From: Joel K. <jj...@ya...> - 2004-09-18 10:56:46
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I recently accepted a position at a public school. I have the combined duties of computer lab supervisor and technical support person for an entire building (about 75 to 100 computers plus related equipment). I think that my new situation presents some (V)Python-related opportunities, but they need to be approached quite carefully. For one thing, my employer is *VERY* conservative, in *all* meanings of the term. Each new idea, program, gadget, &c that might be introduced has to go through a *serious* bureaucratic gauntlet. The administration of the school itself has extremely limited power; key decisions are made at the district level. Another important point: this is a K-2 school, and there are issues about how one can use Python as an educational tool for six-to-eight-year-olds. My short-term wish list: 1. Could someone donate a laptop that they are no longer using? This school has some, but they are all under tight restrictions (see above) and I will need to have a machine that I can experiment on. The main processor doesn't have to be cutting edge, of course, but a lot of RAM would be helpful, and the hard drive should be large enough for a dual partition between Windows and Linux that I might be tinkering with at some future time. A few spare batteries would also be good. Because of various ugly bureaucratic rules, the donation would have to be to me personally, *not* to the school; this might affect any tax breaks that you were hoping to get. However, I can still give plenty of favorable publicity to whichever person(s) and/or firm(s) make the donation possible. :-) 2. I'd like to get some gear to connect a computer to a TV/VCR so that the image going to the computer's monitor will also display directly on the TV and can be recorded on VHS. We already have the TV/VCR in our computer lab, and a computer has been set aside for this project too; we just need the hookup stuff. In this case, the gadget *would* belong to the school, and it just *might* be purchased out of the school's budget. Of course, a donated item certainly would be accepted, as long as the thing works properly. 3. I'm looking for an education-oriented version of Knoppix that can run reliably on a very old Pentium machine with limited RAM and disk space. The CD should be in English; I stress this because there seem to be several education Knoppixes in various European languages, but I'm having a hard time finding an English one. And remember the age group that I'm dealing with: six to eight years. This is a start. I'm open to suggestions, but keep in mind that change is real slow at this place. Joel __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Address AutoComplete - You start. We finish. http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail |