Ok, I know how ironic it is that every month I post about how I’m gonna start posting more, and then I don’t. Well, I’ve been pretty busy lately, here’s a brief overview:
My current project is switching the computers at work from Windows to Linux (for those who don’t know, Linux is a totally free and functional operating system). This is due to the fact that some branch of Moldova’s police have been showing up at computer centers and verifying whether or not they have legitimate copies of Windows. If they don’t, they get shut down and slapped with major fines. Ironically, I have yet to see a legal copy of Windows available in Moldova… so how can people buy legal copies if they aren’t available? Furthermore, legal copies would very likely have to be donated even if they were available, due to adverse financial situations.
Of course, switching our computers to Linux is no easy task for someone who’s only used it as a hobby. The main goals are meeting all of the potentials that we already have with Windows. We’ve been using Ubuntu Linux (www.ubuntu.com), which is great because they will mail anyone 10 CDs for free, and is far less tech-heavy than many versions of Linux. The main requirements are: We must have the ability to control all of the computers from our main computer (since sometimes games lock up or kids do things we don’t want them to do); we must have games! Games are our main source of revenue, and without it, our NGO will not be sustained; Office applications, web browsers, etc. Fortunately all these come included with Ubuntu for free! (note: www.openoffice.org – this is a free and better, in my opinion, substitute for Microsoft Office.)
That’s it for the geeky tech session of the post…
I’ve also been keeping busy coaching basketball twice a week. I think the kids really enjoy it; they keep pushing me to do it three times a week, but I unfortunately am spread fairly thin as it is. I’m hoping to talk to my previous host dad from Costesti, because he is the PE teacher at one of their schools, and see if he wants to put together a team to play against mine. I think that would be fun for the kids and give them a practical application for what they’ve been learning.
We had a language training session last week (also known as IST – In Service Training) in Chisinau, and it was really great. I again had the same teacher I had when I lived in Costesti, and I think she is one of the best Peace Corps has. We have another IST next week, but it is a technical session. We will be studying how to apply for grant money, how to write our applications, etc. The training sessions are great because all of us Americans get a few days to spend together speaking English and just being American for a little while.
I guess that’s all for now…Thanks to everyone who’s been commenting, it helps keep me interested in writing! And you can thank my lovely girlfriend Heather for reminding me to update this today