There was a discussion last week of the One Laptop Per Child XO-1 and its mesh networking capabilities, but an aspect of the OLPC project that might be even more interesting to Freedomboxers is the "school servers," also known as XSes. The operating system and toolset for the XSes aims to provide a surprisingly similar feature set to some of the things that get discussed for the Freedombox:
- Being easy(ish) to administer for non-technical people, important for a school deployment in places where having a dedicated sysadmin is pretty unlikely - Encouraging good security practices (instructor and student PCs always use public-key authentication to communicate with the server, never just user name and password; the admin interface for the XS itself uses one-time pads) - Acting as a NAS for the student machines - Acting as an internet gateway and caching Web proxy for wireless mesh networks - Providing a web server and content management system - Providing a Jabber server for collaborative work (on the XS, this is a heavily patched Ejabberd that allows XOs to share school activities via Telepathy when out of mesh range) - Being suitable for relatively low-power, modestly specced systems (OLPC schools in areas with poor electrification have used fanless low-watt boxes like the Aleutia T1 and netbooks like the first generation Eeepc as school servers) It's pretty tightly integrated into Sugar, the XO operating environment, and of course the installation images are Fedora-based, but the XS might be an interesting basis for comparison and discussion for some of the capabilities we want the Freedombox to have. _______________________________________________ Freedombox-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.alioth.debian.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/freedombox-discuss
