Untangle is scheduled to host an Ubuntu Linux Installfest from Aug. 4 to 7 at LinuxWorld Expo in San Francisco. This latest Installfest, coupled with recent moves by Canonical and Intel made The VAR Guy wonder: Can Ubuntu Linux close the digital divide?
First, a little background. Over the past two or three years, The VAR Guy has heard pundits hype numerous technologies — from municipal broadband to one laptop per child efforts — as bridges that close the digital divide.
Sure, Ubuntu Linux holds great promise as a tool that helps to shrink the digital divide. Netbooks (low-cost subnotebooks) with Ubuntu Remix are expected to flood the market this winter. And Intel continues to press forward with its Classmate PCs — low-cost systems that target K-6 schools in the U.S. and K-12 in emerging markets. Now comes word of Untangle leading the Installfest at LinuxWorld Expo.
Still, low-cost PCs also need broadband. And in many cases, broadband isn’t available — especially in rural U.S. regions. In early 2007, The VAR Guy visited Vermont and sat in a meeting where local IT experts described how hundreds of miles of fiber optics sat in the ground and remained unlit. Verizon, it seemed, couldn’t find a business case to light the fiber and exited the region. Ouch.
Meanwhile, K-12 school kids in Vermont and neighboring states were sharing dial-up connections in computer labs. And recent high school graduates were heading off to college and never returning home. Instead, they were relocating — permanently — to towns that had broadband.
Give a kid or a classroom aging PCs with fresh Ubuntu installs? Wonderful. But give them broadband — coupled with creative freedom and education — and the digital divide will get a whole lot smaller. If everyone had broadband, the next Google or Facebook or Oracle could be launched anywhere — without being tied to expensive real estate in Silicon Valley.
Instead, third-world technology is alive and well in many U.S. schools and homes.
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Tags: Broadband | Canonical | Digital Divide | LinuxWorld Expo | Ubuntu Linux | Untangle Installfest
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The UK has this problem as well. Rural areas always seem to miss out. But we’re address this particular issue here in the UK with various schemes.
Ironically, in Asia broadband is available in most areas with CDMA. While the speed is not as fast as xDSL, it still could be called broadband. In India they sell CDMA wi-fi routers.
So, is US a 3rd world country?
Can Ubuntu Linux Close the Digital Divide | The VAR Guy…
Untangle is scheduled to host an Ubuntu Linux Installfest from Aug. 4 to 7 at LinuxWorld Expo in San Francisco. This latest Installfest, coupled with recent moves by Canonical and Intel made The VAR Guy wonder: Can Ubuntu Linux close the digital divide…
Hmm at my country that’s almost the rule!!! no broadband. In fact at the main cities the biggest bandwidth you can get is about 2M…
When it comes to a national broadband agenda, The VAR Guy would say the US doesn’t have much to brag about.
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