On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 3:40 PM, Warren Young <war...@etr-usa.com> wrote:
>
>> The beauty of the original K12LTSP respin was that just
>> you did a normal fill-in-the-form install pretty much like any
>> fedora/centos
>
> If you insist on having a whole OS dedicated to this, I guess you could go 
> fork Raspbian (http://www.raspbian.org/) and add this stuff to the installer.

I'm not insisting on anything, I just don't see a typical classroom
teacher doing that - in addition to knowing what to set up on the
server side to match.  Where they could just follow some simple
instructions with the LTSP install and come up working.

> Even over the scale of a whole school district, I’d think maintaining a 
> Raspbian fork just to get the x2go config into the installation process would 
> be more difficult.

Agreed, but K12LTSP worked mostly as-is for a lot of districts.

> If you’re waiting for someone else to do the work, you may be sitting there 
> waiting for a long time.  One of the rules of the game that the Pi changes is 
> the value of centralized computing.  30 seats times $40 (including PSU) 
> pretty much balances out the cost of the central server.

I don't need it myself - I'm just surprised that someone hasn't done
it already in a way that would be useful without everyone having to
start from scratch themselves.   And maybe that's not even the best
approach - maybe a 'fat' client with NFS-mounted or cloud-like storage
would be better if there is an automated way to keep it up to date
without letting the user modify things.   I guess these days you'd
have to balance the cost of administering the things against buying a
chromebook.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
    lesmikes...@gmail.com
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