It is hard to believe that my 10th and 11th Grade Vietnamese and foreign students at the American International School in Saigon have been using Linux for about one month now. I am very impressed at how fast they were able to use Linux in a short period of time.
Choosing a Linux distribution for the course was not easy. Last quarter, my students tried the LiveCD versions of openSUSE, Fedora Core and Sabayon Linux. openSUSE and Sabayon both were running too slow in the Acer laptops my students were using. Fedora Core, quite frankly, was just too boring for them. Several students installed Ubuntu Linux at home but ended up removing Ubuntu from their laptops later. I never even considered Ubuntu an option for my class. My favorite, Zenwalk Linux, did not make the cut either.
Finally, I decided to test PCLinuxOS with my students. Wow, amazing. Finally a Linux distro that the majority of my students actually liked using. It ran faster than any of the other Linux distros they tried and easily connected to the internet from inside the school (they like to read Yahoo 360 blogs in class). They figured out how to use Konquerer to browse around the different directories in their laptops without me even telling them. As with Macbooks, the Desktop GUI was easy to learn. Thus, I decided to use PCLinuxOS.
Since all of the laptops in the computer lab only used Window’s XP, the IT Staff and I decided to install PCLinuxOS inside of the VMWare Player. The first day PCLinuxOS was installed was a big nightmare but the IT staff smoothed things out this week. Students can now log into their own individual VMWare Player accounts now. My students are learning fast. I keep them all inside terminal window with Konsole. Yes, they all know how to use the command line now. Today, they all SSH to the Teacher’s Desktop and created two web pages. Several of my IT geeks also learned how to move people’s files around as well which was very amusing.
There are now 48 new Linux users in Vietnam! 🙂
(My Vietnamese student logging into PCLinuxOS with VMWare Player)
(Reading up on the latest Linux Tutorial with Mozilla Firefox)
(My student uses the command line in konsole to SSH to my computer)
(Ken uses nano to create a webpage entirely in XHTML)
(Another student using konsole and nano)
(More of my Vietnamese students using PCLinuxOS)
AIS Computer Science Course Website: http://ais.saigonnezumi.com/
American International School in Saigon: http://www.ais.edu.vn
Saigon Linux Group: http://www.saigonlinux.com
Big thanks to Tony from GHP Far East Company, Ltd., on showing me how to use VMWare.
what kind of applications does the OS offer? are they compatible with MS office package?
wow tha amazing…u must be proud 😀 i know i am
Now that is just awesome. Thank you for sharing your PCLinuxOS experience.
Hi & welcome to imo/e the best all around distro. Drop by (http://www.pclinuxos.com/) & say hi, if you’d like.
PCLinuxOS – Radically simple, it just works. That’s why PCLOS is “The Distro Hopper Stopper!”
How did the students do Vietnamese input?
Were there any problems?
Did they use scim , uim or a combo?
I think Vietnamese uses a quasi-roman alphabet so maybe it is easier
than typing Thai or Korean
That’s great but i’m sure those students will want to input vietnamese
when in America and writing emails to family back home, so to keep them from switching to “the bad guy” an
easy method should be found..
@moof:
Oh, they can. Half the folks in my group are Vietnamese, and furthermore, both KDE and GNOME have had language packs for Vietnamese (and many other languages–Russian, Chinese, Hindi/Urdu, Arabic, etc.) for years now. So, thankfully, that’s not a problem. And furthermore, at least with KDE, you can switch languages on the fly, without having to reboot or even log out. Last I checked, the “bad guy” doesn’t let you switch like that. At least not in Spanish.
–TP
I am HAPPY to hear someone new is using PCLOS , and a school at that . I think PCLOS is THE crossover distro. I am still using PCLOS 93A “Big Daddy” and will never change, it is the best desktop OS I have ever used.. PCLOS is the best distro to start out or change from windows. I can’t say enough good about it !!!
I have been using PCLinuxOS on and off for over a year now and really love it. It was great to see a story on Linux Today with “PCLinuxOS” in the title instead of “Ubuntu” ! Currently I only am using Linux on my home computer, and can run ALL my applications with no problems. Including World of Warcraft.
Hi,
Maybe I missed something in the article, or in a related one somewhere else, but what was the goal for getting the students using Linux? And why run it inside VMWare? Isn’t it a live CD that can be run on its own? (the last question is rhetorical)
Anyways, it is great to see your students learning something useful.
Cheers,
Kevin Wright
I regularly use PCLinuxOS and Ubuntu 7.1, also several other distros are up and running plus some PC-BSD and…they are all just great and getting better all the time…I have xp as well but its really just a handy tool.
“@Tom G: I am getting that a lot. I keep telling some people, Ubuntu DOES NOT Linux. The Ubuntu community in Vietnam is really hurting the Linux movement in this country.”
Do you mean what i think? That some people thinks Ubuntu builds GNU/Linux as Microsoft does windows. I have seen many new GNU/Linux users to believe that Ubuntu is different Operating System than any other distribution and Ubuntu is easy to use because it has great desktop. They just dont understand that Ubuntu is using same parts of GNU/Linux as any other distribution like by using Gnome as desktop, but it configures and choose them in different way.
Like only selects those parts what they think normal user needs and leaves everything else off. And configure Gnome to use own theme and few other applets by default as other distros does samething.
I feel that Ubuntu is doint more harm to GNU/Linux FOSS community than any other distribution. Just becase it is marketing itself (and by users) as easy to use Linux based OS and there isn’t any other samekind what would be easy to use.
I’m Mandriva user myself and i have long time wanted to try PCLinuxOS (it is based to Mandriva) because it has few nice things by default, and if it really rocks, i can suggest it for new users. Now i suggest Mandriva over any Ubuntu based distro 😉
It’s great to see that computer users knows that there is always a alternative to select what OS they like to run. It doesn’t need to be Windows XP or Windows Vista, It can be GNU/Linux or even *BSD. And there is great applications for free (as time (speech) and as money (beer) ;-)).
@Fri13: I don’t get what you mean, marketing is marketing. I also haven’t heard the “there isn’t any other samekind [t]hat would be easy to use” from anybody.
And Ubuntu also has all packages it inherits from Debian, not just non-“normal user needs”. Which, btw, is much more than what a person on #pclinuxos-support told me available in PCLOS “7260 or 7270 packages”.
Ubuntu also separates non-free sw into multiverse and restricted, Does PCLOS do so? There’re Gobuntu, a free-sw-only Ubuntu flavour, and Gnewsense, based on Ubuntu 6.06 that only serves free sw.
And shouldn’t each distro have a distinct default look? That’s just a theme.
I am curious if the compiz 3d desktop is a hit with your class (im sure the the students will figure out a way to make it work) or if it has even been explored yet?