Massive roll-out: NSW Education picks Win7

When more than 200,000 student laptops for the Federal Government's Digital Education Revolution go out to NSW schools, they will be running Windows 7 instead of Windows XP as first announced, following a successful trial in three schools.

Windows 7

(Credit: Renai LeMay/ZDNet.com.au)

"We have completed a test drive of the laptops running Windows 7 under licence in three NSW government high schools recently. As a result of the outcomes of the test drive, the department has decided to adopt Windows 7 as our platform on the Digital Education Revolution student devices," a spokesperson for the NSW Department of Education and Training told ZDNet.com.au.

The Department of Education and Training is part of the Microsoft first wave program for Windows 7. The laptop decision will bring the machines into line with the department's plans to migrate its fleet over to Microsoft's newest operating system.

Windows 7 was released to manufacturing partners last week. The laptops were set to be rolled out to NSW schools this month. The behemoth distribution hasn't started yet but it will "very, very shortly" according to the spokesperson.

The department's decision to use Windows 7 on its fleet and the new student laptops, will see hundreds of thousands of users on the new system. It seems to show that Microsoft's efforts have paid off to remain at the forefront of the operating system market after its problematic release of Vista.

NSW Department of Education and Training had been one of the organisations disappointed by the last operating system. It had been flirting with rolling out Vista, carrying out beta testing, but had decided not to implement the operating system because of the difficulty of implementation and costs when measured against the benefits delivered.

In Australia, as in many other places around the world, there weren't many Vista migrations within enterprise, with internet service provider iiNet and federal government agency the Australian Customs and Border Protection Service being two of the few which did take the leap.

The department even toyed with the idea of using Linux. Yet Windows 7 has won it over and it is not only the state's education organisation that is interested in Microsoft's newest Opus. National Australia Bank and federal government agency Centrelink have both said they were testing Windows 7.

The new operating system will be running on Lenovo hardware for students in NSW after the state signed a deal with the hardware manufacturer in April to deliver 267,000 machines.

Of the other states, NT held a contract with Dell, Western Australia with CDM Australia, Apple and Lenovo, while Tasmania formed a panel of Lenovo and Acer, and Victoria ran a trial with the same vendors. Queensland also used an old panel with five vendors: HP, ComputerCORP, Acer, Dell and Apple.

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Talkback 16 comments

    Links Lance Link (secret chimp) -- 03/08/09

    Are your journos paid by the hyperlink?

    I LIKE seeing the links to prior related stories Graeme Harrison (prof at-symbol post.harvard.edu) -- 04/08/09 (in reply to #320175262)

    I have to disagree... I think it is far better to include links to prior articles on same topic, rather than re-hashing it. Plus you get to read the comments made when the earlier story came out.

    Oh well... Dan Jah -- 03/08/09

    So more of our tax dollars line the Redmond coffers and our children are to learn 'windows' instead of computing.

    Wow I wonder why we keep having skills shortages?!?

    Was always about Microsoft Bruce -- 03/08/09 (in reply to #320175265)

    Earlier anouncements that NSW DET had signed deals with Adobe and Microsoft combined with the level of lock-down NSW DET envisages for these devices mean that this was never going to be about learning computing (or even the free exchange of ideas).

    These netbooks are nothing more than application appliances that may facilitate some basic tasks for probably an as yet unspecified educational outcome.

    Sadly a lost opportunity.

    old news copyright -- 03/08/09

    story ran in the australian a few weeks ago. do a little research next time

    Great little machines Anonymous -- 03/08/09

    Teachers already have these devices and I got a chance to play with one last weel. They are wonderful little machines perfect for students.

    They come with full version of Adobe Acrobat and Premiere and Photoshop. Microsoft Office and Forefront security, one Google application and lots of other things. Students cannot install software. With all these tools on board they make for a fabulous start for students just making their way in the world of IT.

    Thank you Kevin Rudd and Julie Gillard for having the foresight to fund these devices and change the way education can be delivered cheaper, with more fun and far more effectively.

    Great little storytellers Mel Sommersberg -- 04/08/09 (in reply to #320175371)

    Are we being infiltrated by left-leaning members of the Labor Party now?

    This is nothing but a political rant.

    Measure the comments on merit not your political ideologies Anonymous -- 04/08/09 (in reply to #320179094)

    Is it the truth?

    If so, no it wasn't a political rant. If not, yes it was.

    But it wasn't as obvious a political rant as yours.

    This news Anonymous -- 03/08/09

    The pain is coming - they just don't know it yet.

    Magnificent Anonymous -- 03/08/09

    Suffer in ya jocks OSS crowd!

    The OSS community won't suffer Zak -- 03/08/09

    Departments who pick Windows don't make the OSS world suffer, they make the children and budgetary allocation suffer. As per usual we'll just wait until other countries have pioneered and mastered wide-spread OSS uptake in educational institutions, then tip-toe in, if we ever do.

    Dreaming! Anonymous -- 03/08/09 (in reply to #320175963)

    I've been hearing that rubbish for over 10 years... I'm still waiting!!

    It will really get up some peoples' noses if the rollout is successful Patanjali -- 06/08/09

    Being the first of a brand new OS and a BIG one at that!

    But we shall wait and see.

    laptops are chat Anonymous -- 31/08/09

    i have one and am on it now one of the first schools to get them basicly everything is blocked you cant even use some software thats already on it its really not cool and makes me angry

    Get over it guys Mel Sommersberg -- 08/09/09 (in reply to #320256180)

    When I was at school we didn't have computers there and weren't allowed to use calculators. When we wrote essays we picked up a pen and put it to paper. When we wanted to add or subtract we used our heads. When we wanted to do research we rode our bikes to the local library and borrowed their encylopaedias.

    This isn't meant to be a shot at today's students but a shot at those who are bleating about skills shortages in the IT industry which simply don't exist. The fact is that there is an oversupply of IT professionals and I know several who are not employed in their chosen field despite significant qualifications, experience and employment at well-known companies.

    It is also a shot at those who carry on with this childish Windows vs Linux banter. Seriously, get over it. You are forgetting that school children are not educated to build computers but use them as a way of getting set tasks completed.

    And... Mel Sommersberg -- 08/09/09 (in reply to #320272381)

    I will also add that I have seen first hand what school children try to access from school computers and if any of you did you would understand why there is a high level of restrictions in place, both on the installation and use of software and filtration of data downloaded from the Internet.

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