School server

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Revision as of 15:40, 1 February 2007 by 195.16.185.35 (talk)
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When we deploy one laptop per child, we must also deploy the infrastructure necessary to make these laptops useful.

Not true. That is the job of the national ministry of education.

The central component of this infrastructure is a school server.

Not true. The central component is educational content. The second most important infrastructure component is teacher training. The 3rd most important is technical support and repair services. Servers are never needed. They may be desired by some people, but they are not an essential component. Any OLPC laptop can serve up its content, either activity bundles or e-books. Add a thumb drive or USB CD reader to any laptop and you have a server.

The functions provided by this server are open to debate, but at a minimum it provides internet communication and storage resources to the school's wireless mesh.

A single school server is designed to support between thirty and sixty students. An open area of discussion is how several of these are combined to support larger schools.

Currently, the School server is described by these documents: