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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?
As the name suggests, Skolelinux is specifically designed for deployment in schools. How do you go about convincing schools to switch to Skolelinux?
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?
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?
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 development, translation, deployment, maintenance and support of Skolelinux costs money. How do you go about raising funds for your work?
Every successful deployment of Skolelinux in a Norwegian school means a lost sale for Microsoft. Has there been any reaction from Microsoft Norway?
You have chosen Debian GNU/Linux as a base for your distribution. Any particular reasons?
From the technical point of view, what exactly is the main focus of your development work?
Knut, thank you very much for your time and good luck with your project!
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.
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.LinuxQuestions.org adds a Red Hat Forum
LinuxQuestions.org has announced the addition of a Red Hat forum that is officially recognized by Red Hat.Slackware Linux
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.Interview: Morphix founder Alex de Landgraaf (NewsForge)
NewsForge interviews Alex de Landgraaf, founder of Morphix. "When did you start Morphix and why? I actually started playing around with Knoppix, was pretty active on knoppix.net, in December 2002. I had a remastered version called KnopNL, because I was planning to make a light-weight Dutch distribution. There was (and still is) a lively community working on making specific distributions using Knoppix, but I saw time and time again that people had to "put Knoppix on a diet" and merge new changes from Knoppix before they could do anything useful."
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."
Beehive Linux
Beehive Linux is dead. From the obituary:
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.
BG-Rescue Linux
BG-Rescue Linux has released v0.2.0 with major feature enhancements. "Changes: This release updates uClibc to 0.9.20, e2fsprogs to 1.3.4, reiserfsprogs to 3.6.11, LILO to 22.5.7.2, and mdadm to 1.3.0. It adds cmdftp 0.62 and a new Linux kernel 2.4.22 (bzip2) with additional support for USB 2.0 EHCI, PCMCIA serial devices, and the following ethernet adaptors: 3c590/3c900, eepro100, VIA Rhine, TI ThunderLAN, USB-Realtek RTL8150, and USB-ASIX AX88172."
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."
Damn Small Linux
Damn Small Linux has released v0.4.5 with minor feature enhancements. "Changes: This version adds generic printer support. Fluxbox and most X applications are now running under user instead of root. sudo and Microcom were added. Oneko was added for the kids. The swap partition should now be properly recognized which makes DSL more compatible with low RAM systems. A tabs- and frames-enabled, patched version of Dillo was added. The icons were remapped so that they fit in the smallest resolution setting. The enhance feature is now smarter, so that it will not launch duplicate applications, but will bring bbpager into theme compliance."
floppyfw
floppyfw has released stable v2.0.7 with minor bugfixes and the 2.4.22 kernel was included.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."
MoviX
MoviX has released v0.8.0 with minor feature enhancements. "Changes: Support for remotes has been improved, the size of initrd has been reduced, and Italian translations have been added."
Onebase Linux
Onebase Linux has released version 1.0 for x86 systems. Also Onebase is now set to form a Developer base for this project and everyone is invited to join.Recovery Is Possible! (RIP)
Recovery Is Possible! (RIP) has released v6.0 with major feature enhancements. "Changes: The kernel has been updated to 2.4.22. There are a lot of changes, and new floppy versions (1.44 MB and 1.68 MB)."
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."
dRock v2.0.0-rc1 is
also out. "Changes: This release is based on ROCK Linux
2.0.0-rc1. It includes minor bugfixes and feature additions, including
better optimization settings for PowerPC.
"
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."
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