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Creative Arts Charter School Neighborhood Fire Damage

On December 22, 2011 two residential buildings adjacent to the Partimus-supported Creative Arts Charter School (CACS) were engulfed in fire. The fire caused extensive smoke and water damage to the CACS and caused them to lose six classrooms, including their art studio, cafeteria, community meeting space, and library.

Partimus Executive Director Christian Einfeldt visited the school on the night of the fire and reported:

The east wall got scorched, and there is extensive water damage throughout the lower school, grades k thru 5.

The principal’s east windows caught fire, as did the art teacher’s east windows, and the same for the library and the main office.  The fire was mostly to the exterior, fortunately, but all of those windows were punched out by SFFD.

There is water in many of the classrooms, because the sprinklers activated.

Remarkably, all of our Linux computers were spared as far as I could see!  Not a single one of our Linux computers were damaged in any way!

We are thankful for what was spared, but public schools in California continue to be underfunded and incidents like this one can be very painful for a school to weather even with government aid and insurance. They are asking the community to donate what they can to help, learn more at: http://creativeartscharter.org/news/fire.asp

Details about our deployment at CACS can be found here: http://partimus.org/cacs.php

Ubuntu Earrings featured and Partimus on Linux.com

In the first bit of press for Partimus, co-founder Maile Urbancic submitted the Ubuntu Earrings made by her company BoutiqueAcademia into the Ubuntu Women Month of Making.

The submission was so inspiring that in a poll of the community the story of the earrings was one of the two winners selected from all the contestants! See here for the other winner: Ubuntu Women Month of Making: Winners!

Read her full submission here: Ubuntu Women Month of Making: Maile Urbancic

As a reminder $6 of each purchase of the earrings goes directly to Partimus, you can purchase them online here: http://www.boutiqueacademia.com/products/Ubuntu-Earrings.html

We were also delighted to come across this article by Rikki Endsley over on Linux.com: Kids on Computers Grows Up

It features Stormy Peters’ organization Kids on Computers. In the article the collaboration Partimus did with Kids on Computers is mentioned:

“Partimus, a non-profit founded by Cathy Malmorse (CEO of ZaReason, a Linux computer supplier) and Maile Urbancic (founder of Boutique Academia, a science and technology-inspired jewelry shop)partnered with Kids on Computers to build, install, test, and ship 30 desktops to 18 de Marzo in 2010. “Approximately 27 Partimus volunteers contributed 150 hours of their time to build, install, test, and prepare the computers for shipment,” the Partimus site says.”

Congratulations to Kids on Computers on their upcoming work!

 

Solano Stroll 2011: Wrap-up

On Sunday, September 11th Partimus volunteers joined hundreds of local entertainers, artists, vendors, non-profits and community groups with a table at the 37th annual Solano Stroll in Berkeley, California.

Our booth had volunteers from multiple local groups, including Partimus (board members Elizabeth Krumbach and Christian Einfeldt were on hand and co-founder Maile Urbancic came by), Ubuntu California and annual organizers of the booth BerkeleyLUG. Huge thanks to Jack Deslippe who handled all the coordination of the booth details.

We were able to sell a couple pairs of the Ubuntu Earrings and combined with gracious donations from folks interested in our organization brought home over $40 in donations.

Thanks again to all the organizers, volunteers and everyone who stopped by our booth and expressed interest!

More photos from the event can be found here.

Partimus at Solano Stroll on September 11th

Partimus will be working with BerkeleyLUG and the Ubuntu California Team to staff a booth at the Solano Stroll in Berkeley on Sunday, September 11th from 10AM – 6PM. Our booth will be located at 1223 Solano Ave.

We’ll be showing off the Ubuntu software that we deploy in schools and giving out information about our organizations.

So if you’re attending the stroll, we hope to see you there!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Spring cleaning in the Creative Arts Linux lab

Harley and Faride

Harley Strazzarino and Faride Patel dig into a Linux computer in the lab

We did some great stuff today. The Partimus.org volunteers installed RAM in 29 GNU-Linux computers. They tested each of the computers to make sure that they are working. We end-of-lifed a lot of them, and pulled them out of the lab and put them into storage. From there, they will be responsibly recycled by our partner, MCRC.org.

We also brought the server back on-line, which had been off-line and turned off all summer, due to construction at the school. The server had one whole summer’s worth of updates to pull down off of the Ubuntu repositories. The server is now ready for our server architect, James Howard, to come back and work his magic with updating the software in all of the client machines in the lab.

Thanks tons to John Strazzarino, Harley Strazzarino, James Ouyang, Faride Patel, and James Howard for a great day of bringing Linux to a public school, the Creative Arts Charter School!

the crew

From left to right: Harley Strazzarino, John Strazzarino, Christian Einfeldt, James Ouyang, and Faride Patel

Pizza and Triagefest Sunday 8/28/11

This Sunday, 8/28/11, we will be having a triage fest at the Creative Arts Charter School (CACS) from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 pm. The Creative Arts Charter School is located at the corner of Pierce and Turk Streets in San Francisco. Bring all the tools that you need to diagnose desktop computers. You might also want to bring copies of Ubuntu 10.04 if you have them. Also, bring a hungry belly, because we will have pizza and soft drinks for everyone who shows up!

We will be testing machines in the CACS lab to make sure that they are working properly. If they are not working properly, we will be canabalizing them for other machines.

Please call Christian Einfeldt at 415-351-1300 when you arrive at Turk and Pierce, and I will come out and get you. Getting into the school is tricky, so it is best to just call from the corner of Pierce and Turk when you arrive.

If you have any questions, feel free to email contact@partimus.org.

Original announcement by Christian Einfeldt at http://lists.partimus.org/pipermail/discussion-partimus.org/2011-August/000062.html

You may join our discussion list if you wish to keep up to date about upcoming volunteer opportunities: http://lists.partimus.org/listinfo.cgi/discussion-partimus.org

Possible collaboration with SFSU students

A brand new possibility has opened up for collaboration between Partimus and college students attending San Francisco State University. On August 12, Sameer Verma, a professor of Information Systems in the College of Business at SFSU, proposed a collaboration to help with the workflow of Partimus.org. Here is an excerpt of what Sameer proposed:

I run the internship program at SF State in Information Systems. What
I have in mind is to see if I can assign one or two interns in the
Fall to Partimus, and get them to work on gathering data, and mapping
workflow both on the teacher/student side and on the volunteers side.
They will be assigned to Partimus, to work on CACS as a starter. I’d
prefer it if the interns worked via Partimus so that the outcome of
their internship can be applied to other schools as well. They’ll
interview, observe, analyze and then we can figure out what’s needed
– a ticketing system, inventory mgmt, etc

As a business professior, Sameer obviously has a great eye for helping organizations to better define and achieve their goals. Regardless of what form the collaboration between Sameer’s students and Partimus takes, it is almost certainly assured to help Partimus take the next step toward scaling up and helping more students get access to the latest free open source software and the Internet! The Partimus Board will be meeting to discuss options soon. The full text of Sameer’s post is here.

The Ubuntu-themed earring campaign is succeeding!

Partimus is happy to announce that it has received its first check from the Boutique Academia Ubuntu earrings drive! As we blogged about here, Boutique Academia, a small company run by Partimus co-founder Maile Urbancic, has created some beautiful gold-colored and silver-colored earrings created in the shape of the Ubuntu human family logo.

Maile has graciously decided to donate $6.00 from the sale of each pair of earrings to Partimus. She will send Partimus checks reflecting those earnings every time she receives enough sales to send us at least $100.00 in earnings.

The first check arrived in the Partimus office a few days ago, and is in the amount of $102.00, which reflects the sale of 17 pairs of earrings. A copy of the check (with the account info deleted) is posted with this blog entry.

We are so proud of these earrings, because they are beautiful, and they promote the Ubuntu theme of one human family. Partimus’ work in schools is about delivering high-quality pre-owned computers to students, but the bigger picture is teaching students and teachers about the power of sharing. The Ubuntu human family logo fits right in with this theme, so Partimus is certainly thrilled to be able to be associated with this wonderful theme, and these beautiful earrings.

We are also thrilled to be able to show our major donors that we are making headway in our goal of growing Partimus as an organization. Major donors are always happy to see that the organization they support has multiple sources of revenue, so that the organization is sustainable in the long run. Thanks to Maile for starting this fundraising campaing, and thanks to all of the Partimus volunteers who publicized the campaign and are making it a success! And of course, thanks tons for all of you wonderful donors who purchased a set of earrings!

First check from earrings sales

This is the first check from the sale of Ubuntu-themed earrings

Fun, Pizza & Ubuntu Linux at a public school!

We did some really great work today, and had fun doing it!

Ubuntu GNU-LLinux being installed for video editing in 7th grade social studies

We installed 14 GNU-Linux work stations in 3 classrooms at the public charter KIPP San Francisco Bay Academy at Geary and Scott Streets. Thanks very much to Eric S., Joe Puig, Grant Bowman, Michael Paoli, Elizabeth Krumbach, and Michelle Mastin, for doing a really fast, great job with these installs! The teachers are gonna love these machines! Here are a few pics from Elizabeth Krumbach and Michelle Mastin:

http://yfrog.com/kfx4riwyj

http://flic.kr/p/aaQJGx

http://flic.kr/p/aaTWdr

The 7th grade social studies teacher is going to use the machines for student video editing. The 6th grade social studies teacher is going to use the machines for student research. The 5th grade math teacher is going to use the machines for student math practice. This is a really meaningful contribution to public schools that otherwise would not have the money to get computers into these teachers’ classrooms! Thanks everyone for the great work that you did today!

If anyone is interested in helping Partimus.org put computers into schools, we are excited to get your help. If you are too busy, but have a few dollars that you can spare, contributions are also welcome! Donating can be as easy as buying some Ubuntu-themed earrings for someone you love:

http://partimus.org/donate.php

There will be plenty more events like this one, if you didn’t get a chance to come today!

Teaching teachers how to share software, one computer at a time.

I met today with some new teachers at the KIPP San Francisco Bay Academy regarding computers in their classrooms. There is a 5th grade math teacher who wants to use our GNU-Linux computers to allow the kids to do math problems online. There is social studies teacher who wants to use our Linux computers for research. There is a 7th grade social studies teacher who wants to use our computers for video editing.

The funny thing is that these teachers are very liberal, but they are not interested in hearing about how our Linux computers help build community. For me, personally, the best thing about GNU-Linux is that it fosters belief in community. Sure, Linux computers are technically superior to Microsoft Windows and Apple, but that is not what gets me excited about free open source software (FOSS). For me, the best feature of FOSS is the freedom. We, the community, control FOSS code, not some behemoth corporation who just views users as a revenue source.

But for these teachers, they are only interested in getting their kids on the Internet. They really don’t care about the rest of it. Or at least I have not found out the best way to get them interested in it. Maybe my messaging is wrong. Maybe it is my tone of voice. Maybe my timing is not good. I am willing to explore improving in all of those areas.

So for the time being, I tend to just stick to the numbers game. Every Linux computer that comes to life is a vote for freedom. If we are to prevent digital lockdown, we are going to have to recruit large numbers of people to our cause. Many of them will have opinions that differ from mine. I know that I need to be able to work people who have different opinions. I would rather see large deployments of GNU-Linux than have everyone agree with me. To me, the code itself teaches freedom every time it is used, in small but important ways.

For example, free open source software often is not sold in an “App Store” but is distributed for free as in beer and free as in free speech through the mirrored repositories all over the world. If we can get teachers to understand that the code is there for them to use and explore, we will have caused them to question why they need to rely on a hostile corporation such as Microsoft or Apple, who will restrict their ability to share the software. When people have spent so many years using Microsoft or Apple, they need to be taught how to share free software. My personal hope is that by just using these Linux computers, the teachers will get a powerful, real-life lesson in how wonderful and freeing it is to share.