
The $100 laptop inching ever closer to reality
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It's not so that kids get a job in the tech industry, it's for education. Like, for example, if they can get information about HIV transmission, it might help with the AIDS timebomb in africa, that sort of thing.
Shame the poor buggers missed out on OSX though - they'll be too busy trying to recompile their kernel to actually get anywhere....
Shame the poor buggers missed out on OSX though - they'll be too busy trying to recompile their kernel to actually get anywhere....
But that same kind of information could be dissemenated, probably much more effectively, with an initiative to supply a connection for teachers?Geebs wrote:It's not so that kids get a job in the tech industry, it's for education. Like, for example, if they can get information about HIV transmission, it might help with the AIDS timebomb in africa, that sort of thing.
For the price of equipping 100 students with $100 laptops, you could furnish them with a whole lot of books, writing materials, and set up the teacher with increased access to learning resources.
"Maybe you have some bird ideas. Maybe that’s the best you can do."
― Terry A. Davis
― Terry A. Davis
Well, I don't know how effective it would be but here are some positive points:
(1) With schemes like the Gutenberg Project and Google library, you have access to thousands to millions of books online.
(2) In the near future its expected for more schools to put their lectures online and even have advanced "distance learning" based websites where they not only give you the material but help test you (imagine flash or java interactive sites) to assess how much you retained.
(3) Many peeps think that education is the only real way for developing countries to catch up to the Europe/America standard. Not everyone needs to learn it all, just a small percentage who have the ambition and will lead the new industries. Also, its at the choice of the student - clearly some professions probably won't benefit from e-learning.
Its the old "Give a man a fish and he will have food for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will have food for a lifetime."
(1) With schemes like the Gutenberg Project and Google library, you have access to thousands to millions of books online.
(2) In the near future its expected for more schools to put their lectures online and even have advanced "distance learning" based websites where they not only give you the material but help test you (imagine flash or java interactive sites) to assess how much you retained.
(3) Many peeps think that education is the only real way for developing countries to catch up to the Europe/America standard. Not everyone needs to learn it all, just a small percentage who have the ambition and will lead the new industries. Also, its at the choice of the student - clearly some professions probably won't benefit from e-learning.
Its the old "Give a man a fish and he will have food for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will have food for a lifetime."
ToxicBug wrote:Why do the children in developping countries need laptops? I think there are more important problems there. Its not like here the school students all have laptops, so why not give them to the children here first?
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old nik (q3w): hack103
old nik (q3w): hack103
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"First, find a building....."Grudge wrote:The whole point with this project is that building computer labs in development countries actually isn't more efficient.stocktroll wrote:ok even if its for developing countries, they dont need no laptop. Just build computer labs to teach students, much more efficient.
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first real pics:



[url=rtsp://196.203.134.60/archives/pc-051116-1900-en.rm?start=00:01:26]UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and Nicholas Negroponte Unveil $100 Laptop Prototype at the World Summit on the Information Society in Tunisia[/url] *requires real player or alternative.
those noobs who are going to whine about realplayer, go here
if you watch the video just watch until it's unveiled. the rest of this extremely boring and a complete mess.



[url=rtsp://196.203.134.60/archives/pc-051116-1900-en.rm?start=00:01:26]UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and Nicholas Negroponte Unveil $100 Laptop Prototype at the World Summit on the Information Society in Tunisia[/url] *requires real player or alternative.
those noobs who are going to whine about realplayer, go here
if you watch the video just watch until it's unveiled. the rest of this extremely boring and a complete mess.
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Not bad. I do hope it's sturdy.
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Canis wrote:What are the specs on that thing?
from wired.comIt boasts a 7-inch screen that swivels like a tablet PC, and an electricity-generating crank that provides 40 minutes of power from a minute of grinding. Built-in Wi-Fi with mesh networking support, combined with a microphone, speaker and headset jack, even means the box can serve as a node in an ersatz VOIP phone system.
Under the hood, it's powered by a modest 500-MHz AMD processor, and uses a gig of flash memory for storage. But the key to building it cheaply enough to educate the world's children is an innovative, low-power LCD screen technology invented by Negroponte's CTO, Mary Lou Jepsen.