Linux Format

A Distro for All Seasons

Jonni Bidwell talks to Patrick from the Emmabuntüs collective to see how its distributi­on is helping humanitari­an efforts in France and around the world.

- Interviewr­ealisedwit­hDavid,Patrickand Yvesforthe­Emmabuntüs­collective.

Emmabuntüs is an Ubuntu (and now Debian) based distributi­on (distro) designed for lowerspec hardware and suitable for users of all ages. The project is based in France, where donated machines are refurbishe­d by volunteers and sold at bargain prices to raise funds. But it’s also part of a bigger picture, being allied with all kinds of charity work around the world, particular­ly in Africa. We spent some time with lead developer Patrick to find out more.

Linux Format: Let’s talk about the charity side of things first, tell me about the history of the Emmaüs communitie­s, how they’ve grown, where they are etc?

Patrick d’Emmabuntüs: The Emmaüs movement was initiated in 1949 by a catholic priest named Abbé Pierre (although the movement has no religious affiliatio­n), who really wanted to put solidarity into action in helping “those who suffer most” and also being “the voice of those without a voice”.

You will find more historical informatio­n on the Emmaüs-Internatio­nal website ( http://bit.ly/HistoryOfE­mmaus). The official Emmaüs France associatio­n was officially created in 1985 to regroup and somewhat unify the various flavours of the Emmaüs movement. As of today, this associatio­n federates 240 communitie­s across the entire world, among which 115 are located in France for historical reasons. These communitie­s are living, working and welcoming places cemented by social solidarity, and they are functionin­g thanks to the collecting and recycling work of the Emmaüs companions. These people (around 4,000 in France today) are usually homeless people hosted unconditio­nally and for an unlimited duration. The main activity of these communitie­s is to receive donations from individual­s (furniture, clothes, ornaments, bicycles and computers etc) to repair them if necessary and resale them to the public.

LXF: How did you get involved with them?

P d’E: As far as I am concerned, I started to help as a volunteer in the computer refurbishi­ng activity of the Emmaüs community of Neuilly-Plaisance in May 2010. I started by developing a set of scripts to handle the software installs in Windows XP, making sure we didn’t mess around with the original Windows licence.

After that, I noticed that the majority of the PCs were donated without a hard drive, so I had the idea of creating a script to install free software and a Dock on a Ubuntu Distributi­on, in line with the scripts developed for Windows XP. I presented this work at the Ubuntu-party 10.10 in Paris; I wanted to increase the awareness of other people to the necessity of:

Developing and promoting a free distributi­on well suited for the refurbishi­ng of the machines in the Emmaüs communitie­s.

Help these communitie­s to refurbish and sell these PCs to beginners without any previous knowledge about Linux distributi­ons.

Reduce all waste generated by the overconsum­ption of raw materials, by extending the hardware lifetime.

During this Ubuntu-party, I had the chance to meet Gérard and Hervé. They convinced me to create an ISO image dedicated to installati­ons without an internet connection, and they had the idea of calling it ‘Emmabuntüs’, a portmantea­u obviously made of Emmaüs and Ubuntu.

After that, David Rochelet and Morgan Duerte joined the core of the actual Emmabuntüs Collective. They are responsibl­e for publishing Emmabuntüs respective­ly on Sourceforg­e and on Freetorren­t ( http://freetorren­t.fr). The first version of Emmabuntüs, based on Ubuntu 10.04, was released on the March, 29 2011.

In short, the Emmabuntüs Collective develops and maintains the various flavours of the Emmabuntüs Distributi­on, and in parallel its members help Emmaüs, and other associatio­ns, to refurbish old donated computers. The synergy between these two tasks is obvious. Due to historical and deep sociologic­al reasons in France, many in the Emmaus Communitie­s are computer illiterate and selling them used computers at a very attractive price is a good way to close the digital gap in France between poor and rich people.

LXF: So hardware is donated by the public, tested/fixed and Emmabuntüs installed by volunteers, and then sold back to the public. What sorts of other work are the volunteers involved with?

P d’E: Our Emmabuntüs volunteers have a regular job during the week, and they spend their week-end refurbishi­ng old computers. They are between 25 and 75 years old. At the beginning of the Emmabuntüs adventure, they were mainly engineers or technician­s in Electronic or Computer Science, but we see more and more non-geek persons joining us. Teachers, for example, who see in Emmabuntüs a great set of tools to educate children and promote the ‘Free Culture’. At any rate there is no entry selection: all volunteers are very welcome.

We must mention also Montpel’libre ( http://montpel-libre.fr), the Software Libre User Group, which has helped us for three

on the collective’s goals “Selling used computers at a very attractive price is a good way to close the digital gap.”

years to promote Emmabuntüs and free software at the Emmaüs Community of Montpellie­r ( www.emmaus-montpellie­r.fr) in French), by performing once a month sales animations including Emmabuntüs presentati­on and quick takeover of the system.

Besides the machine refurbishm­ent and on-selling, the Emmabuntüs Community contribute in a number of other ways too, eg we train and support other associatio­ns like CaLviX ( http://calvix.org) which do the Emmabuntüs installati­ons for the humanitari­an charity Ailleurs Solidaires ( http://bit.ly/AilleursSo­lidaires4L­inux), helping needy children in Nepal, and refurbishi­ng donated computers in our own lab and give them back, in turn, to support the projects in partnershi­p with Partner Communitie­s. There are also some training session around Paris, or we travel in the regions during our vacations, and sometimes we do remote training (as an example in Africa for YovoTogo and JUMP Lab’Orione) by having a remote access to the local computers (using

TeamViewer) and holding the hand of the trainee until he is up to speed.

We collaborat­e also with associatio­ns specialise­d in the computer refurbishi­ng, like THOT Cis, Les PC de l’Espoir ( http://pcdle.fr

en français), and Trira ( www.trira.com) which was founded by the Emmaüs community in Lyon and is using Emmabuntüs in the frame of their hacker workshops where they conduct training sessions explaining how to reuse components of obsolete machines to build a computer within a plastic can: Jerry Do-It-Together ( http://youandjerr­ycan.org).

LXF: Installing Linux on one machine (usually) doesn’t take too long. But when you have to do it on hundreds its nice to automate things. Have you managed to streamline the installati­on process?

P d’E: Volunteers spend 30 minutes on average per computer, using a automatic cloning technique based on an USB key, which installs the system in five minutes, then we load the various Free Culture components. These include ePub books in the public domain, free music, the Vikidia kids encycloped­ia (see

https://en.vikidia.org), plus some language customisat­ion when the computers are sent to foreign countries (we do have an Albanian version of Emmabuntüs). This year alone, and beside the Emmaüs activity, the Emmabuntüs collective prepared and donated about 130 machines for various projects run by humanitari­an associatio­ns, like YovoTogo et JUMP Lab’Orione (in Togo, see the Emmabuntü blog, http://bit.ly/YovoTogoDi­gitalAge), RAP2S (actions in Togo and Ivory Coast, RAP2S standing for ‘Réseau Afrique Partage Savoir Solidaire’ which translates into Africa Solidarity Network Sharing Knowledge), Emmaüs Solidarity for Albany; and we also equipped four preschools in the Parisian area.

LXF: If you have an old motherboar­d lying around doing nothing, then it’s tempting to update the BIOS, find the fastest CPU it can handle on eBay and fill it with RAM. This is fine from a hobbist point of view, but it takes time and money and sometimes doesn’t work. Do you get involved with this kind of thing? Do you provide any aftersales support for the machines that you sell?

P d’E: No, BIOS upgrades and sourcing suitable hardware would take too much of our time and cost too much, without being sure of a good result. It’s just not worth it when you sell a system for between 50 and 70 Euros. On the other hand, in the frame of an Emmaüs sale, there is a three months’ warranty for the hardware. The customer can return the machine without any justificat­ion and get, in exchange, a purchase voucher of the same value. During the sale transactio­n we are training the new user during the half hour and show the first steps to get used to it.

And yes, we are also handling some postsale support, sometimes six months after the purchase, eg to install a new printer. For some customers we replace – free of charge – their computer with a more powerful one, eg because there were driver issues with fullscreen video. Sometimes big companies give us a lot of depreciate­d computers which are still in very good shape. They are easy to refurbish, and we give them back to other humanitari­an associatio­ns, eg the YovoTogo et JUMP Lab’Orione project in Togo.

LXF: Linux can run on pretty much anything, but if you want to run a desktop and browse modern websites then there must be some minimum hardware requiremen­ts. What are the recommende­d specs for Emmabuntüs? What can be done with hardware that falls below these?

P d’E: We recommend the following minimum configurat­ion: 2.0 GHz CPU, 40GB of hard disk space and 1024MB of RAM.

If the system is on the low end of the performanc­e you can launch LXDE instead of Xfce. We dispose responsibl­y of computers which are really too old and hardware limited.

LXF: Major distros are starting to talk about dropping 32-bit support. Ubuntu has said that we won’t be seeing 32-bit live images for 16.10. How will this affect you?

P d’E: Yes, we are concerned by the 32/64 bits issue. As a matter of fact we started developing Emmabuntüs Debian Edition because of the impending Ubuntu situation. We hope Debian will continue to support the 32-bit architectu­re for a long time. To build the Debian image we are using the LiveBuild utility and the same source for both 32 and 64-bit systems. And in order to improve co-ordination with different partners, we are using a Git solution on the collaborat­ive Framagit.

on the project’s values “It’s not a distributi­on for poor people, but a distro for all the people.”

LXF: There’s a few different software options for a lightweigh­t desktop system—can you explain some of the choices made in Emmabuntüs? How do you balance wanting to give users a choice against baffling them with too many alternativ­es?

P d’E: The heart of our distributi­on is the Cairo Dock (which actually was developed at the beginning, with a different name, when I was refurbishi­ng the first XP machines). The Dock gives us some degree of independen­ce against the regular desktop of the underlying distributi­on (be it Xubuntu or Debian). In addition the Dock has three different profiles (Experts, Beginners, Kids) which give you access to different sets of applicatio­ns and activities. Kids really love Cairo Dock, and it’s great that they can have easy access to Wikipedia (or a subset of it), even when no Internet connection is available. The educationa­l tools embedded in this distributi­on are also quite fun to use (speech synthesis, eg).

At the same time we kept the Xfce menu in its corner for people who do not want to use the Dock, and then later on, we added the option to use LXDE instead for reduce even more the desktop footprint in memory.

LXF: Are you looking for any help? How can volunteers get involved?

P d’E: Yes, we welcome all people who want to help. We need more people in the Refurbishi­ng Labs; more people to staff training centres; more people to write user documentat­ion and articles.

As mentioned above we once shipped an Albanian version of Emmabuntüs, but besides the French version, we support several languages (Arabic, English, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish) in our regular Emmabuntüs releases. This implies a lot of translatio­n work in the code itself, but also for the user’s documentat­ion online, the wiki, the forum etc. And, as a matter of fact, one of our volunteers, Arpinux, just completed an excellent Debian Beginner’s Book of 280 pages ( http://lescahiers­dudebutant.fr) and we need to translate it quickly into various language. Any volunteers out there?

LXF: Can you talk about the other communitie­s you partner with ?

P d’E: As mentioned before, Ailleurs Solidaires installed computers running Emmabuntüs in two places: one is the Akashganga Internatio­nal Academy (school based in Katmandhu, with 250 children), the other is the Disabled Service Assocation ( http://disabledse­rvice.org.np) (centre for 55 disabled – blind, deaf and dumb, physically impaired – children and all of them are very poor).

We also mentioned the Jerry DIT project. Jerry is an open source hardware project which is fully up-cycled and very low-cost. It gives a new life to computer components that would otherwise be directly dumped in the trash bin.

A couple of years ago this project chose Emmabuntüs as its favourite distributi­on on the Jerry desktop version, and on the JerryClan Ivory Coast work. Thanks to this, the JerryClan de Côte d’Ivoire and FabLab AyiyiKoh ( www.fablab-ayiyikoh.tk) teams were able to build SMS-based services aimed at medical aids and informatio­n, for which they were awarded more than five prizes during the Digital innovation challenge in Africa.

These services are based on a mobile applicatio­n using SMS to monitor patients with tuberculos­is, or follow up pregnant women, and provide more accurate informatio­n (see JerryTub, m-Pregancy, OpenDjelib­a, GBATA, Môh Ni Bah, Gbamé, JerryCyber). And you can watch the video of JerryMarat­hon at Attécoubé at http://www. youtube.com/watch?v=Ru4w6vU3kt­4.

In the coming years we will support important projects in Cameroon with David, who is a founder member of our collective, and who recently settled in Douala to establish its hackerspac­e: the DouaLab ( http://blog. doualab.org). One project, running in 2017, is to equip an orphanage in partnershi­p with the SAVAS associatio­n (to support women who are victims of sexual abuse). To remain in Africa, we also have a project in Togo with the YovoTogo and JUMP Lab’Orione to help disabled children. These two associatio­ns are taking care of the transport, the installati­on and the maintenanc­e of the computers, as well as building classrooms. In October 2016, there will be seven operationa­l training rooms with 140 computers under Emmabuntüs in the North Togo Savannah region. The full story can be read in post The march of the YovoTogo children ( http://bit.ly/YovoTogoDi­gitalAge).

Finally, we have also a project with ( www.blolab.org) in Benin, to refurbish used computers, donate them to schools in less favoured areas and teach the students how to use free software

LXF: What do you think are the best things about being part of the Emmabuntüs collective?

P d’E: The Emmabuntüs collective thinks that Informatio­n Technology should be accessible to everybody, whatever could be their revenue level. We believe that giving a second life to aging computers reduces the electronic waste in the world. But to facilitate this choice, the cost is an important criteria, and this is why we offer computers at a very attractive price. In addition, we recycle waste that nobody want to reuse or knows how to dispose of correctly, with an estimated value under one euro. We transform it into a very useful object for training, knowledge and informatio­n, which costs between 50 and 70 euros. Brilliant isn’t it? In short, Emmabuntüs is not a distributi­on for poor people, but a distributi­on for all the people.

 ??  ?? Computer class in the Akashganga Intl Academy equipped by Ailleurs-Solidaires.
Computer class in the Akashganga Intl Academy equipped by Ailleurs-Solidaires.
 ??  ?? We run a test by launching, in parallel, Chromium, the Clementine music player, the Thunar file manager, the Geany text editor, and the htop system utility, you get a memory utilizatio­n of 346MB, which leaves yet another 156MB of free space, if you...
We run a test by launching, in parallel, Chromium, the Clementine music player, the Thunar file manager, the Geany text editor, and the htop system utility, you get a memory utilizatio­n of 346MB, which leaves yet another 156MB of free space, if you...
 ??  ?? A rare photo of Patrick d’Emmabuntu. Emmaüs helpers prefer to put the collective before the individual, so surnames (and mugshots) usually aren’t provided.
A rare photo of Patrick d’Emmabuntu. Emmaüs helpers prefer to put the collective before the individual, so surnames (and mugshots) usually aren’t provided.
 ??  ?? The LXDE desktop environmen­t consumes only 155MB of memory at start up.
The LXDE desktop environmen­t consumes only 155MB of memory at start up.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? In the North Togo Savannah region, the first training room equipped with Emmabuntüs.
In the North Togo Savannah region, the first training room equipped with Emmabuntüs.
 ??  ?? Emmabuntü has been used in award-winning digital projects in West Africa, see p41.
Emmabuntü has been used in award-winning digital projects in West Africa, see p41.
 ??  ?? Akashganga Academy were so happy and enthusiast­ic after the Ailleurs Solidaires visit that they repainted the main gate.
Akashganga Academy were so happy and enthusiast­ic after the Ailleurs Solidaires visit that they repainted the main gate.

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