usability improvements and the only thing I could really do were to take out the spam SMSes.  And if you wanted to get more themes for it, you had to go to the store and download them, as well as pay for most of them.  I already paid $5 for the app, I shouldn’t have to pay for more stuff to go in the app, nor should I have to deal with extras I don’t want.  So, I wasted my $5.  Someone else might want that functionality, but I don’t need it.

I tried Chomp SMS and they had annoying ads along the bottom.  I was displeased, especially when the ads were flashing.  Ahem.  Of course you can buy it for $2 but I wasn’t into also having to install the themes separately inside the app.  This was no different from GO, except it didn’t send me any spam texts.

Enter SMSdroid.  I installed this and noticed there were ads in it.  I was a little grumpy but figured I would try it out.  I found that it worked gloriously and was quick on the SMS send and receive, and the ads were text only, unlike the others.  I’ve decided to use this program after paying for a donation to the developer.  Also, this is the only app that’s open source and has it’s code hosted on github.  That in itself is cool, so I’ve decided to support this developer.  It’s a simple app that just works and has some simple theming.  More than the stock app and less than something like GO or other apps.  It’s a great app that does what it says on the tin.

If I get sick of SMSDroid, I might go back to Handcent if I need more theming options.  I’ll for sure have to pay to get rid of the ads; that’s annoying.

Android App Series: Moon+ Reader

When I bought my Nexus 7, I figured I’d use it mostly as a reading device.  And sure enough, that is what I use it the most for.

Pocket notwithstanding, I like to read ebooks.  I needed to find an ebook reader that would be suitable.  I don’t mind google’s ebook reader but there didn’t seem to be a a way to import your books into the program, and I like to read a lot of Project Gutenberg stuff as well as things from Storybundle, so that was high on my list.  I tried several ebook readers (including the Nook app) but didn’t find something I liked till I gave Moon+ a shot.

I was wow-ed immediately.

I loved the different reading color “skins” and the text changer and everything else.  Moon+ was the first app I ever bought for any android device.

It’s pretty simple:  You load your books into it (and there’s a Dropbox integration, which I have to try yet), pick what you want to read (you can filter by author, series, etc) and then start reading.  Swipe from your right bezel to flip the page forward; to flip back, swipe from the left.

It’s simple and I got it for something like $4.  It might still be half off on the google play store, but I highly recommend it for reading books you’ve downloaded.

5/5 penguins for the fact that it can be as simple or as complex as you want it and it’s array of options.  Also, it’s a rock solid app and doesn’t crash or crash my device.

Android App Series: Pocket

I’d like to start a new series on my blog of Android Apps I use regularly and that I love and can’t think of functioning without.

The first one I’d like to write about is Pocket.

Pocket was originally called “Read it Later” and was the first read later service I tried.  It was not the last; I tried a special folder in my bookmarks, a read later tag on del.ici.ous, a read later tag in diigo, a folder of webclips in Evernote, and Instapaper.

I was using Instapaper as my “go to” read later app.  I then got my Android phone and didn’t really have a good mobile app for reading things while on the go.  It was about this time that Pocket came on the scene and I tried it out.  It told me that I “already had an account on this service” and I found out it was  a rebranded Read it Later.  I installed it on my phone, copied my articles from Instapaper, and the rest is history.

I use it judiciously when I’m reading online on one of my computers.  I’ll find long articles on Ars or Lifehacker or a great feminism post somewhere or whatever, and I click my “save to Pocket” button in Chrome and I have an awesomely formatted article on any browser that’s connected to the internet as well as my phone and my tablet.  The awesomest thing?  I don’t have to have network access to read the articles as they download to the device.  This is both a great thing and a bad thing if you have limited space, but Pocket formats things mostly in plain text and removes the pictures, so you have a plain text reading experience.

I also use Pocket when I’m reading my RSS feeds in Feedly on my Nexus 7.  I pick the “save to Pocket” option on things I think read better on a larger screen (lifehacker with comments, for example).

You can read in your browser, on your phone, and on your tablet.  As long as your devices are connected to the internet, you can easily keep your place between devices.  This is handy if you read something on the tablet, and then get pulled away and have to go out somewhere and then are waiting in line and then you read some more on your phone.  You’ll keep your place so you don’t have to scroll to where you were.  It’s a really handy app.

You can also “star” articles to read again or if you are compiling research for an article or something.  Click the star on your article and it saves to the “starred” section of your Pocket account.  It’s handy to keep track of your favorite articles.

I’ve set up IFTTT to take my starred articles and send them to a folder in Evernote so I can keep them for reading again.

Pocket is a brilliant app and works on Android, i-devices, your browsers (through an extension or bookmarklet) and various RSS readers and other apps.  I give Pocket a hearty thumbs up and 5/5 penguins for its simplicity and usefulness.

Image

Ubuntu Desktop

Ubuntu Desktop

Ubuntu Quantal Quetzal 12.10 with an old-timey Mario wallpaper.

So I did it.

I went back to Ubuntu after a two-month long foray into Linux Mint.  I did like Linux Mint, but there were some small niggles that I could not wrap my head around.  Anyway, I’d gotten used to Unity and the way things were handled in the shell.  I like many of the programs that are included by default in both Ubuntu and Mint, but I think that Ubuntu is a better fit for me at this time, although Mint has come a long way.

What bugged me about Mint partly was its release schedule.  They adhered to a “when it’s done, it’s done” model, and I tend to like a specific date of release so I can anticipate it and participate in the beta and release candidates.  Mint doesn’t seem to have this.

Anyway, I had to do some modifications, as usual, to get my desktop the way I wanted it.  Namely, it involved installing Gimp, Banshee, Spotify, Pithos, VLC, gpodder, Chromium, Dropbox, NixNote, Pidgin, and the restricted-extras packages.

There’s something about Ubuntu and Unity that keeps bringing me back, and I’m not sure what it is.  Simplicity?  Community?  Speed?  Good design?  I don’t know, but Ubuntu was my first distro and I tend to like it regardless of what it does.  I don’t particularly like the shopping lens, but I think with the outcry from the community, they will be scaling that back quite a bit in the next version, which is a great thing.

Anyway, if I want a more “Mint” experience, I can install Cinnamon, which I had installed before I went to Mint.  I think I’ll install it again; it was a good desktop.

Shorpy Saturday - Eldorado: 1955

Reblogged from The Woodward Spine:

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By Jeffrey Buck

The automobile has evolved over time. Materials, size and badging have all changed over the years to accommodate changes in lifestyle and cost. The curves and lines of this 1956 Cadillac have long since been replaced with more aerodynamic designs and will again change as new technology is discovered and created.

Take a look at the photograph entitled “

Read more… 35 more words

Wow, an amazing picture. The big three made some awesome cars in the 50s. I hope they make more.
Link

Laptops in the College Classroom and Creating an Environment Conducive to Learning

This is very interesting.  I come from a time where laptops were not prolific in the classroom (matter of fact, they were really rare) and most students did not have a laptop, but a desktop.  There were no tablets.  Cell phones weren’t the multifunction units we have today.  For the most part, students used engineering paper and pens/pencils to take their notes.  I do know many students transcribed their notes at home onto the computer but I had no need as I tried to stay organized with them and put them all into a ring binder.  Ahem.

A strict policy regarding technology (except maybe in a coding class) would be a good idea.  I know I would get distracted if a student in front of me was playing on their laptop instead of paying attention to the lecture.

I come from a different background (Kettering students tend to be… very driven in regards to their studies… not that other schools’ students aren’t, but it just seemed that KU students had a stronger drive for some reason), so I’m probably biased in my observations.

I can see how a student could leverage technology to improve their grades through note-taking and dropbox and working through examples in class (I’m thinking something like Matlab, programming, or a CAD-style class).  It would have been nice to have a Macbook on which I could have done my work and had a sweet dock/monitor setup and an iPad that could hold some of my books and other materials for reading.  It would have reduced my load of what I was carrying, but I think I still would have carried paper and pens and pencils because I find in many cases that taking notes on paper is so much better and easier than taking notes on a laptop.  I never got used to typing notes as they happen and I prefer to use a pen or pencil and engineering paper.

I wholeheartedly agree with you, Kelli, about your laptop/tech ban in class.  I hope it will increase class interest and participation.  I don’t have any experience on the other side of the podium, but I do have experience from being a student, and I feel that students with traditional notes materials seem to be more engaged.  I know I was.

Google Nexus 7 Review

I’ve acquired a Nexus 7 tablet recently and would like to do a write-up about it.

So.  A few weeks ago, I decided I was going to get a tablet.  I’d been looking at tablets for awhile now, and I wanted something that would be easy to use, light-weight, and good for reading.

I was looking at Apple’s iPad.  Brian has their iPad 2 and is very happy with it.  I would probably have gotten the New iPad if I was to get one, but was still undecided, so I was waiting.  I looked at the Asus Transformer and wasn’t impressed with the portability (I had a very portable computer in the Air).  I looked at all the tablets they had out at Best Buy and nothing really tickled my fancy.

I started seeing the new 7″ tablet from Google and Asus, and I was intrigued.  I decided to try it out at Office Max one weekend; sadly they didn’t have any in stock.  Another weekend, I went down to Microcenter and picked up the 16 gb version of it, along with a cover for it.  I’m still loving the cover; I wish I’d found a smart cover that would sleep and wake when you open it, but we all can’t have everything.  There’s a neat M-Edge cover out that I might pick up later, but for now, my blue cover is working fine.

I’ve been customizing the heck out of it… basically moving things where I think they should go and changing backgrounds and experimenting with widgets.  I’m pleased with what I’ve done, so how about a picture?

Nexus 7 Screenshot

The picture is my Pandarian Monk from WoW.  I have my Fancy Widgets running for weather and time and whatnot, and all the apps I need in the folders at the bottom.

From left to right we have: Google, Reading, Media, Social, Gaming, and Utilities.

I’ve installed the following apps (broken out by folder):

Reading:

  • Moon+ Reader Pro: Go-to reading app.  It’s really great and takes a ton of formats.
  • Pocket: I use this for longer articles from my RSS reader.
  • Feedly: My RSS reader.
  • Comics: There are some free things so I decided to give this comics app a try.  DC and Marvel universes, plus indie publishers.
  • B&N Nook: I have some books I like to read that are still in my Nook account.  I read them with this.
  • OverDrive: For library books.  I’ve not figured out how to really use it yet.  Ahem.
  • Wikipedia: Of course, duh.

Media:

  • Spotify: Music!
  • Pandora: Music!
  • Netflix: Movies!

Social:

  • Twitter: For short ramblings.
  • Skype: Video chat.
  • Facebook: To keep up with facebook.
  • Instagram: Initially to test out my camera, but I’ll keep it around to browse Instagram.  It’s nice on a tablet.

Gaming:

  • Fruit Ninja: I’ve a new addiction to slicing fruit…
  • Angry Birds: Uhm, flinging little birds at pigs? Why not?
  • Words with Friends: I’ve played this more now since I’ve installed it here.
  • Frozen Bubble: Great FOSS game.
  • WoW Armory: To show off my WoW stuff to people when I have an internet connection.

Utilities:

  • Evernote: Notes.
  • Dropbox: Indispensable.

Google gave me $25 at the Play store, so I paid for Fruit Ninja and Angry Birds to get rid of the ads.  I also did an “in-app” payment for WwF to get rid of the ads.  Moon Reader+ Pro was only $5 and it was worth every penny.  It’s by far the most used app on my tablet.

And I use this thing.  I read on it, game on it, use it to check the weather in the morning before work, and sometimes use it to watch a movie before bed.  I picked up a picture stand for $5 at Target; that works to hold the tablet in landscape mode to watch a movie in bed.

And now for some more pictures!  I took these while opening it all up.  And opening the box was a pain, let me tell you.  So here we go!

From the top left, you can see my screenshot again, and then the packaging, some general unboxing stuff, and then finally the tablet in the case.  I wish I could have gotten a black case, but they didn’t have one, so what can you do?

It fits really well in my purse or my bag for work.  I like being able to carry this device around so I can read or play a game if I have to wait or whatever.  Sometimes I’m without wifi, and in those times, the books are perfect.

A word of warning to Linux users: you’ll have to install gMTP to browse the files on the device.  It uses the Microsoft Protocol thing, and won’t show up as a device in Nautilus.  It took me a couple tries to pair the device with gMTP, but once I got it working, it was great!  Now I tend to upload what I need to dropbox so I can access it easily on the device.

If you’re looking for a 7″ device that you’ll use for games and reading and light browsing, I can’t recommend this enough.  It’s an amazing little tablet and I love this size.  It’s perfect for reading.

5/5 penguins.

Apple Macbook Air 11″, and why I decided to get one

I said I’d never get a Mac.

I swore I’d never get a Mac.

I thought people who had Macs were pretentious.  I thought people who had Macs had more money than sense.  Linux worked just fine for me and I was also pleased with Windows 7.

That was before I heard about the new ultrabooks that actually came out earlier this year.  I seriously looked at them at Best Buy early in June; the Dell XPS ultrabook looked really nice, but I read some hassles about Ubuntu and there was absolutely no guarantee about battery life (they were advertising almost eight hours of battery life under Windows 7).  I asked some questions, then wandered over to the Apple desk.  I played with both 11″ and 13″ Airs, and was impressed.

(This is long, so we’ll go under a cut.)

Continue reading

How One Teacher Built a Computer Lab for Free: iFixit

How One Teacher Built a Computer Lab for Free iFixit.

The problem? An underfunded school needed computers for the classroom. Budget? $0. Staff involved? Just one: Robert Litt, a sixth-grade teacher.

Robert teaches at ASCEND, a small arts K-8 school in the Alameda County School District. He’s a fan of technology and believes that it’s an important part of K-12 education. Yet ASCEND had no computer lab and no computers in classrooms. So in 2007, Robert acquired 18 donated computers. But these computers were less help than he’d anticipated. The operating systems were slow. Some computers had viruses or malware. Students became frustrated.

Brilliant.  I would really like to see this happen more often in public school systems; so many times they’re stuck in the Windows or Apple money spiral that they can’t get out.

I’m not opposed to paying for software, but many schools aren’t in the position to pay for a lot of software or operating systems to run that software.

Glad to see Ubuntu being put to good use on donated school computers.  Fewer viruses, less malware, and a decent experience for the students.  And they can learn something about an alternative to Windows and Apple.