[ale] Educational Software for a Library
Michael D. Hirsch
mhirsch at nubridges.com
Tue Aug 3 16:42:47 EDT 2004
On Tue, 2004-08-03 at 15:00, Nathan J. Underwood wrote:
> I am googling this, but wanted to toss it out to the list to see if I
> could get any personal experiences on the topic. My Dad works in the IT
> Dept for his local Library, and has been instructed to look into using
> Linux for some of their 'floor machines'. These machines are going to
> (initially) be used for children's use, specifically educational games
> and filtered Internet. My Dad is a staunch Windows user (well,
> Microsoft, user, we got started around the MS DOS 2.x days), but is
> going to 'give this Linux thing a shot', so he's asked me for some
> suggestions on educational games for Linux. The machines that they will
> be using are in the 333MHz -> 650MHz range, so nothing fancy would be a
> good idea. I've suggested FC1 with Afterstep (I've tinkered around with
> a few other distro's, but I always seem to go back to Red Hat / Fedora,
> and Afterstep is a nice looking, small, and quick Window Manager that
> I'm pretty familiar with).
My kids enjoy the games on the Knoppix variant put out by the Open
Source Education Foundation: http://osef.org/
Even if you don't want to go with that CD, it provides a great starting
point for a list of games and educational Linux software.
Michael
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