On Sun, 1 Feb 2015 21:34, Michael Dunsavage <mikesd81@...> wrote:
I have a client that wants to set up a room in her daycare for older kids to play educational games. I was already looking at the Education LIfe, but my question is:
Is it a good idea to just set up thin clients to load the image? These computers would not be online at all.
It's not a tight budget, but I would like to keep it reasonable, and I think this would be cheaper than 10 full machines. What is a good thin client product?
Well, best overall support in big scenarios that I've ever seen was IGEL, (I'm talking using Office, Mail, etc as Thin-client from a session-server) But also in smaller scenarios their clients give very good figures. Have a look, the models that I have to installs the most are the UD5 and UD6 https://www.igel.com/en/ https://www.igel.com/products/thin-client-zero-client-hardware/hardware-over... Other wise you can also use the more and more available mini-computers like Intel-NUC for example and configure them the same way. Price and goal are the decisive factors. Hint: those PC in a HDMI stick are not what you want, even a Raspberry B+ model is much better. (that's what, 50 buck inclusive casing?) - Yamaban -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org