To be honest I don't play games at all now, may be back in 1990 when I had my sega Master System but I haven't really played any games since Quake 1 (whenever it was realeased)
Wait, so you don't even play Patience or anything of that order? Maybe you get your kicks coding, my way is not everyone's, but it sounds kinda dull to me.
What you're suggesting is very foolish, you seem to think it's fine to for the schools to allow studants to install software, even pirate software in some cases.
Um, actually, who's suggesting that? Don't read implications where none exist.
Have you stopped to think of the implications of what you're suggesting?
Yeah, by correlation, teachers wouldn't be entrusted to not play games on the systems, and we'd ALL get more work done. Get real, that's not how the power structure works (though sometimes I wish it did).
By giving studants the privileges to install games you're also allowing them to install viruses and while most students don't do it on purpose there is a strong possiblily that the games can contain viruses and this is even more often the case with warez obtained from P2P networks.
Okay, fair enough. I'm not endorsing warez, and I doubt anyone else here has said as much. To that end, any campus that doesn't have P2P ports clamped down should
expect to be brutally owned. They really
don't need anything open but 80, and if they're feeling particularly generous, 5190.
The schools should only allow you to use the software that they provide, if you really want to provide you with games then maybe you could pay them to buy them for you and they can ensure they are legit and you only use them at lunch and break time. But I don't see the point in this if you really want do play games then whay don't you bring a laptop in? That's what I used to do.
I'm glad you can afford to do that. On the other hand, you bring up an issue that I'm sure we've thoroughly worn out by now. We DO pay them to buy them for us, and the ratio in the States is roughly five computers to every registered student. It's ludicrous that we're expected to work on those five systems 24/7. That being said, really, what's to stop someone from just booting off a LiveCD and doing what they want from VMware anyway? The only solutions I've heard you advocate so far are all software-based, and you have to admit, that's no substitute for having someone actually
watching the physical systems. Now not everybody is going to try to split their attention between thirty boxen at once, fair enough. That's what the entire Teacher's Assistant / Personal Assistant concept is all about. If you can't watch the physical presence, hire someone you trust
that can, either for cash or class credits. Again, we're too dependent on software solving security issues, and that's a contradiction in terms really. If something's not physically secured, no amount of encryption and monitoring is going to solve that problem.