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Re: [LUG] Kids failing on coursework because of proprietary file formats

 

On 17/06/2010 13:06, Paul Sutton wrote:
On 17/06/10 12:51, James Andrews wrote:
My daughters school (Uffculme) use MS software pretty much exclusively. I
was encountering consumer resistance from her as we were using Open Office
at home and it is subtly different to the MS programs.

So when I got her a new laptop, it was MS Windows and I bought a "student
edition" of MS Office suite

Even so there has been a couple of occasions when she has wanted to have MS
Publisher or some other Billyware just because that's what the teacher was
using.  And the student edition doesn't include every single obscure program
in the MS line up.

Now the laptop is not connecting to the 'Net, apparently because we switched
wireless routers and Windows XP Sp3 has various bizarre problems with
interoperability.

This is a PITA because most of her homework seems to involve googling for
images to put in various presentations


Me again

well the government are asking for ways they can save money,  if schools
had their IT budgets slashed perhaps they would wake up and start using
open source software and make do with what is available to them,

If IT budgets are being spent in such a way that it is having a negative
affect on kids then something has to be done

giving hand outs to poor children is not really the answer if we are
meant to be cutting billions from the deficit,

Paul

Some time ago Gareth Edwards (the legendary Welsh rugby player) said of Shane Williams that 'he has to learn to play smarter not harder' since people were now catching him. I made the observation that government organisations need to learn to spend smarter not harder. Having worked in Purchasing and Supplies previously in local government, I think it is noteworthy how many departments flood Supplies with requisitions in March just to use up their budgets so they won't get cut the following financial year. It would be interesting if an FOI request regarding purchasing trends showed a spike in orders nationally in March, and how many of them could actually be justified.

Julian

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