One Laptop per Child
Formation | January 2005 |
---|---|
Type | Non-profit |
Headquarters | Cambridge, MA |
Chairman | Nicholas Negroponte |
Key people | Mary Lou Jepsen, Walter Bender, Jim Gettys, Seymour Papert, Alan Kay |
Website | One Laptop Per Child website |
The One Laptop per Child association (OLPC) is a non-profit organization, created by faculty members of the MIT Media Lab, set up to oversee The Children's Machine project and the construction of the XO-1 "$100 laptop". Both the project and the organization were announced at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland in January 2005. According to the home page of the project's wiki at laptop.org, "OLPC espouses five core principles: (1) child ownership; (2) low ages; (3) saturation; (4) connection; and (5) free and open source." [1]
OLPC is funded by a number of sponsor organizations, including AMD, Brightstar Corporation, eBay, Google, Marvell, News Corporation, SES, Nortel Networks, and Red Hat[2]. Each company has donated two million dollars.[3]
Intel was a member of the association for a brief period in 2007. They resigned their membership on 3 January 2008, citing disagreements with the organization's founder, Nicholas Negroponte.[4]
The organization is chaired by Nicholas Negroponte and its CTO was Mary Lou Jepsen. Other principals of the company include former MIT Media Lab director Walter Bender, who is President of OLPC Software and Content, and Jim Gettys, Vice-President of Software Engineering.[5]
One Laptop per child is a 501(c)(3) organization registered in Delaware, USA.
Mission
The goal of the foundation is to provide children around the world with new opportunities to explore, experiment, and express themselves. To that end, OLPC is designing a laptop, educational software, manufacturing base, and distribution system to provide children outside of the first-world with otherwise unavailable technological learning opportunities.
OLPC espouses five core principles [11]:
- Child ownership
- Low ages. The hardware and software are designed for elementary school children aged 6-12.
- Saturation
- Connection
- Free and open source
It's an education project, not a laptop project.
History
OLPC is based on constructionist learning theories pioneered by Seymour Papert, Alan Kay, and also on the principles expressed in Nicholas Negroponte’s book Being Digital.[6] These three individuals plus the several sponsor organizations are active participants in OLPC.
The organization gained much attention when Nicholas Negroponte and Kofi Annan unveiled a working prototype of the CM1 on November 16 2005 at the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Tunis, Tunisia. Negroponte showed two prototypes of the laptop at the second phase of the World Summit: a non working physical model and a tethered version using an external board and separate keyboard. The device shown was a rough prototype using a standard development board. Negroponte estimated that the screen alone required three more months of development. The first working prototype was demonstrated at the project's Country Task Force Meeting on May 23 2006. The production version is expected to have a larger display screen in the same size package. The laptops were originally scheduled to be available by early 2007, but production actually began in November, 2007.
At the 2006 World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) announced it would back the laptop. UNDP released a statement saying they would work with OLPC to deliver “technology and resources to targeted schools in the least developed countries”.[7]
The project originally aimed for a price of 100 United States dollars. In May 2006, Negroponte told the Red Hat's annual user summit: “It is a floating price. We are a nonprofit organization. We have a target of $100 by 2008, but probably it will be $135, maybe $140. That is a start price, but what we have to do is with every release make it cheaper and cheaper— we are promising that the price will go down.”[8]
The OLPC project had stated that a consumer version of the XO laptop was not planned.[9] However, the project has established the xogiving.org website for outright donations and for a "Give 1 Get 1" offer valid from November 12, 2007 for two weeks, but this was extended through December 31, 2007.[10] The "Give 1 Get 1" offer's required donation of $399 has a tax-deductible portion of $200. The fair market value of the XO laptop is placed at $199 by the OLPC Foundation.
Participating countries
The following countries have already “committed” to the project in various ways. However, the commitment is not binding. The laptops will be sold to governments, to be distributed through the ministries of education willing to adopt the policy of “one laptop per child”. The operating system and software will be localized to the languages of the participating countries. As of December 1, 2007, only two countries, Peru and Uruguay, actually purchased the XO laptop[11][12].
- Argentina
- Brazil (not yet, is in study) [13]
- Cambodia
- Costa Rica
- Dominican Republic
- Egypt
- Greece
- Libya
- Nigeria
- Pakistan
- Peru (now receiving laptops) [14]
- Rwanda[15]
- Tunisia
- United States of America [16]
- Uruguay (now receiving laptops) [17]
The following countries are receiving laptops in the Give One Get One program.
- Haiti
- Rwanda
- Cambodia
- Afghanistan
- Mongolia
Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney submitted a bill to the legislature to deliver $100 laptops to all children in the state.[18] Nigeria was the first country to order one million laptop computers.[19] However, neither deal has materialized as of November 2007[20].
On October 11 2006 The New York Times reported that OLPC had reached an agreement with the government of Libya to supply laptops to all of its 1.2 million school children. The $250 million deal includes satellite Internet access, one XS (school server)[21][22] per school and technical support.[23][24] Muammar al-Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam al-Qaddafi has talked of turning the country into the first E-democracy, with citizens participating electronically in government decision-making.[25] However, this deal was never materialized as of November 2007[26].
India has rejected the initiative, saying “it would be impossible to justify an expenditure of this scale on a debatable scheme when public funds continue to be in inadequate supply for well-established needs listed in different policy documents”.[27]
Thailand under prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra had committed to the project, however after the 2006 coup d'état the new education minister called the project "not urgent and not in my education reform plan".[28] According to a spokesman for the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology, the laptop will be evaluated with pilot projects before proceeding cautiously.[29]
On December 1, 2007, Boston Globe reported that the government of Peru purchases 260,000, and the Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim has purchased 50,000 of XO Laptop[30].
In the United States, the city of Birmingham (Ala) has purchased more than 15,000 laptops to let students use them at city schools [31].
Year of purchase | Confirmed number (approximate) | Date confirmed | Purchaser |
---|---|---|---|
2007 | 100,000 (5,000 delivered in 2007) | 2007 | Uruguay |
15,000 | November 14 2007 | City of Birmingham (Ala)[32] | |
270,000 | December 1 2007 | Peru[33] | |
50,000 | December 1 2007 | Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim[34] | |
167,000 (Half to be distributed to developing world) | January 5 2008 | "Give One, Get One" program[35] | |
Total | 602,000 |
Criticism
Though generally well received at early stages, the project has been criticized on several fronts.
Design
On November 10 2005, Lee Felsenstein criticized the centralized, top-down, “imperialistic” design and distribution of the OLPC. Felsenstein, currently of the Fonley Institute, draws upon his previous experience with distributed collaboration and open source hardware in the Homebrew Computer Club.[36]
Environmental concerns
The project has received criticism due to concerns over environmental and health impacts of hazardous materials found in other computers.[37] Many nations and organizations are working towards the development of “Green Electronics” (e.g. European Union with Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive).[38]
While any project on this scale will have environmental impact, OLPC has asserted that it is aiming to use as many environmentally friendly materials as it can; that the laptop and all OLPC-supplied accessories will be fully compliant with the EU's Restriction of Hazardous Substances Directive (RoHS); and that the laptop will use an order of magnitude less power than the typical consumer notebooks available as of 2007, minimizing the environmental burden of power generation.[39] Use of renewable power (solar, wind, water, ethanol, biodiesel, animal, child) is strongly encouraged.
- The original design provided a hand crank for charging the battery. The production design has a nominal 12 volt power socket (usable range of 10-15 volts) that functions with any power generation system that can charge a 12 volt car battery.
- The XO's lithium-iron-phosphorus (LiFeP) battery contains no toxic heavy metals.
- The screen backlight uses LEDs rather than fluorescents, and so contains no mercury.
- The XO can be dismantled with a #1 Phillips screwdriver for recycling.
- The plastic parts can be completely separated by color for recycling rather than downcycling.
- The XO is one of eight computers to receive EPEAT's Gold rating for environmental performance. [40]
Effective use of money
At the UN conference in Tunisia, several African officials, most notably Marthe Dansokho of Cameroon and Mohammed Diop of Mali, were suspicious of the motives of the project and claimed that the project was using an overly American mindset that presented solutions not applicable to specifically African problems. Dansokho said the project demonstrated misplaced priorities, stating that clean water and schools were more important for African women, who, he stated, would not have time to use the computers to research new crops to grow. Diop specifically attacked the project as an attempt to exploit the governments of poor nations by making them pay for hundreds of millions of machines.[41] Additionally, the price of $188/unit does not include the cost of setup, maintenance, training of teachers, or Internet access. Countries adopting the XO-1 must budget for these costs as well.
One criticism has been that the money for purchasing laptops could be more favorably spent on libraries and schools. John Wood, founder of Room to Read, emphasizes affordability and scalability over high-tech solutions. While in favor of the One Laptop per Child initiative for providing education to children in the developing world at a cheaper rate, he has pointed out that a $2,000 library can serve 400 children, costing just $5 a child to bring access to a wide range of books in the local languages (such as Khmer or Nepali) and English; also, a $10,000 school can serve 400–500 children ($20–$25 a child). According to Wood, these are more appropriate solutions for education in the dense forests of Vietnam or rural Cambodia.[42]
Price - HRD India
The Ministry of Human Resource Development of India has rejected Nicholas Negroponte's offer of $100 laptops for schoolchildren. The Ministry has stated plans to make laptops at $10 for schoolchildren. Two designs submitted to the ministry from a final year engineering student of Vellore Institute of Technology and a researcher from the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore reportedly describe a laptop that could be produced for "$47 per laptop" for even small volumes.[43] No technical specifications or development timelines have been released.
Lawsuit
Lagos Analysis Corp., also called Lancor, a Lagos, Nigeria-based company, sued OLPC in the end of 2007 for $20 million, claiming that the computer's keyboard design was stolen from a Lancor patented device [44] The amount of damages is based upon an order by the Nigerian government for one million of the laptops. Lancor decided that, since their keyboards retail for $19.95, the $20 million is the price for one million keyboards. Lancor obtained a temporary injunction against the Nigerian sale in December of 2007, and the country's government announced that it is now reviewing its order.
OLPC responded by claiming that they had not sold any multi-lingual keyboards in the design claimed by Lancor.[45]
See also
- Laptop page
- School server page
- Related projects
- Ceibal project (OLPC project in Uruguay).
- Dynabook, an earlier, similar project by Alan Kay.
- Wizzy Digital Courier: Internet access for rural schools via USB stick.
- Similar projects
- Digital Textbook a South Korean Project that intends to distribute tablet notebooks to elementary school students.
- OpenBook Project, a meta-project functionally similar to XO-1 that aims to create and maintain open hardware and software specifications to enable production of convenient "tablet" in high volumes.
- Classmate PC a low-cost laptop by Intel.
- VIA pc-1 Initiative, VIA Technologies digital divide program.
- Eee PC, a low-cost subnotebook designed by ASUS and Intel.
- Sinomanic, another low-cost (250$) subnotebook
- Clio NXT.
- InkMedia MC, another low-cost subnotebook
- Zonbu A low-cost (250$) full-size laptop with relative high system specifications.
- Popular culture
- The Diamond Age a Science Fiction story about an educational and interactive electronic book getting into the hands of under privileged children around the world, instead of the rich minority it was intended for.
References
- ^ The OLPC Wiki, laptop.org
- ^ Gardiner, Bryan (2007-07-13). "Intel Joins OLPC Initiative". PC Magazine. Retrieved 2007-07-14.
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(help) - ^ ""Taiwan's Quanta to make 100-US-dollar laptops for poor kids"". Retrieved 2007-04-05.
- ^ "Intel Resigns From Board Of One Laptop Per Child". Retrieved 2008-01-03.
- ^ OLPC Principals and Staff List Retrieved February 13, 2006
- ^ Negroponte, Nicholas. Being Digital. ISBN 0-679-43919-6.
- ^ "U.N. Lends Backing to the $100 Laptop". Associated Press. January 26 2006. Retrieved 2006-01-27.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ Donoghue, Andrew (2006-06-02). "$100 laptop 'will boost desktop Linux'". CNET News.com. Retrieved 2006-08-19.
- ^ "One Laptop per Child Has No Plans to Commercialize XO Computer". Business Wire. Retrieved 2007-01-16.
- ^ "One Laptop Per Child -- XO Giving". OLPC project. 2007-09-23.
- ^ [1] "One Laptop Per Child orders surge" Boston Globe, December 1, 2007
- ^ [2] “A Little Laptop With Big Ambitions: How a Computer for the Poor Got Stomped by Tech Giants” Wall Street Journal, November 24, 2007; Page A1
- ^ "Govt studying independent US$100 laptop project". TMCnet. March 10 2006. Retrieved 2006-03-10.
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(help) - ^ [3] "One Laptop Per Child orders surge" Boston Globe, December 1, 2007
- ^ http://www.linuxtoday.com/infrastructure/2007010902326NWHWEV Linux Today Notes From a Senior Editor: A Close Look at the OLPC
- ^ http://www.bizjournals.com/masshightech/stories/2007/11/12/daily23.html
- ^ http://radian.org/notebook/first-deployment
- ^ http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2005/laptops-1005.html
- ^ "Nigeria orders 1 million $100 laptops". The Inquirer. July 26 2006.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ [4] “A Little Laptop With Big Ambitions: How a Computer for the Poor Got Stomped by Tech Giants” Wall Street Journal, November 24, 2007; Page A1
- ^ http://wiki.laptop.org/go/XS_Server_Specification
- ^ http://wiki.laptop.org/go/XS_Server_Services
- ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/11/world/africa/11laptop.html
- ^ All Libyan pupils to get laptop and web access
- ^ All Libyan pupils to get laptop and web access
- ^ [5] “A Little Laptop With Big Ambitions: How a Computer for the Poor Got Stomped by Tech Giants” Wall Street Journal, November 24, 2007; Page A1
- ^ "HRD rubbishes MIT's laptop scheme for kids". The Times of India. July 3 2006.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ Bangkok Post, Education Ministry axes 3 schemes, 28 November 2006
- ^ Rural Thai students to get R700 laptops, 25 December 2006
- ^ [6] "One Laptop Per Child orders surge" Boston Globe, December 1, 2007
- ^ http://www.bizjournals.com/masshightech/stories/2007/11/12/daily23.html
- ^ http://www.bizjournals.com/masshightech/stories/2007/11/12/daily23.html
- ^ [7] Intel Quits Effort to Get Computers to Children, January 5, 2008
- ^ [8] "Peru, Mexico billionaire agree to buy $188 laptops" Betanews, December 3, 2007
- ^ [9] Intel Quits Effort to Get Computers to Children, January 5, 2008
- ^ Problems with the $100 laptop by Lee Felsenstein
- ^ How Much E-Waste Per Child?, WorldChanging, December 19, 2005
- ^ Era of Green Electronics, JimTrade, August 20, 2005
- ^ OLPC Frequently Asked Questions, OLPC Wiki, accessed April 25 2006
- ^ EPEAT laptop ratings, Fall 2007
- ^ “The $100 laptop — is it a wind-up?” CNN, December 1 2005. Accessed December 1, 2005.
- ^ Software 2006 conference, Scaling Organizations Panel [10] (32:40)
- ^ The Times of India: HRD hopes to make $10 laptops a reality
- ^ "Lawsuit over keyboard design."
- ^ "Discussion of the Lancor lawsuit at groklaw.net"
- Kirkpatrick, David (November 28 2005). "I'd Like to Teach the World to Type". Fortune. pp. 37–38.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - "Nortel to Sponsor One Laptop per Child Initiative". Business Wire. Retrieved 2005-12-14.
External links
- OLPC Home Page
- OLPC's "Give One. Get One." Program (US & Canada)
- OLPC Wiki
- Planet OLPC
- OLPC Community Support Forums
- OLPC.TV videos of the OLPC
- Red Hat's OLPC page
- Annan presents prototype $100 laptop at World Summit on Information Society (MIT press release)
- Negroponte's keynote at TED
- Sugar, the XO laptop, and One Laptop Per Child a developerWorks article by M. Tim Jones
- OLPC Austria
- OLPC Chile
- OLPC Nepal
- Un Computador por Niño
- Related projects
- Potenco Inc. (Portable power supply generator, development funded by the OLPC project)
- Imara Project (similar but unrelated) at MIT CSAIL
- 50×15
- Similar projects
- News articles (by date)
- "Laptop With a Mission Widens Its Audience", New York Times, October 4, 2007
- "Yves Behar and the $100 laptop", Men's Vogue
- "Potenco", Digital Commons July 3 2007
- “GDC: SJ Klein Asks For Serious OLPC Content”, Gamasutra, March 6, 2007
- “Politics: Microfinance launches One Laptop Per Child project”, Wanabehuman, January 8, 2007
- “Response to Techdirt criticism of Children's Machine”, Moving to Freedom, January 2, 2007
- “Pakistani students might be using $100 laptop next year”, DhartiPakistan , November 30, 2006
- “The Laptop Crusade”, by Douglas McGray Wired Magazine, August, 2006
- “Negroponte: Laptop for Every Kid”, Wired News, November 17, 2005
- “UN debut for $100 laptop for poor", BBC News, November 17, 2005
- “$100 Laptop moves closer to reality”, Wall Street Journal, November 14, 2005
- “$100 Laptop Effort Gains Momentum”, PC Magazine, September 29, 2005
- “One laptop per child", Laptopical, July 2, 2005
- "Can the $100 Laptop Change the World?" - Nicholas Negroponte speaks freely on the ambitious One Laptop Per Child Project., LAPTOP, April 29, 2007
- "Politics 'stifling $100 laptop'", BBC, November 27, 2007
- Media (by date)
- "Sizing Up a $100 Laptop" on NPR's Morning Edition, October 8, 2007
- Jim Gettys's presentation recorded at FOSDEM 2007 about OLPC
- 60 minutes interview, One Laptop Per Child. CBS, May 2007
- Keynote at NetEvents, Hong Kong, Nicholas Negroponte: One Laptop per Child December 2006
- - Negroponte's Interview talking about OLPC project and Intel 11/23/2006 in Argentina (English and Spanish audio)
- TEDTalks: Nicholas Negroponte (Recorded February 2006 in Monterey, CA. Duration: 18:21)
- Interview with Nicholas Negroponte - Videostream
- Negroponte discusses One Laptop Per Child (MP3), South China Morning Post, December 6, 2005
- a video interview with Mary Lou Jepsen on November 17 2005 at the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Tunis
- Nicholas Negropontes' talk (MP3) at the Technology Review's Fifth Annual Emerging Technologies Conference in September 2005