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posted by janrinok on Tuesday May 26 2015, @12:30PM   Printer-friendly
from the life-is-easier-with-FOSS dept.

The European Union's interoperability page reports:

Using open source in school greatly reduces the time needed to troubleshoot PCs, [as indicated by] the case of the Colegio Agustinos de León (Augustinian College of León, Spain). In 2013, the school switched to using Ubuntu Linux for its desktop PCs in [classrooms] and offices. For teachers and staff, the amount of technical issues decreased by 63 per cent and in the school's computer labs by 90 per cent, says Fernando Lanero, computer science teacher and head of the school's IT department.

[...] "One year after we changed PC operating system, I have objective data on Ubuntu Linux", Lanero tells Muy Linux [English Translation], a Spanish Linux news site. By switching to Linux, incidents such as computer viruses, system degradation, and many diverse technical issues disappeared instantly.

The change also helps the school save money, he adds. Not having to purchase [licenses] for proprietary operating systems, office suites, and anti-virus tools has already saved about €35,000 in the 2014-2015 school year, Lanero says. "Obviously it is much more interesting to invest that money in education."

[...] The biggest hurdle for the IT department was the use of electronic whiteboards. The school uses 30 of such whiteboards, and their manufacturer [Hitachi] does not support the use of Linux. Lanero got the Spanish Linux community involved, and "after their hard work, Ubuntu Linux now includes support for the whiteboards, so now everything is working as it should".

[...] Issues [with proprietary document formats] were temporarily resolved by using a cloud-based proprietary office solution, says Lanero, giving the IT department time to complete the switch to open standards-based office solutions. The school now mostly uses the LibreOffice suite of office tools.

[...] "Across the country, schools have contacted me to hear about the performance and learn how to undertake similar migrations."

As I always say, simply avoid manufacturers with lousy support and FOSS is just the ticket.


[Editor's Comment: Original Submission]

 
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  • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Tuesday May 26 2015, @04:10PM

    by kaszz (4211) on Tuesday May 26 2015, @04:10PM (#188095) Journal

    The problem with website style access is that it's a poor design to interact with for other software. So the whole software-to-software communication becomes a huge and lengthy hurdle.

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  • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Tuesday May 26 2015, @04:13PM

    by kaszz (4211) on Tuesday May 26 2015, @04:13PM (#188101) Journal

    s/lengthy/unreliable/

  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Tuesday May 26 2015, @04:28PM

    by VLM (445) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday May 26 2015, @04:28PM (#188113)

    The unix philosophy of small cooperative tools is actively opposed. Thus the giant monolith.

    In the old days of telnet servers and RS-232 connections I was the guy stuck writing "EXPECT" scripts to automate work.

    The modern solution is presenting some kind of REST ish standard ish API. Being a standard there are of course like 15 incompatible standards. But machine to machine automation is hardly impossible over the web. I've been stuck doing all sorts of SOAPy WSDLy foolishness over the years.

    • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Tuesday May 26 2015, @04:41PM

      by kaszz (4211) on Tuesday May 26 2015, @04:41PM (#188127) Journal

      Not impossible. Just very cumbersome.

      It's almost like.. oh this webinterface is messy. Fix it? nah. Slam OpenWRT etc.. onto and be done with it using some script on the device.