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Re: Debian-edu/Skolelinux and Edubuntu cooperation



Thomas Templin wrote:

So you will tell us that a school authoritive who has the coice to have an old fashioned Debian-Edu developed and offered by hobbyists or to have a brand new MS-Windows offered by professional marketing people supported by a million dollar marketing branch will choose Debian-Edu?

Pardon me, but it must be another planet you are living on.

- You know that schools are offered MS OS and Software for free more
 and more?
- You know that MS offers free training for authoritives and admins
 more and more?
- You know that MS gives a financial support for hardware more and
 more?
- You know that MS offers their OS on a cheap base just in those
 countries where Free Software starts to have a good chance in the
 market?

So the cost arguments are dissapearing, they may be against free software in only a year or two if MS goes on as they start do do in the moment.



You are pointing out some important facts here, but I don't agree
with your conclusion.

The cost arguments may be disappearing for licenses, training etc,
but those arguments were never the most important ones anyway (MS
Office is a separate issue, but you can get even that almost for
free if you can live with an old version - which you can of course).


What counts is the annual operating cost for the installation.  To
me, this is the single most important argument for chosing Skolelinux
over Windows.  The major cost factor is hours spent on assisting users
and user administration.

My conclusion is that we can mop the floor with Micrsoft's million
dollar marketing branch and their professional marketing people if we
are focusing on what really counts.  Which is:

 => easy to learn and use (reducing hours spent on user assistance)
 => easy to operate (reducing hours spent on user administration)



There is obviously also a marketing issue involved.  What can we do
to be perceived as "cool" and modern rather than grumpy, geeky and
old-fashioned?  Firefox was able to do this, and so should we.
I wouldn't mind a million dollar marketing branch to do it, though...



Halvor









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