Microsoft to Build High School in Philadelphia, PA 615
LynchMan writes "According to the The Philadelphia Inquirer, Philadelphia is too be the home of a Microsoft funded High School. While having an inner city public school with a large tech fund ($46 Million) will be a great asset to those young students interested in technology, is the Philadelphia School District selling out to Microsoft really the only way to achieve this? Especially with all of the negative press that Microsoft has had recently, is this an attempt to do some good and help out those who cannot afford private school? Or is Microsoft just making sure that they secure themselves another generation of coders/admins/users? This being the first school of it's kind, will a Microsoft high school be coming to a town near you?" This looks very much like the Microsoft buses that toured from school to school a couple years back, but much larger and much more stationary.
Little billy did something bad (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Little billy did something bad (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Little billy did something bad (Score:4, Informative)
We are all serfs on Microsoft's and Big Pharma's 'intellectual property.' [gregpalast.com]
Re:Little billy did something bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Matthew
Chapter 6
1 Take heed not to do your alms before men to be seen of them, otherwise ye have no reward with your Father who is in the heavens. 2 When therefore thou doest alms, sound not a trumpet before thee, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, so that they may have glory from men. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward. 3 But thou, when thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right hand does; 4 so that thine alms may be in secret, and thy Father who sees in secret will render [it] to thee.
In other words "charity is charity when you do it quietly". Boasting about it on the other hand, is self publicising and earns you no brownie points or to put it another way:
Let not thy marketing department send out press releases in order to make thy people think thou art a generous individual when instead thou art trying to maximise thine user base and profits for such actions render thee no better than the rulers of Sco who long ago wedged thine heads up thine arses and tried to rob the righteous penguinistas and thine own shareholders.
Re:Little billy did something bad (Score:4, Insightful)
Two characteristics seem to govern all of Gates's "philanthropy":
1. Charitable exercises always follow bad press for Microsoft and/or Gates (his first penny was given away immediately following the release of his abysmal videotaped testimony for the antitrust hearings)
2. Charitable exercises always contain significant strings that benefit Microsoft, Gates, or the ideological institutions that made him a rich and powerful man (granted that this is true of the work of nearly all "philanthropists".
It's actually the last point that worries me the most. There is *always* ideological pressure from corporate funding to education. With what sort of balanced worldview do people come out of the Microsoft school?
Philanthropy in general is a weird, weird thing. It's essentially like saying "well, I'm sure rich - I must have taken a whole lot more money than I deserved from the rest of you folks, so here's 10% of it back - just out of the goodness of my heart! Get it? I'm rich *and* I'm a sweet guy!". Wouldn't it be better simply not to overpay these individuals to such an amazing degree? Are we that married to our Horatio Alger lottery mentality?
Re:Little billy did something bad (Score:4, Insightful)
agreed (Score:3, Insightful)
Comparing Gates Foundation charities to MS business practices is a lot like comparing the J. Paul Ghetty museum in LA to oil drilling in the North Sea.
We may disagree about the morality behind some of the world's larger fortunes ('behind every great fortune, there is a crime'). However, I question the assertion that the nature of these philanthropic ventures is forever tainted by the origins of the
Re:Little billy did something bad (Score:5, Informative)
You forgot to say IANACPA. I'm not either, but I do know that according to the IRS your basis for charitable contributions of inventory (that is property you sell in the course of your business) is the SMALLER of the fair market value or your cost.
If MS donates software that cost them very little to produce then they get very little tax deduction. If the software comes directly from MS then MS is donating millions of dollars worth of software that the school could probably never afford in exchange for very little tax benefit. If the software is coming from the Gates Foundation, then the foundation would have to buy the software from MS and donate it. Since the foundation is tax exempt the deduction wouldn't be an issue. If you like you can check out form Publication 526 [irs.gov] from the IRS.
Re:Little billy did something bad (Score:3, Informative)
At our business, we put in hours and hours of work into free websites for non-profits, only to find out that we couldn't get any tax deductions for services rendered.
Not a penny.
I'm not sure how the tax code works exactly in this respect, but the only amount they can deduct is the amount of money spent to salary the workers, which they would be do
Blinded By Hate (Score:5, Interesting)
If it was not for Microsoft this school would still be built, it just wouldn't have the technology.
I have the suspicion that those who object to this would think it would be the coolest thing if RedHat decided to help a school become a pure Linux organization, with a Zarus PDA for every child.
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:5, Informative)
"How could anyone have any question about this being a good thing?" [..cut..] MS is contributing technology and services to the school."
I would say the article makes it look like Microsof is paying for the school, but it only gives project management, training and support. Which probably only will relate to Microsoft technology.
From the article: "Microsoft's contribution will not be monetary, but services worth millions of dollars, including a full-time on-site project manager, planning and design expertise, staff training and ongoing technology support. It plans to bring in other technology partners.In what way is this such a beutifully good thing?
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:3, Insightful)
Because in most inner city, US schools, kids have no access to technology at all, asshole. This is without a doubt, a good thing. Or maybe you just like the idea of kids growing up with no technology education?
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:5, Informative)
Computers in nearly every classroom from elementry to high school. (Nice ones, trust me).
OC-3 Internet access.
Internet 2 access (T3 IIRC).
Lots of tech training for the district's teachers.
Library automation.
Basically, just about everything that a school would need and then some. His kids are well taken care of.
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:5, Insightful)
Yup, and MS gets to look like a hero for donating their consulting services, which will amount to "Buy Microsoft products". Favorite line from the article:
The company's reward is the opportunity to design a school using technology in every way possible from the ground up - a prototype it could then market.
Yippie. So they want to use a school as a facility to assemble a new product. Glad that they have the kids' best interest in mind!
How about making technology a lower priority (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:5, Insightful)
When Apple did this, it was praised and lauded as good move to provide computers, and help kids, and maybe also build potential customers.
When Microsoft does this, it's pure evil, the administrators have been duped, sold out, stupid. Suspicions of some nefarious larger purpose are raised immediately.
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:5, Interesting)
Remember, Microsoft is a monopoly. They play by different rules. If Coke was a monopoly with 90%+ marketshare, you bet the government would be denying them any contracts to "extend" their reach into schools.
If Microsoft and Apple were 50/50 in overall dominance, it would simply be competition. Otherwise, Microsoft should be highly scrutinized when it comes to anti-competitive behavior.
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:3, Interesting)
A typical monopolist tactic is to sell or give away software at reduced prices. This is flat out illegal for a monopoly to do. Microsoft can afford to give away software if it means making up profits by locking this school into buying future microsoft products to remain compatible. Give away the software, sell upgrades at as
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:3, Insightful)
this needs to be modded up.
I agree with this posting, fully. mod ME a troll, but not the author of this post.
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:2)
As you mentioned Pepsi - Partial credit!
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:5, Interesting)
Its a great idea!
We know they will learn almost exclusively microsoft products, but thats ok. They will be learning computers.
I wonder if Microsoft will eliminate their auditing for the school out of fear that they too would be found with 'illegal copies' of Microsoft products...
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:2, Interesting)
"This is an experiment! If afterwards the students bought cigarettes for themselves, so what, they were likely to anyway. "
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:3, Funny)
In fact there was a small city in the mid-west that was scheduled to build a Linux school. But when the school-board realized that by the time they resolved all the dependencies it would be time to graduate, they dropped the idea.
Another Gnu/Linux Grammar School broke ground in Seattle about six years ago. Known as K-12, the project's gotten stalled as the masons and carpenters juggle its construction with the demands of their paying jobs
Here's why you are wrong (Score:2, Insightful)
See what nice guys those gangsters turned out to be? Sure, they knock off businesses and rub out people now and then, but they sure do throw nifty block partie
Nope, here's why (Score:3)
The legal entity (corporation) does to other legal entities (other corporations) what the illegal one (mafia) does to other people: Threatens to "cut off their oxygen supply." So Microsoft absolutely has killed -- other corporations. Oh, and they did th
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:2)
Do you really think they are going to buy the CDs? THe MSDN (no key required) versions would most likley be the ones floating around the school. There's no ned to buy anything at that point. Even if the Admins did lock everything up in a safe somewhere, With this "technology" available to the kids (broad-band, nice machines, etc.), it's a snap to grab ISOs for whatever they want from the 'Net.
Still, I s
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyone remember this [theregister.co.uk]?
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:5, Insightful)
Too early to see (Score:3, Insightful)
If it actually goes to helping the most disadvantaged students, where it would be the most difficult to make succesful, I'd applaud the effort.
If it goes to mostly middle class and upper middle class students, then I'd have to view it as simply a further corporatization of the pub
NOT blinded by hate (Score:4, Insightful)
This donation of M$ dollars (not the school itself) is bad for 3 reasons:
1. Regardless of the kindness, M$ is an unethical company. Period! A free lunch today will not be one tomorrow. You need no more evidence of this than to scan the various news source headlines for the last few years. Corporations don't give anything out unless there is a business or tax reason. And while some in the opulent halls of M$ may see this as a worthy cause, more see it as a business opportunity. Ugh, open your eyes. There is obviously some tax write off or future opportunity to hook more people on their products - or both. This is the nature of big business/capitalism, plain and simple. Get 'em while they're young.
2. A public school should not be financed in any way by a corporation. However, these things can happen because so many people in this country do not put as much emphasis on quality public education as they should.
I'm horrified by the stories my sister tells me of the parents having to contribute money and supplies to her kids school because the school can't afford it! Personally, when I have kids, they're going to public schools and I'm going to PTA meetings, etc., and I'm gonna put my time in and at least if things still continue to go down hill, at least I'll say I did something. My parents never did that. There is a complete lack of caring and responsibility of the majority of voting public and our esteemed leaders on this subject. It needs to change and that change would benefit everyone. Why this doesn't horrify anyone else is beyond me. If you don't have an educated public, then you have close to nothing.
While I'm sure most kids will have to work at some point in their life using M$ tools, I see no reason, being the company M$ is, to promote their usage before their professional career. Why muddy up their most impressionable years with the horrors and inflexibilities of an M$ world? They'll have plenty of time to see that on their own when they can make their own choice on what OS and tools they want to use. I'd rather my kids and my sister's kids learn about history, math, etc.., instead of service packs.
3. All this 'neat' stuff, being an expirement and all, will go right back to benefit M$ and no one else. It would be such a better idea to use free software and open standards because the creation (the mind of someone young is a wonderful thing!) and fixing of said technology would go back into the common good - royalty and patent free (one would hope). This is a no brainer; using public funds not just for educating our kids properly, but also improving technology - that anyone can have - will in turn, give us more control over how and when we access information.
You know, the general public/govt./us did this before when we paid for the copper for phones to be laid down in the early/middle part of the 20th century. The govt. laid all the wire and let AT&T use it for next to nothing. Over the years, AT&T got 0wnership of it. Then, in the latter part of the 20th century, the baby bells used that free (as in beer) resource to stop local competition in their local markets. They cited the argument "why should we be made to lease our lines for little money to local competition?"
So I say the opposite, why should public funds go to helping figure out technical issues for the richest software company in the world? Because kids will be bug testing (and possibly fixing) on publicly funded time which is not what I or anyone else pay tax dollars for!
Nah, this is a sham and public relations magic hand waving. It's a $46mil bug test and fixit it school. Like the reality of the M$ office in which you're not amazed by all the marvels of the modern world and how much time and money they save you, but rather how you're locked into a buggy platform with escalating costs, little or no choice, and no c
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:5, Funny)
So you want to hold a business decision made by their *competitors* against them now?
How about we all just be done with it, and say their contributing because Bill Gates enjoys eating babies.
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:2)
"Microsoft isn't evil per se, just hell-bent on warping the mind of children."
Assuming that it were true that an entire corporation would have such an ambition...I would imagine a couple of billion dollars spent on
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:2)
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, because the government gives them enough money, riiiiight
When I was in high school (~7-10 years ago), we had Pepsi machines, and the school sold Taco Bell and McDonald's food on certain days of the week. Not to mention that Little Debbies snacks had the in-road on the grade schools.
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:2)
Are you claiming that this is a good thing? Are you merely telling us that this is what happened to you? What is your opinion on the matter? We all know that many schools have Pepsi machines and a Taco Bell Express.
I don't think that public schools should be used in any way to e
Re:Blinded By Hate (Score:3)
It seemed many of my then classmates liked the tired old "school food sucks" mantra. In reality, it wasn't the school's cooking they didn't like; it was the food. In other words, their parents never exposed them to exotic food like...uh...vegetables. Consequently, they weren't happy with anything but Pizza Hut pizza and chicken fingers.
A few things we can be sure of (Score:4, Funny)
2. All kids will have an irrational hatred for penguins.
3. Apple? Who?
Re:A few things we can be sure of (Score:4, Funny)
Re:A few things we can be sure of (Score:2, Funny)
Re:A few things we can be sure of (Score:3, Funny)
Corporate Sponsorship in Schools (Score:5, Funny)
I heard of a case where a kid at a Pepsi-School was sent home after drinking a Coke.
Perhaps the same will happen with Linux and Mac OS X users at Microsoft School.
Article about Corporate Coke here. [colorado.edu]
Re:Corporate Sponsorship in Schools (Score:4, Interesting)
Okay, we had a soda machine at my high school. I think it was a Pepsi machine, but I honestly can't recall. But it was just one machine, and it was not in the cafeteria, so it was not "tempting" people to buy ye olde nasty carbonated sludge.
Would someone at my high school have been sent home for drinking a Coke? Shit no. They could have brought it from home. Now, we did have people expelled for drinking JD when they should have been in class....
Frankly, if a corp wants to buy a shitload of computers or educational material for a school, fine by me. As long as it meets or exceeds the standards set by the local school board, I have no problem with it whatsoever, especially if it's helping a poorer school district.
Is this automatically going to give rise to a bunch of pro-MS kids? Doubtful. If anything, it will most likely lead to those kids learning computers a bit better, as they try and bypass whatever firewalls or censor-ware are on the computer to get to the pr0n. (Also, I see a lot of firesharing in this school's future. They can go ahead and combine student ID's with the RIAA's crap-tastic idea for "amnesty".)
Kierthos
Re:Corporate Sponsorship in Schools (Score:5, Informative)
> me...
I remember something about this. A quick Google turned up the following blurb. I don't know that this is true (a little more digging should confirm/reject it):
Greenbrier High School in Evans, Georgia had sponsored a "Coke in Education Day" in order to win $500 from the Coca-Cola company. One kid (Michael Cameron) wore a Pepsi shirt to school to protest and was suspended.
So, the report, albeit incorrect, was not *that* far off the mark. And the above story of Greenbrier High School, if true, is very worrisome.
Pepsi on Coke Day story is true. (Score:5, Informative)
Here is the first link from Google on the subject:
http://www.noveltynet.org/content/paranormal/www.p arascope.com/articles/cnews/980325.htm [noveltynet.org]
I very strongly recommend that everyone read "No Logo". Brands in education is a problem.
--
Simon
Re:Corporate Sponsorship in Schools (Score:3, Informative)
I think the case you're referring to is a student who was suspended for wearing a Pepsi t-shirt on his high school's "Coke Day"?
Pink Floyd (Score:2, Interesting)
"Admission will not be based on academic ablility" (Score:5, Funny)
Apple (Score:3, Funny)
A Win Win (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A Win Win (Philly's bad schools) (Score:2, Informative)
coders (Score:3, Interesting)
No. If they wanted that, they would build a school in India (next to the condoms factory
Re:coders (Score:2)
Your reaction is just typical
- Oisin
Re:coders (Score:3, Interesting)
A PR-stunt is a typically low-budget, outrageous our at least out-of-the-ordinary event designed to get undue media attention - hence "stunt." For example, Bill Gates breakdancing on "Dance Fever" would be a media stunt.
The Awkward Years of Obsolescence (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Awkward Years of Obsolescence (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The Awkward Years of Obsolescence (Score:3, Interesting)
Quite. And what happens when it's served its purpose to Microsoft and they quietly withdraw funding?
The first hit of heroin's always free.
Does it matter? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Does it matter? (Score:2)
We wouldn't want that, now would we?
KFG
Hail Bill (Score:2, Funny)
Inner City (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, if they were plunking a school in a suburb that was doing just fine without them, I'd question their motives. But, in this case, I'd have to think this is at best, altruism on Microsoft's part, or at worst, advertising money well spent.
Re:Inner City (Score:2)
Companies are, by definition, self-serving. Altruism has no place here.
It smells... (Score:2, Insightful)
Microsoft has a record of using 'donations' and grants to its complete benefit, not the benefit of the people they are donating to. Microsoft is different than other companies in that it does it so blatently.
Re:It smells... (Score:5, Informative)
It will be one of 11 new high schools to be funded by the district's five-year $1.5 billion capital plan.
Microsoft's contribution will not be monetary, but services worth millions of dollars, including a full-time on-site project manager, planning and design expertise, staff training and ongoing technology support.
The company's reward is the opportunity to design a school using technology in every way possible from the ground up - a prototype it could then market.
"Microsoft came here because we asked, simple as that," Vallas said.
For those who might criticize such a corporate presence in a public school, district officials emphasized that Microsoft will not manage the school.
It seems to me, based on the article, that MS is not funding the building of the school other than providing the technology and then continuning to provide support and advice for the school. Sure, Microsoft is getting something out of the deal but I don't remember reading where a good or charitable deed had to be completely selfless. Yes they may get tax breaks, a foot in the door to other districts and have a customer for future products at this school. But so what, they are providing a substatial benefit to the students at this school.
Re:It smells... (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's see what Google has to say, shall we?
Service Pack 2 (Score:2, Funny)
I believe its tentativly expected to fix a few bugs (Termites and Wasp infestations in the ceiling)..
Oh and it will replace a few corrupt bricks..
-- Jim.
Who cares (Score:2)
Anyway you can run everything with Windows you can do in Unix with the write software installed. Perl, apache, and alot of other goodies are available.
Students do not need to be left behind and I hate microsoft but lets try to make lemons out of lemonade here.
No, see this is good (Score:4, Insightful)
Grammar Natzi (Score:2, Insightful)
Corporations (Score:5, Insightful)
Like every other corporation on the face of the planet, they don't blink unless (they think) it's in their best interests.
I hate it when people "support"(buy from) a corporation because they get warm fuzzies from that company "supporting"(tossing a measly hundredth or thousandth of a percent of their profits to) a cause. Does BMW give a crap about breast cancer? No. Like all the other corporations that support "breast cancer research", they're basically just looking to get women to buy stuff from them.
"Buy ________, we support ______ by donating* to the __________ foundation of America!"
(*1/10th of a percent of the net profit of this product, minus taxes, executive bonuses, kickbacks, and of course some good old fashioned book cooking)
Hightech != Microsoft (Score:2)
From a hardware standpoint, know how computers work and all of the meta layers of state machines and computers (logic gates, microcode, registers, memory access, and functions of various CPUs, operating systems, applications, and how all of the above is programmed)
From a programming standpoint, know multiple languages and concepts (assembler vs. lisp vs. C vs. pe
HubbardTech (Score:2, Funny)
"Ms Hoover... I don't see why the GPL is viral. The argument makes no sense!"
"Well, Jimmy, that's because there is a word in B. Henry Gates' lecture that you don't understand. Go use WordClearTech until you find it. The rest of you: class dismissed because a worm has crashed the LAN again."
If only computers were the most important thing (Score:2, Insightful)
Gee, how did we ever survive school without computers? I feel like I need to do it over again, and get it right...
Rebels! (Score:2, Informative)
To be l33t.
I feel l33t because I'm the only person who uses linux in the whole school (sysadmins included)
On another note, our school would greatly benefit from ANY sort out IT help. Either they don't subnet or have good bridges. When a class logs on the Novell-based network, the whole netw
don't complain that they're the only ones offering (Score:5, Insightful)
Bill Gates can build all the schools he wants to and Linux can't for one reason and one reason only: Windows makes an offer. Bill and Melinda have built a foundation with grants galore [gatesfoundation.org] for the implementation of the Windows system. Whether you see it as gifting technology to the masses or corrupting the youth to the product, the point remains that public schools would gladly take the technology no matter who offers it. And these days, it's not as though anyone in the non-Windows world is giving the schools a whole lot of alternatives.
The solution: quit complaining about the philathropic efforts of Windows and start an Open Source Foundation. Have an endowed fund and accept grant applications. Built it. They will come.
A letter to Jon's Parents (Score:3, Funny)
Mr. Doe I'm sorry to say that your son's report "What Microsoft Applications I Ran This Summer" was not graded because our systems can't read old Word files anymore. Please upgrade to a newer version of MS Word at home and resubmit your son's work for grading before the next semester.
Relax (Score:2)
Besides, most of us were introduced to Steinbeck in High School too, and who here still reads him?
If not Microsoft, who else? (Score:2)
As much as the communal voice of Slashdot wants to make Microsoft out to be the Great Satan (tm), they DO add positively to our society. (Do you really think those extremely cheap hardware options you have would be there without M$?)
Calm The F*** Down (Score:2)
BUT....
Way back when I went to school, Apple was the driving force. Schools had Apple computers, that was a given. So I learned all the geeky computer stuff on an Apple II and a Franklin.
Was Apple my first computer purchase?
Hell no! When I finally had my first real job I was watching the money. IBM clones
Gateway (Score:2)
No Logo (Score:3, Insightful)
altruististic ? nope, self-interest. (Score:4, Interesting)
Scroll down for Paul Allen reference
http://www.savephillyschools.org/edisonwatch/ [savephillyschools.org]
I'm jealous (!) (Score:2)
My favorite days were those closed school snow days. I guess they'll be getting used to crash days...
its certainly good (Score:4, Insightful)
While its certainly a good idea to have kids exposed and trained to use Linux and other oses at a young age, people must consider the rebellion factor. A lot of kids will hate whatever the school endorses. Considering this is an inner city school, I would just be happy that they are getting the money.
Ailing School System (Score:3, Insightful)
The Philly public school system is shite. They're in their fourth year of budget problems and the state actually stepped in and bailed them out on one of them. Packed classrooms, lack of textbooks and teaching materials, etc. It's nasty. I spent a year at Southern before my mother pulled me out and put me in Catholic school.
I would only think that this could be a good thing, especially considering that the city likes building football and baseball stadiums instead of improving things like public education. Outside interests can only help. Don't get me wrong, I don't think that it's the greatest thing in the world and it skeeves me out just a bit, but it's more of a 'better than nothing' situation. Kids can only benefit. Let them find open source the way I did-- I like to think of it as being chosen:)
This is bood! Or maybe gad! (Score:3, Insightful)
But this is also bad in that branded education is arguably undesirable. One of the dangers, for example, is that the school won't be free to teach students about Microsoft's less desirable traits and tactics, or about the problem with monopolies in general. As the article notes, MS is pursuing this as a case study - it may decide it wants to market this service far and wide in the future. A Microsoft school is obviously going to reflect Microsoft's interests. You may not think this a problem today, but how might this develop in the future, as MS' strategies develop and the schools they created are bound to follow? Now, I'm not proposing GNU-sponsored schools here, but at least such schools would have guaranteed freedom and flexibility in terms of their IT setup and how they choose to use it.
The big difference is, of course, that MS is able to do this here and now, and potentially make great improvements to kids' educations. So for once, this isn't a theoretical debate. Which, you know, makes the whole thing ten times more difficult.
no no no (Score:3, Insightful)
Linux? eh? Mac? What's that? It runs inside of WindowsXP right? Behold, the next generation of systems administrators, purchasing directors, and CTO's.
Philly is getting retribution... (Score:3, Informative)
Philadelphia school district is among the poorest funded in the nation. In 1998 Microsoft and the BSA nailed the district to the tune of $4.8 million. [salon.com]
Now, Philadelphia is going to Microsoft and helping them market their products in return for funds to help build a new high school (which is desperately needed). I think Mayor John Street and his team have done a good job in turning that loss in 1998 into a win 5 years later.
How is it bad to have access to technology? (Score:5, Insightful)
Crash days? (Score:3, Funny)
Notice to all students at Microsoft High (Score:3, Funny)
2. When the blackboard suddenly turns blue, students must leave the classroom in an orderly fashion and return to their seats after ten minutes. No explanation will be given.
3. An alarm bell will sound to signal a massive virus outbreak or worm infestation at Microsoft High. Students are required to calmly exit the building. No drills have been scheduled for this procedure, as it is believed the bell will ring frequently throughout the term without them.
4. Visits to Open Source High are stictly forbidden. Students are, however, encouraged to visit other area schools and report any smaller, well-run institutions with innovative programs to expedite their hostile acquisition by the Microsoft School Board.
5. Our MSSAT exam is similar to--though subtly incompatible with--its government counterpart.
6. Please do not be alarmed by the video portraits of Bill Gates whose eyes follow you down every hall. He got the idea from reading Harry Potter.
I was about to object to this, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
...then I remembered where we get Computer Science lectures at Cambridge University: the William Gates Building. We also get free copies of Windows XP, amongst others. So it would be a bit hypocritical to object :-)
These things can go either way... we still have Linux on all the lab PCs and we get taught as much Linux-specific stuff as Windows-specific stuff, if not more. So, wait and see before you judge, is my advice...
Re:Cue the Microsoft Bashing!! (Score:3, Insightful)
I think it's called "experience."
KFG
Re:Cue the Microsoft Bashing!! (Score:3, Interesting)
Just so long as they make sure they have the complete O'Reilly catatlog and don't put up a fuss about the Linux backend running the catalog.
I'm reminded of one of my favorite bumper stickers:
"Welcome to New Jersey! Leave your money and go the fuck home"
KFG
Re:Little off topic but... (Score:2)
Re:Little off topic but... (Score:2)
Re:Selling-out (Score:2)
Re:Blackmail (Score:3, Informative)