Gary Nichols wrote: > > Alan, good luck on your project and please keep us PLUG'ers posted on > your progress. Your home sounds like the perfect test bed for this > concept. :-) I was thinking of doing something similar for my girls > but I can't get them off the computers long enough to do a reconfig. > :-) I'm still wondering why my 13-year old is thumbing through my > vi/bash books.... *grin* Ok, I know why. hehehe She's living with a > linux geek. > > Anyone else thinking of trying this? I burned the CDs in July but I'm still waiting for the mythical Free Time to try it :-) I don't have the spare hardware at home, and haven't built it a firewall to live behind at work. I'm hoping to stumble across a "NFS for the paranoid mini-HOWTO". Steve > > On Sun, 2001-09-02 at 16:54, Alan Dayley wrote: > > k12ltsp.org looks like a great project even for my home. My oldest has hit > > Jr. High school now and conflicts to get computer access are increasing. > > This will only get worse as the siblings get older. I was not looking > > forward to shelling out $$ for lots of extra computers but using this I could > > minimize the cost of hardware and software and everyone, conceivably, could > > have their own computer. > > > > Anyway, I now have the ISOs for this project burned. I will be happy to > > bring them to the meeting on the 13th for anyone to copy. I must get these > > CDs back though. I don't have enough room to keep the ISOs on my computer. > > Who would have thought a 12GB drive would be too small some day. > > > > Alan > > > > On Friday 31 August 2001 09:21 am, you wrote: > > > I'm waiting for calls back from Sun AND Redhat regarding support for our > > > getting OS/Free software in schools. Redhat's CEO has a special > > > interest in what we are trying to do here, and he's pushing this > > > project: > > > > > > http://www.k12ltsp.org/ > > > > > > > > > Comments, please?