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When Victory Baptist School, a small private school in Sherwood, Ark., was struggling to keep its computer network together last year, an 11-year-old student named Jon Penn stepped in as network manager.
Penn did it to help his mother, Paula, the school librarian who had computer support added to her workload a week before the school year started when the existing IT systems overseer suddenly departed. For Jon — who says his favorite reading material is computer trade magazines — it’s been the experience of a lifetime, even getting to select and install a gateway security appliance largely by himself. (Listen to Penn talk about the network.)
“This is kind of a small school, and I’m known as the computer whiz,” the sixth grader says (For more offbeat networking stories,
read our Wider Net archives.)
“We spent $2,158,” says young Penn, describing how he picked out the McAfee Secure Internet Gateway Appliance after evaluating it in a 30-day trial. He also looked at the Barracuda box — a tad more
costly — and tried the Untangle open source product, which he said didn’t meet the school’s needs as well.
His school needed a gateway to protect against attacks, filter viruses and spam, and block inappropriate sites. Keeping costs down is important since the school is operating on a shoestring budget to keep its 60 aging computers, a donation from years ago, working for the roughly 200 students permitted to use them, along with the teachers.
The first thing Jon found as he leapt into the role of network manager was that he had to map out the network to find out what was on it. He bought some tools for this at CompUSA and realized there was an ungodly amount of computer viruses and spam, so he pressed the school to invest in filtering and antivirus protection.
“These computers are so old they don’t support all antivirus programs,” Penn says. The school took advantage of a Microsoft effort called Fresh Start that offers free software upgrades for schools with donated computers, switching from Windows 98 to Windows 2000.
One reason to do this was the hope of one day centrally managing the school’s computers so Jon doesn’t have to change them individually. To install Windows 2000, he removed obsolete network interface cards, Ethernet, video, print and sound drivers with the intent of having a better computer base by next fall.
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Comments (112)
I agree....shut upBy Anonymous on May 8, 2008, 6:55 pmI have to agree that 90% of the posts here are absolutely ridiculous. You are all older than, what I can assume, 22 years old and you are trying to validate your...
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Jon Inherited a Mess, But Is Sorting It OutBy everdream on May 5, 2008, 11:10 amFirst, hats off to Jon! You did at 11 years old, what most of us adults would have done: needs analysis, systems design & implementation, then evalutaion (Deming...
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well done!By Anonymous on April 17, 2008, 10:46 pmwell done Jon :) i'm an admin at a school myself and we need more people like you. keep it up. this is what i call real educating
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Paula - Don't let some ofBy Alliance-Datacom on April 17, 2008, 4:42 pmPaula - Don't let some of these people get to you. Some feel the need to prove they are this or they are that. Truth be know Jon did a fine job and I wish other...
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Knee jerk reactionsBy Alliance-Datacom on April 17, 2008, 4:32 pmKnee jerk reactions anyone?? Going out on a limb and speaking for "us", remember why we all do this stuff? Because its in our blood. We love to do it. Do you...
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