Slick tools...now will they work?
It's late at night, the week before school starts and I'm finally getting around to one of my more important projects for the summer. Best laid plans of mice and men, right?
It's late at night, the week before school starts and I'm finally getting around to one of my more important projects for the summer. Best laid plans of mice and men, right?
You know the story: times are tight, do more with less, make 1:1 happen with less money, etc., etc.
As I was driving through the small town in which our district is based yesterday, I was pondering a conversation I'd had with a local fiber company. In middle-of-nowhere Massachusetts, as in much of rural America, broadband is not easy to come by.
If Apple is willing to turn its back on the XServe, will it also turn its back on OS X Server, which, surprisingly, represents a high-value, easy to use tool for schools?
Is it possible to save enough money on servers by going refurbished that schools can pay for necessary infrastructure upgrades or even deploy larger-scale solutions? This is what I wanted to find out.
Our thin clients at the high school have served us very well. A few bumps along the way, a bit of learning for me in terms of the capacity of our network and the limitations of our terminal servers, and occasional adjustments of expectations, but overall, they have met our instructional needs and drastically reduced desktop support requirements.
Last week a company called Codelathe sent me one of the cooler devices I've ever had the chance to use. In response to my personal cloud post over on Between the Lines, they said, "Have we got the product for you!
A friend emailed me today with some questions about a thin client deployment he was considering for a local school. A bit of time on the phone with his Dell rep and he was convinced that he just didn't have the budget to roll out a terminal server and a lab of thin clients.
Desktop PCs can always be reimaged. It's a pain, but downtime only affects one person.
One of the real strengths of the new breed of cheap ultraportables is their ability to connect to more powerful terminal services, acting as portable, full-featured thin clients. Thus, while the XO, Classmate, Eee, Noahpad, and others (many being introduced as we speak at CES) have plenty of utility for basic computing, there may be many occasions when students can really benefit from server-centric computing.