A student has a project on life in a poverty-stricken country, so what do they do for more information? They go to the computer. Stop and think for just a moment what the children do for information in that poverty-stricken country. Nicholas Negroponte and a group of veterans at Media Lab did think about it. In fact, they began a group that would soon be joined by exceptionally talented people in the open-source community to work towards the goal of providing One Laptop Per Child.
While the project has been a long time coming, from ideas originated while computers were still mammoth-like objects that took up a whole room, no one can say the project comes too late. The goal of OLPC is a timely one: to provide children around the world with new opportunities to explore, experiment, and express themselves. The project features a $200 laptop with a bright screen for easy readability in direct sunlight and pencil-sharpener inspired crank to recharge its high efficiency battery. As far as software, although Microsoft and Apple both tried to provide versions of their operating systems to OLPC, ultimately they required too many resources and a “lite” version of the open-source system Linux was used.
One of the coolest features of this laptop, called the XO, is that despite its miniscule power requirements, it includes a networking technology that “meshes” each computer together, connecting every child in a village to each other, as well as to any Internet connection that might be available, such as a satellite link or cellular connection. This link can connect XOs up to a third of a mile away! The camera also has a video camera and built-in speakers and can be run in black-and-white or color modes.
Since its inception, OLPC has seen its fair share of supporters and critics. Many say: Why develop countries of foreign nations when children here at home are without technology? A
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February 21st, 2008 at 8:03 pm
My friend has been using one for a little while. It is a very neat little device and pretty well constructed. I was actually surprised by how small it was. I guess form the pictures I had been expecting something larger but that was not the case. His only gripe with the unit is the charge on the battery doesn’t seem to last very long. Still a great idea that may end up being lost in the courts before it has had a real chance.
February 21st, 2008 at 8:21 pm
phoFuki,
Thanks for your post. I haven’t seen one of them in person yet. I started the first computer classes on an island in the western Caribbean a number of years ago, and it was a real thrill to watch kids who had never seen a computer before go from zero skills to writing documents and designing spreadsheets in a couple months. I saw one of my then sixth graders later, and he told me he got a scholarship to collegio (like our high schools in the US) to specialize in computer science. So this is a concept near to my heart.