From: Petter Reinholdtsen It has been way too long since my last interview, but as the Debian Edu / Skolelinux
+community is still active, and new people keep showing up on the IRC
+channel #debian-edu and
+the debian-edu mailing
+list, I decided to give it another go. This time the announcement
+of a new free software tool to
+create a school year
+book triggered my interest, and I decided to learn more about its
+author. Who are you, and how do you spend your days? My name is Yvan MASSON, I live in France. I have my own one person
+business in computer services. The work consist of visiting my
+customers (person's home, local authority, small business) to give
+advise, install computers and software, fix issues, and provide
+computing usage training. I spend the rest of my time enjoying my
+family and promoting free software. What is your approach for promoting free
+software? When I think that free software could be suitable for someone, I
+explain what it is, with simple words, give a few known examples, and
+explain that while there is no fee it is a viable alternative in many
+situations. Most people are receptive when you explain how it is
+better (I simplify arguments here, I know that it is not so simple):
+Linux works on older hardware, there are no viruses, and the software
+can be audited to ensure user is not spied upon. I think the most
+important is to keep a clear but moderated speech: when you try to
+convince too much, people feel attacked and stop listening. How did you get in contact with the Skolelinux / Debian Edu
+project? I can not remember how I first heard of Skolelinux / Debian Edu,
+but probably on planet.debian.org. As I have been working for a
+school, I have interest in this type of project.
+
+ The school I am involved in is a school for "children" between 14
+and 18 years old. French government has recommended free software
+since 2012 (but is far away from applying this to itself), so while
+the school computers are still using Windows, all computer have the
+classic set of free software: Firefox ESR, LibreOffice (with the
+excellent extension Grammalecte that indicates French grammatical
+errors), SumatraPDF, Audacity, 7zip, KeePass2, VLC, GIMP, Inkscapeâ¦
+
+ What do you see as the advantages of Skolelinux / Debian
+Edu? It is free software! Built on Debian, I am sure that users are not
+spied upon, and that it can run on low end hardware. This last point
+is very important, because we really need to improve "green IT". I do
+not know enough about Skolelinux / Debian Edu to tell how it is better
+than another free software solution, but what I like is the "all in
+one" solution: everything has been thought of and prepared to ease
+installation and usage.
Secondly, and more importantly, free software is a requirement to +prevent abuses regarding human rights and environmental care. +Humanity can not rely on tools that are in the hands of small group of +people.
+ +What do you see as the disadvantages of Skolelinux / Debian +Edu?
+ +Again, I don't know this project enough. Maybe a dedicated website? +Debian wiki works well for documentation, but is not very appealing to +someone discovering the project. Also, as Skolelinux / Debian Edu uses +OpenLDAP, it probably means that Windows workstations cannot use +centralized authentication. Maybe the project could use Samba as an +Active Directory domain controller instead, allowing Windows desktop +usage when necessary.
+ +(Editors note: Infact Windows workstations can get the centralized +authentication in a Debian Edu setup, but the fact that this is not +well known can be seen as an indication of the need for better +documentation and marketing. :) + +
Which free software do you use daily?
+ +Nothing original: Debian testing/sid with Gnome desktop, Firefox, +Thunderbird, LibreOfficeâ¦
+ +Which strategy do you believe is the right one to use to +get schools to use free software?
+ +Every effort to spread free software into schools is important, +whatever it is. But I think, at least where I live, that IT +professionals maintaining schools networks are still very "Microsoft +centric". Schools will use any working solution, but they need people +to install and maintain it. How to make these professionals sensitive +about free software and train them with solutions like Debian Edu / +Skolelinux is a really good question :-)