November 19, 2005

Cool design

From Ars Technica comes this story about a laptop developed at MIT for use in the Third World. Cost to manufacture -- about $100. Power source -- a hand crank. Toy? -- definitely NOT! From the MIT Press Release:
Annan presents prototype $100 laptop at World Summit on Information Society
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan unveiled the first working prototype of the $100 laptop Nov. 16 at the World Summit on the Information Society in Tunis, Tunisia. Annan was joined by Nicholas Negroponte, chairman and co-founder of the Media Lab at MIT, in presenting the laptop to the gathering.

The $100 laptop, first announced by Negroponte at the World Economic Forum in January 2005, is an ultra-low-cost, full-featured computer designed to dramatically enhance children's primary and secondary education worldwide. It is the central project of the nonprofit One Laptop per Child (OLPC) association, which aims to equip the world's schoolchildren and their teachers with a personal, portable, connected computer.

"The $100 laptop is inspiring in many respects," said Annan. "It is an impressive technical achievement, able to do almost everything that larger, more expensive computers can do. It holds the promise of major advances in economic and social development. But perhaps most important is the true meaning of 'one laptop per child.' This is not just a matter of giving a laptop to each child, as if bestowing on them some magical charm. The magic lies within -- within each child, within each scientist-, scholar-, or just plain citizen-in-the-making. This initiative is meant to bring it forth into the light of day."
Awesome -- the tech specs look really good too. A small machine and slow but enough to really work -- not a toy.
one-laptop-per-child.jpg
Posted by DaveH at November 19, 2005 10:38 PM
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