Greg Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > The first point seems solvable if they just install Java afterwards. > Then we don't need to worry about licenses. Its a big install but > probably not a deal breaker. The performance may be challenging but > again I think we can make it fit.
(Several persons in the learning team are interested in knowing how a Sugar XO can effectively run java-based applications... I expect this will be way too slow but I'd love to be wrong.) > I'm not sure what free but not open source means. It generally means that it's free of charge, not free of use. Use = study, modify, redistribute, redistribute modified versions. > [...] > The pedagogical specialists here tell me that concept maps are pretty > hot in education right now. They also pointed me to a commercial tool > which some schools use: http://www.inspirationsoftware.com/ > > Does anyone know of an open source solution in this area? Freemind comes to my mind (because it also runs on wikkawiki plat-forms), but there are a few others: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mind_mapping_software Online (not FLOSS) tools: http://www.spinscape.com/ http://www.mindmeister.com/ http://www.mindjet.com/ http://www.thebrain.com/ All this being really too sparkling for my old-fashioned linear shabby brain. -- Bastien _______________________________________________ Devel mailing list Devel@lists.laptop.org http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/devel