Capita wins contract to deliver Home Access grant

No big surprise here, but what could it mean in real life terms?

Capita won the Becta contract to manage grant administration for the Home Access Programme, which provides computers and connectivity to low-income families Capita have £15.7 million to play with from 16th October 2009 to June 2011.

Some quick initial thoughts: Connectivity will obviously be provided by BT, estimated £20 per month for internet connectivity over 22 months is £440. Lets say capita take 10% as operation/admin/profit overheads. That leaves us with £14.3 million. Let’s estimate that 50% of the people who will require connectivity will also require a computer @ £300 (including support/licensing etc.). So that’s £440 on internet, £150 on a computer meaning they can allocate about £600 per person.

Quick initial maths estimates that 23,833 families could be impacted by this across the UK over the next 22 months.

Population of the UK is close to 61 million (source: CIA). This contract may impact 0.3% of the population. Is that enough?

Press release:

http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS38867+19-Oct-2009+PRN20091019

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Review of Sugar (SOAS) Operating System

What is Sugar?
SOAS (Sugar on a stick) is the free easily accessible Operating System by Sugar Labs which is being used for the One Laptop Per Child initiative. SOAS is free under LGPL & GPL license. SOAS is downloadable from http://www.sugarlabs.org/

What have Sugar labs tried to do when creating sugar OS?
Simply put, create an operating system for learning. This may or may not be the correct way to introduce a child to computing. I cannot be the descision maker of that due to my lack of experience but I can give you an insight into the performance from a usability point of view.

The (Home page) for a pupil

How smooth is the OS?
Very smooth, everything is pretty obvious, within a few seconds you are up and running, browsing and/or learning. Websites such as Primary Games Arena (Flash) and School Email (Microsoft Exchange OWA) work great. The browser home page is a bit boring and maybe Primary School Safe Search should be used as an alternative.
Changing from one application to another is seamless, although you can’t keep many applications open. I couldn’t find the option to shut down, I guess it was hidden..
Come on John, you can’t convince us that an OS on 256 MB or ram runs “smooth”!
I didn’t think it would myself but it does, mostly due to the fact its a clean boot up every time and there is no ability to store lots of stuff in swap space to slow things down!
It can’t be all gravy and chips!
I found the scroll bars a little too small for young kids and I worry about the black and whiteness of the GUI. It’s clean but is that what kids want? From experience, no..
An activity.
Structured Learning..
One thing the Sugar OS tries to do and I’m not convinced that is succeeds is give the pupil some sort of structured learning, by providing reading materials then activity’s based on the material. I guess they think that teachers will create activity’s but something tells me this may be a pipe dream.. I may be wrong though.. These activity’s are also confusing me because some of them just don’t open anything, I get a grey screen. I guess this part of the OS is work in progress..
Applications such as Joke Machine just seem to lack any true obvious structure or examples (probably due to restrictive disk space) but seem to have a great deal of potential for more experienced Sugar users.
Overall review
A very good operating system for learning at school and away from school. Fulfils all the requirements for a great mobile OS and seems quite engaging. My only criticism is the lack of spark on the GUI, the GUI is just too flat for me and needs some funking up!
Would I use it over Windows 7 in a school?
Well, a Windows 7 powered Asus EEE device is going to set the school back £300+ where as a Sugar device should cost £160 (all maintenance taken into account on both OS’). If money weren’t an object I would stick with Windows 7 but if it means we can give 2 pupils a device instead of 1 then the One Laptop Per Child initiative wins hands down. Sugar’s educational focus puts it ahead of other open source OS projects and even hosted cloud OS’ as it provides always available learning.
Just don’t tell my Microsoft buddy’s about this post 😉

Installing Sugar (Soas) onto Windows Virtual PC 2007

Sugar won’t install by default. I have tried hitting tab and adding noreplace-paravirt to no avail 🙁


This is a screen dump of what I have..


Adding add vga=0x32D will boot me into the GUI but I have no mouse!

Adding i8042.noloop gives me a mouse!

How to do it:

  1. Create a Virtual PC
  2. Set RAM to 256MB
  3. Mount Sugar ISO image
  4. Start up your Virtual PC
  5. A message will pop up saying “Automatic boot up in 1 second” – Hit TAB!
  6. You will see a line saying “vmlinuz0 initrd=initrd0.img root=CDLABEL=Soas2-200906221314 rootfstype=auto ro liveimg quiet rhbg”. Remove the last 2 words (quiet and rhbg)
  7. Add “vga=0x32D i8042.noloop” to the end of the line
The line should read…

vmlinuz0 initrd=initrd0.img root=CDLABEL=Soas2-200906221314 rootfstype=auto ro liveimg vga=0x32D i8042.noloop

*Note the CDLABEL value may change dependant on the release you use!

**Note Files will not be saved in this version, there will be no persistence so updates will not be saved either. This is not the case if you boot from a USB Key

Congrats – Working Sugar on a virtual PC 🙂

How you can help the 1 laptop for every pupil scheme

Uruguay just give every primary school pupil a laptop. This was only possibly by kind donations of USB memory sticks to Sugar.

Sugar is the operating system that runs on the devices, it is bootable anywhere from a USB stick. The USB memory stick doesn’t need to be large, 512 megabytes is plenty!
Please send your used USB memory sticks to http://recycleusb.com and they will turn them into Sugar sticks ready to be used by children all over the world!

Barcode scanning in the kitchen – The reality..

I wanted to give barcode scanning a chance so I went downstairs and tried the most obvious thing to scan, a bottle of copella juice. It got the product and did it’s thing.. Great!

So I tried some old paprika in a jar, few years old so fail 🙁
Then I tried some cumin from tesco – no luck with that so I figured maybe there was a problem so I gave it something easy to scan..
A carton of eggs bought last week from tesco, surely this staple food will come up as a recognised by froogle? Shockingly it didn’t…
The room in my house with the most amount of barcodes in and the tool failed me 🙁
At what point will barcode scanning tools recognise the majority of none electrical goods? Who are we waiting for on this? The major supermarkets? Maybe it’s just tesco who are really bad at publishing their products on froogle or maybe froogle isn’t penetrating enough online food stores to get databases (using base or whatever they chose to use)?