First I would need to know what desktop you want to use.
If you use gnome or kde which are good for teachers then there are tools and 
ways to configure once for all.
If you use xfce for kids or icewm then again as above but different.
None are too hard and once you get them and make the right scripts it is easy.
Let me know what desktop you plan to use.

On Thursday 13 July 2006 14:42, Roj Jer wrote:
> Words from yet another newbie... please be patient.
>
> Career Microsoft folks (like myself) wanting to move from the Microsoft
> community to the Open Source Linux community face enormous challenges when
> first arriving in the neighborhood. We don't understand the "lingo" or even
> where to go to find anything that looks vaguely familiar.
>
> I have been recruited to help design and implement a computer lab for a
> neighborhood private school (K-12). The largest factor was $$COST$$. They
> have a big need and a small budget. They've received a donation of 30+
> 100Mhz Pentium PC's with 64Mb Ram, 1GB Hard Disk, and 10/100 Nics. The cost
> of implementing new "Dell's" was around $15,000... (way over budget). What
> is the budget? The least expensive method possible. So, my research has
> begun. I thought about Citrix on a Microsoft Server, but there were all of
> the licensing $$COST$$. So, I considered researching Open Source solutions.
>
> I got super pumped when I Googled "Open Source Linux Terminal Server" and
> the 2nd item was titled, "K12 Linux in Schools Project". I read all of the
> "Testimonials" and "Case Studies" and determined that this was a perfect
> match.
>
> I downloaded the *K12LTSP 4.4.1 - Install CD-ROMs* and commenced to
> installing it on a donated 1.4GHz AMD PC with 4GB of RAM. I emulated an
> Ethernet bootrom on the client PC's by booting from a floppy disk created
> from the http://www.Rom-O-Matic.net <http://www.rom-o-matic.net/> site.
> Within an hour after having the LTSP server online, I had 3 of the 100MHz
> Pentium PC's connected and working.
>
> Super! Great! But that seems to be where the Magic ends.
>
> And now the point!
>
> In the Windows world it is easy to configure the "All Users" Start Menu
> (C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Start Menu), or customize a Start Menu
> for a particular user. You can customize the Default User environment
> (local machine) as a template for subsequent new users.
> When incorporating Citrix into the Mix, you can install software on the
> Citrix server and "Publish" the application for a particular user or group.
>
> My questions:
>
> 1) How / Where do you configure LTSP to segregate "Teachers" from
> "Students", "3rd Grade" from "12th Grade", so that each "group" gets the
> appropriate desktop and program menu respective to their roles in the
> school? A 3rd Grader does not need the same applications, shortcuts, etc as
> a 12th Grader.
>
> 2) What are other schools using for URL filtering and Surf Control to keep
> students from "stumbling" across Porn Sites or any other topic deemed
> "inappropriate"?
>
> Thanks for your patience.
>
> RJ

-- 
Alfred Nutile
Alternative Sustainable Technology Solutions
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://yurtboy.gotdns.com
"Spend your money on training not software and new computers" Socrates


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