I second the Google Apps suggestion.  My kids school uses Google exclusively 
and it's easy for the kids to learn and use.  Plus it's accessible any where 
with interwebs connection. 

 I would check with the teachers and administration to see if this is a viable 
option. 

Short of that,  try the LO options mentioned or the VM hack also looks 
promising.   I may try that one out myself. 

Schools generally push acceptance and inclusion in all their other activities, 
computing shouldn't be any different.   Fight the good fight ;-)

-- Joel Burtram
Sent via the Samsung GALAXY S®4, an AT&T 4G LTE smartphone

<div>-------- Original message --------</div><div>From: Patrick Flaherty 
<pflahe...@wsi.com> </div><div>Date:05/22/2014  13:16  (GMT-05:00) 
</div><div>To: David Rysdam <da...@rysdam.org> </div><div>Cc: GNHLUG 
<gnhlug-discuss@mail.gnhlug.org> </div><div>Subject: Re: how dumb is this idea? 
</div><div>
</div>Have you played with portable apps (http://portableapps.com/)? Libre 
office works on windows and linux. Past that, maybe something hosted (like 
google docs, but maybe a bit more Free). 


On Thu, May 22, 2014 at 12:59 PM, David Rysdam <da...@rysdam.org> wrote:
My kids and I are 100% Linux at home. (My wife has a Mac, which none of
us touch unless we absolutely have to.) At school, it is unfortunately
obvious the kids use Windows. Also, starting in middle school, the
school expects every kid to carry a USB drive back and forth so they can
work on projects.

I've had some problems providing support for this, to put it mildly. For
something like a paper, the solution is obvious: write in plain text and
dump into Word at the last minute. (The solution is obvious, but no
child of mine has listened to me yet. That's something I don't think
GNHLUG can help me with.) But for something like PowerPoint, the
solution isn't so obvious. They have to be able to edit it in both
places, during in-class work periods and as homework.

I don't know what the school expects people to do if they can't afford
Office at home.

However, I just had an idea. You can get 128GB USB drives on ebay for
~$20 now. Why not install an emulator-based (as opposed to bootable)
"live CD" image on there that they can then mount the rest of the USB
drive with and edit their work in Linux *even at school*?

They probably won't be able to get on the network with it, which is fine
since the host Windows OS could handle that.

Transferring documents (for printing, say) may be a problem, although I
assume the live CD images somehow manage it. Oh wait, to reap the
benefit you'd have to print *from Linux* which probably won't work even
if you had the right printer driver set up. Well, print at home, I
guess.

I don't think security would be a problem unless there's now some way to
prevent someone from starting an app off their USB drive.

The only real issue I can think of horsepower: Does the school hardware
have the oomph to support this hack? I'll have to ask my kids what the
school has.
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-- 
 Patrick Flaherty  |
 w: 978 983 6597      e: patrick.flahe...@weather.com

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