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Kid friendly Laptop

post #1 of 3
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Source: CNet



The One Laptop Per Child crusade for low-cost PCs for developing nations is another step closer to the assembly line.

The nonprofit organisation this week is showing off an initial working prototype of its so-called $100 PC. This marks the first time the project has combined its candy-coloured designs with computing hardware.

"Both the [industrial design] and the hardware had been shown separately in the past," Walter Bender, OLPC's president for software and content, said in an email to CNET.co.uk's sister site, News.com. The working laptop, he wrote, is "completely self-contained, a real milestone for us".

One of the machines on exhibit this week features a new, vividly orange exterior that complements other prototypes done up in shades of green, blue and yellow. But it's not a final design just yet -- the system carries an 800x480-pixel display, while the eventual production version is expected to have a 1,200x900 display.

The OLPC group was meeting this week with task forces from the countries in which it plans to launch the $100 computer in early 2007. The Linux-based computers will not be for individual sale, but rather will be made available through large-scale government initiatives.

The goal of the project, unveiled in 2005 by MIT Media Lab founder Nicholas Negroponte, is to get the PCs into the hands of millions of children in countries including India, China, Brazil and Nigeria, as an educational tool. It's not alone in its low-cost ambitions -- chipmakers Intel and Advanced Micro Devices and software giant Microsoft have similar systems in the works.

Other details about progress on the systems appeared on the OLPC site over the weekend. For instance, a team from Linux vendor Red Hat has trimmed the software distribution from 400MB to about 250MB, uncompressed. "There is still low-hanging fruit left to pull out of the image, including bitmap fonts we don't use (7MB), the X font server (1MB) and Perl (30MB)," the site says.

Negroponte had complained last month that "Linux has got fat," hampering efforts to produce "small, fast, thin systems".

The machine on display this week is running Fedora Core 5.0, Bender said.

The first 15 A-Test boards have been successfully assembled and tested, according to the OLPC site, and wide-scale distribution of developer boards is expected by mid-June. Taiwanese contract manufacturer Quanta has been selected to manufacture the systems.

The PCs, which will not have a hard drive, are meant to work wirelessly with other systems in their area.
post #2 of 3
OMG, this is exactly what I need for my 3 yr old!
post #3 of 3
Quote:
Originally Posted by shof515
The PCs, which will not have a hard drive, are meant to work wirelessly with other systems in their area.

They finally nixed the whole hard drive concept eh? I'm guessing it will use flash instead memory instead. These laptops are supposed to replace and or serve as textbooks, so it will be interesting on how they plan on getting all the information on it.

I did a research project on this concept last year and they intend the wireless to act as a mesh network with all other nearby machines. I didn't see an mention about battery life or power sources. Early concepts had hand cranks and a small generator for power.
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