St Francis de Sales Minor Seminary (SFSMinor), a boys' high school in Lipa City, took charge of its own P1,500/year Web solution with Minimatech in April 2009.

In the picture, Vice-Rector and ICT Champion Rev. Fr. Oscar L. Andal watches as CoWeb pioneer Laury tutors teachers in simple Web publishing for their own teaching needs.
The whole Minimatech Team visited SFSMinor for the one-day training in the school's Internet laboratory. The CoWeb Champion at SFSMinor is Corazon Flores.
Cora's own website is at coraflores.sfsminor.org while the school's website is at sfsminor.org. The school is also developing other teacher's websites and a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) facility, all housed in a single Minimatech site priced at P1,500 per year!
Comments (0) Added by raffy December 3, 2009 (3:46PM)
CoWeb envisions members who are able to use easy and low-cost ICT for teaching, exemplified here by Prof. Tristan of Union College, Sta. Cruz, Laguna.

Tristan met the CoWeb pioneers in December 2007 when the Union College Internet laboratory was equipped with low-cost PCs shown below.

Tristan was quick to appreciate that the new PCs are diskless, so he prepared his own System-in-USB and hung the USB as a neck gear. He now wears his Operating System and data!
Comments (0) Added by raffy December 3, 2009 (1:10PM)
![]() Chancellor Velasco tests the eBox2300. |
UPLB through the College of Public Affairs has been researching on low-cost computing solutions since 2005. The technology package is called eMinima, which means “easy” to use and “minimalist” in its requirements.
In November 2006, through the support of Chancellor Luis Rey Velasco and pioneering work of Dr. Raffy Mananghaya, the chipmaker VIA Technologies, the Philippine eLearning Society and the ICT Commission (CICT) launched an Affordable Computing Workshop that demonstrated low-cost PC solutions. The workshop featured the VIA integrated board and Puppy Linux Operating System. It also featured a tiny PC, the eBox2300 (shown in the picture being tested by Chancellor Velasco), which can deliver day-to-day computing at only 15 watts maximum power consumption.
The successful workshop prompted CICT in January 2007 to adopt a PC4ALL program that advocated the use of $200 PC package (P10,000, given the exchange rate at the time).
![]() Intel's D201GLY integrated board. |
![]() Dr. Ranola with the eee PC. |
Comments (0) Added by raffy December 3, 2009 (11:05AM)