NSW DET culls $200m netbook list

By Liam Tung, ZDNet.com.au
24 February 2009 10:32 AM
Tags: asi, asus, dell, det, hp, netbook, schools, verity firth

The NSW Department of Education and Training has whittled its shortlist of would-be netbook suppliers for its $200 million state-wide deal down from 21 to just six.

Verity-Firth-118x142.jpg

DET Minister: Verity Firth
(Credit: NSW government)

The department confirmed late yesterday that companies that have been asked to submit a proposal for the supply of the 220,000 netbooks worth no more than $500 each, include ASUSTek, Acer, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Lenovo and local technology supplier Anabelle Bits Pty Ltd, a division of ASI solutions.

The companies have until 6 March to submit a response, with Education Minister Verity Firth saying the department planned to select a "preferred vendor" by the end of March.

The department plans to deliver the netbooks to schools in greatest need first, with the aim of achieving at least one computer for every two students in years nine to 12. "All year 9 government school students will have a laptop by the end of the year," Firth said.

NSW had secured $380 million of the $2 billion supplied under the Federal Government's Digital Education Revolution, according to Firth.

Teachers will also be given a laptop under the proposal, according to Firth. "This means students and teachers will be using the same laptop. By having a laptop, teachers will be able to access thousands of online curricula and web-based applications, as well as new teaching methods," she said.

"[The computers] are just the first turn of a revolution which will see a huge lift in schools' ability to prepare students for the increasingly sophisticated technological challenges of the digital age," she said.

Yet to be announced, however understood to have been selected already, are the candidates that will be asked to submit a proposal for the wireless network roll-out to 571 of the state's public schools. ARN, which first broke the news of the netbook six, has reported the lucky few wireless suppliers to be NEC, Lenovo, IBM and ASI Solutions.

The cost per laptop over a four-year lifespan, according to the department, would reach approximately $2,245.

Security will play a key role in the deployment, with DET planning to restrict the netbooks to function only on the DET-filtered network to prevent them from being sold.

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Talkback 8 comments

    Valued Anonymous -- 24/02/09

    It will be interesting to see the attrition rate of the laptops in terms of day-to-day use. People tend not to value things that are given to them.

    OS Anonymous -- 24/02/09

    it will be interesting to see what OS they use... (i hope its linux)

    OS BChau -- 25/02/09 (in reply to #320124031)

    As a parent, I hope the OS is MS Windows. It is something I know. I'm not a techie and have no idea of Linux and how to deal with it if my boy ask me for help. Windows is the more popular one and most parents would be relatively comfortable of having to deal with it.

    Heh Anonymous -- 26/02/09 (in reply to #320124079)

    I'm considering sitting here all day pressing F5 on this page just to see what linux fanbois have to say about your comment :P From my experience (which is quite limited) some linux distros can take a little getting used to - personally I prefer kubuntu with the KDE 4.2 UI running. It bears similarities with a windows UI (only far more customisable) and is far easier to pick up and use than some of the other distros.

    LInux... Anonymous -- 18/05/09 (in reply to #320124079)

    Definetly wont be linux, im a student and know for a fact that it would be the dumbest idea to run Linux (wether its ubuntu or a DET modified release). and from what ive heard about the scheme being changed every week or so i really dont think it will happen for a while.

    O.L.P.C. Anonymous -- 25/02/09

    Shouldn't the original [and best] be considered too?

    Forcing most students to have 2 laptops Anonymous -- 26/02/09

    I think that the lack of choice and totally inflexible aspects of the netbooks will mean that any kid who want's to actually do something useful will have to carry two laptops.
    I think that students and teachers should have direct choice. Something like a 90% rebate with a cap of $500 would be ideal. All core applications should be cross/platform and web-based. Students could simply share resources for non-core applications.

    Have you used a netbook? Anonymous -- 27/02/09 (in reply to #320124229)

    That sounds like someone who hasn't used a netbook. My missus has an eeepc901, and it boots in half the time of my top of the line Dell, it opens Word, and Firefox faster, the only limitation we have seen is it can't have as many windows open, but it only has a gig of ram, my dell has 4gb.
    Admittedly her eepc is running eeebuntu and my dell is running windows.
    Comparing it to my Ubuntu laptop it is about on par, yes the keyboard is smaller and I have more storage space on my Ubuntu laptop, and more processing power to waste on VIrtual machines� and games but for day-to-day work use the eepc is equal to or better than a standard notebook once you get used to the tiny keyboard, which maybe an issue for some parents less dexterous fingers.

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