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Interview with Knut Yrvin, Project Leader of Skolelinux

[This article was contributed by Ladislav Bodnar]

September traditionally means back to school in many parts of the Northern Hemisphere and this year is no different. What will be different, however, is the operating system that many Norwegian pupils will find on their school's computers once they return to the classrooms. That's because despite the excruciating heat wave that hit much of Europe this summer, the Skolelinux developers did not take a break. Skolelinux? Yes, Skolelinux, a project to create a Linux distribution with the goal of replacing the proprietary operating systems in schools throughout Norway. The project's two primary objectives are the ability to run on low-end computer systems as well as a complete support for all Norwegian languages, including the minority ones.

Knut Yrvin, the Project Leader at Skolelinux kindly agreed to answer a few questions for LWN.

Knut, thank you very much for your time. Firstly, can you tell us about the beginnings of Skolelinux? What motivated the initiation of the project?

It all started when Petter [Reinholdtsen, the project's system architect] and myself, were attending a summer party one day in June 2001. We talked about how sad it was that most local schools had little besides old computers and a few applications running on Windows, and very little money for upgrades. We found it frustrating that closed-source software prevented our pupils interested in technical, under-the-hood things from learning by example - from source code written by expert programmers. That's when we decided to stop talking about it and simply do it. We had a start-up meeting on July 2, 2001, with 13 participants and 12 other interested parties who could not attend personally.

As the name suggests, Skolelinux is specifically designed for deployment in schools. How do you go about convincing schools to switch to Skolelinux?

We use the "seeing is believing" strategy. We let teachers try Skolelinux for themselves and make a decision only once they've used it. We also get a lot of help from the Unix/Linux User Groups around the country who are helping with deployment. The whole process is then self-propagating; we often get references and hear about installations in places we didn't even know existed!

We have also written a considerable amount of tailor-made documentation for teachers. We provide a day-to-day Operation Handbook, a Getting Started guide, a Get-to-know Skolelinux course, and other documents. Everything is written in Norwegian in a simple, non-technical language.

IBM Norway is helping as well. They started promoting Skolelinux in December 2002 and soon afterwards many more hardware vendors jumped on the bandwagon. Suddenly there seems to a be a lot of momentum behind the Skolelinux project!

How many schools are using Skolelinux at present?

Officially about 20. But unofficially we have reports of entire towns, municipalities and counties that are testing Skolelinux in one or two schools before making an official commitment. We know of an IT department responsible for all schools in one city which has agreed not to disclose their plans to deploy Skolelinux just to avoid the inevitable bureaucracy associated with such a transition. We also know of 8 or 9 communities, which are going to switch to Skolelinux later this year. We have asked them to do it slowly in the beginning to gain experience (and to let us sort out the 5 remaining release critical bugs ;-)).

What kind of response have you been getting from schools? Would you say that there is a lot of enthusiasm for Linux? Have you met with any resistance?

Yes, we have met with opposing ideas. These usually come from the administration in municipalities and Microsoft professionals who believe that "Windows is the answer, what's the question again?". We try to by-pass them and go straight to the schools' principals asking them about important values, such as the use of the Norwegian languages, IT budgets, and Internet-based solutions in cases where The Ministry of Education and Science mandates that schools conduct their examinations on the Internet.

In Spain, there are several provinces the governments of which have mandated exclusive use of Linux in all levels of schools. Is there a similar situation in Norway? Do you get any support from the Norwegian government?

The government helped financing the initial project report which discussed the use of free software in education and funding of associated activities. There is a will to continue contributing in the future so that the mostly voluntary work can be transformed into secure jobs for the people involved.

The development, translation, deployment, maintenance and support of Skolelinux costs money. How do you go about raising funds for your work?

Initially, it was the NUUG Foundation which helped funding the effort. They have covered the cost of travel to developer meetings from various parts of Norway and even from other countries. Now there are 4 or 5 of us on their payroll to ensure the continuity of the development, effective project leadership and translation work.

Every successful deployment of Skolelinux in a Norwegian school means a lost sale for Microsoft. Has there been any reaction from Microsoft Norway?

Well, we did receive a letter from Steve Ballmer wishing us good luck with the Skolelinux project. This was after a meeting with Microsoft and a round-table conference with some well known IT-personalities in Norway. The meeting was initiated by Microsoft Norway who invited us to join a 60-minute discussion to talk about some controversial issues regarding the way Microsoft conducts some of their business. It was interesting and Ballmer was up to speed on questions like security, intellectual property rights, etc. Unfortunately, he had to leave early, just when the discussion was beginning to heat up. Anyway, we are of the opinion that Microsoft people are nice, and hopefully they think the same about us. We don't agree on some crucial principles concerning the ownership of the source code, but we try to focus on our task, rather than politics. However, we know that Microsoft has offered some Norwegian schools huge discounts to undermine the advancements of Skolelinux.

You have chosen Debian GNU/Linux as a base for your distribution. Any particular reasons?

The openness, Debian project's acceptance of our contributions, apt-get, the conservative and well-tested packages and of course, the community - these were the main reasons.

From the technical point of view, what exactly is the main focus of your development work?

We currently work on a new Debian installer as well as an out-of-the-box services and network setup. We have also created a user administration system with LDAP, Webmin, and netgroups. This is because the IT coordinators in schools need an easy-to-use, web-based and secure system for creating and managing user accounts for pupils and teachers. Another essential area of our work is writing user-friendly documentation in local languages.

Knut, thank you very much for your time and good luck with your project!

Comments (2 posted)

Distribution News

Debian GNU/Linux

The Debian Weekly News for September 2, 2003 is out. This week's edition looks at software patents in Europe; a talk on Debian GNU/Linux as a Japanese language teaching platform; Opteron support; for Debian Developers; and much more.

Branden Robinson reports on the results of a survey which followed a lengthy debate on the debian-legal mailing list concerning whether the GNU Free Documentation License satifies the Debian Free Software Guidelines. Meanwhile, the debate continues.

Last October, Bdale Garbee arranged a group subscription to LWN.net for Debian developers, sponsored by HP. In response to questions, Bdale has recently noted that the Debian group subscription is still available. For those of you who have opted to keep your own subscription to help out LWN, you have our thanks. However, if you are a Debian developer and not currently subscribed to LWN you might want to take advantage of Debian's group subscription.

Comments (none posted)

Gentoo Weekly Newsletter

The September 1 Gentoo Weekly Newsletter is out; it looks at the availability of portage tarballs for OpenBSD and FreeBSD and the second Gentoo BugDay. The project is also looking for a new lead French translator.

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LinuxQuestions.org has announced the addition of a Red Hat forum that is officially recognized by Red Hat.

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At Slackware Linux the slackware-current changelog shows lots of activity. Lots of packages have been upgraded, including the Linux kernel (to 2.4.22). Bugs have been created and squashed in the process.

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FreeBSD portupgrade (O'ReillyNet)

O'ReillyNet looks at FreeBSD's portupgrade utility. "The ports collection is constantly being updated. New ports are added regularly, usually on a daily basis. If you're the curious type and like to see a layout of which ports were added when, you'll find FreshPorts an invaluable resource."

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Beehive Linux is dead. From the obituary:

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Minor distribution updates

Astaro Security Linux

Astaro Security Linux has released v4.011 with minor security fixes and v4.012 with minor bugfixes. "Changes: This Up2Date added LOGACCEPT to packet filtering and year support for log files. It also fixed the WebAdmin port after importing a backup, the Autofilter bug with PSK authentication, an iptables rules/DNSproxy settings conflict when the proxy was disabled, and a PPTP daemon connection limitation. The POP3 proxy was fixed for clients that didn't terminate connections properly." Version 4.012 fixes a small issue with SMTP domain routing which occurs in very rare cases.

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BG-Rescue Linux

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bootE Linux

bootE Linux has released v0.20-r2 with minor feature enhancements. "Changes: In addition to a few minor adjustments, support for MS-DOS and VFAT file systems were compiled back into the kernel. Furthermore support for ReiserFS was added."

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Local Area Security Linux

L.A.S. Linux has released 0.4b MAIN of its 'live CD' distribution. "Changes in this latest version of L.A.S. include the addition of Ettercap-GTK, Clam Anti-Virus, MiniCOM, SpikeProxy, MRTG, and many of the Cisco-centric Open Source Exchange tools."

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Recovery Is Possible! (RIP)

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Rock Linux

Rock Linux has released v2.0.0-rc1 with minor bugfixes. "Changes: In this release, more help text was added, a major cleanup of Emerge-Pkg was made, some new packages were added forming a total package count of nearly 900 packages, there were boot CD improvements, some init scripts were corrected for LSB conformance, and a better optimization selection for PowerPC resulting in better optimization settings, as well as many more cleanups and bugfixes."

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Comments (none posted)

Distribution reviews

A Galaxy of Possibility Part 1: Mandrake 9.1 ProSuite (OfB.biz)

Open for Business reviews Mandrake Linux 9.1 ProSuite. "For our evaluation of Mandrake Linux 9.1, we received a copy of Mandrake Linux ProSuite 9.1. ProSuite is Mandrake's high-end package that offers a number of useful features for enterprise deployment on both desktops and servers. Of particular interest is the DVD-ROM that is included, something that makes deploying Mandrake much more of a joy. Like SuSE's Professional Edition DVD (actually the latest SuSE includes two DVD's, but we only needed the one), Mandrake ProSuite's DVD allows you to use just one disc to install pretty much everything you could ever want on a GNU/Linux system."

Comments (none posted)

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