Hi,
Cambridge University in England now has dual-boot
Linux on all of it's pulic computers (PWF - Personal
Workstation Facility):
http://www-uxsup.csx.cam.ac.uk/pwf-linux/
I don't know if this page counts as support:
http://www.cam.ac.uk/cs/docs/unix.html
There is more support, but much of i
On Thu, 2002-09-12 at 18:48, Dan Kegel wrote:
> I've put together a resource page re "Linux in Universities"
> at http://www.kegel.com/linux/edu/
Federal Institute of Technology in Zürich, Switzerland
- has several computer labs (generally accessible to student
David P James wrote:
> > http://www.kegel.com/linux/edu/
>
> (1) I don't know how or if this fits, but for what it is worth the
> department of economics here at Queen's runs on Debian servers, and has
> some Debian-based workstations available for use by grad students and
> faculty. However, the
Ken Bloom wrote:
> You should consider discussing universites whose departments use linux in
> their labs. For example, I attend UC Davis and have taken computer classes
> in three departments: Computer Science, Computer Engineering, and
> Mathematics. Each of these departments' labs run Unix vari
ite who to contact to get input from the Debian project
> on this -- apologies if "debian-user" isn't the right place.
>
> I've put together a resource page re "Linux in Universities"
> at http://www.kegel.com/linux/edu/
> My goal is to encourage univers
DvB wrote:
> > http://www.kegel.com/linux/edu/
>
> Don't mean to be finicky, but I believe you have a typo in "Maryland,"
> in your list of survey results (I found that section quite interesting,
> BTW).
Thanks, I took this opportunity to finally learn how to use aspell,
and fixed all the obviou
* David P James <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 2002-09-12 20:22 -0400:
[...]
> training students to mount and unmount a floppy for instance, as we use
> floppies for data storage quite a bit. Not a big task, but nevertheless,
> who is going to do it?
apt-get install mtoolsfm
-Andre
msg02087/pgp0.
|
-
"Geek by nature, Linux by choice."
-Original Message-
From: David P James [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, September 12, 2002 4:16 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Linux in Universities
Dan
On Thu, Sep 12, 2002 at 04:15:45PM -0400, David P James wrote:
> Just training students to mount and unmount a floppy for instance,
> as we use floppies for data storage quite a bit. Not a big task, but
> nevertheless, who is going to do it?
Assuming that the students ususally do work at home on
Dan Kegel was roused into action on 09/12/02 12:48 and wrote:
> Hi all,
> not quite who to contact to get input from the Debian project
> on this -- apologies if "debian-user" isn't the right place.
>
> I've put together a resource page re "Linux in Unive
* Dan Kegel ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said:
> I would appreciate your feedback on the content. If there's anything
> missing there from your point of view, please let me know,
> and I'll see if I can fix it.
Hi Dan.
Why are you not including LUGs? Many universities have LUGs. They are a
clear sign
Dan Kegel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi all,
> not quite who to contact to get input from the Debian project
> on this -- apologies if "debian-user" isn't the right place.
>
> I've put together a resource page re "Linux in Universities"
&
> Hi all,
> not quite who to contact to get input from the Debian project
> on this -- apologies if "debian-user" isn't the right place.
Well, since one of your selling arguments is the low-cost, you could
make Debian stand out on this page because it's the only really free
Linux operating system
the right place.
>
> I've put together a resource page re "Linux in Universities"
> at http://www.kegel.com/linux/edu/
> My goal is to encourage universities to support Linux and
> free software in general, and to provide information on
> the current state of Linux suppor
14 matches
Mail list logo