Posted on February 28, 2007 by Guest Writer in Use Cases: Community, Content: Education, Content: Music, Software: Third Party

olpc andes
One computer, many tools
I am Jonah Bossewitch and I have faith in OLPC miracles as millions of Children's Machine XO's going into production this year.

I believe that the One Laptop Per Child educational initiative is poised to frame the discourse around educational technology and global youth media. The issues at stake lay at the crossroads of the purposeful use of technology in teaching and learning, and as a corollary, the role of multimedia and media literacy in education and instruction.

The OLPC laptop offers an incredible array of tools for teachers and researchers of youth media and media literacy. Beyond its utility as an e-book, a distribution channel, and a communications platform, each device is also a miniature multimedia production studio, with capabilities to capture (each laptop has a built-in camera and microphone), edit (the linux-based operating system will include editing software, and is also a general purpose operating system which can be easily extended), and play audio and video (the laptops will be internet connected, and have full-featured internet browsers).

Combined with their innovative mesh networking, these laptops have the potential to turn billions of the world’s youth into participants in the emerging networks of peer‑production, such as the Wikipedia, flickr, and YouTube. A digital content overload even. Nicholas Negroponte, the OLPC chairman, recounts that the first English word spoken by many children living in the third world is “Google.”

Through search and discovery, the OLPC laptop will expose the world to the full range of popular culture that the Internet offers - from popular music, images, and celebrities, to spam and porn. As educators and researchers we should be actively anticipating this platform and others like it, crafting curricular engagements that leverage and direct the educational power this torrent of media offers.

olpc xo laptop
A handy tool for content

Many of the other presentations at Think, Teach, Play may actually find a home on the "$100 laptop", especially to the extent it provides multimedia editing tools, and perhaps more importantly, an internet-connected browser.

Lawrence Lessig has boldly asserted that text is becoming the Latin of our time, and audio and video the new vernacular. The freeculture movement is leading the struggle to reclaim popular culture as a read/write medium, as opposed to merely a read‑only one. Technologies such as the OLPC laptop present affordances to their users which shape their usage in practice.

The OLPC laptop’s affordances uniquely situate it at the frontier of free culture in ways that subvert traditional hierarchical authority and power relations. The project has been designed from the ground up to embody constructivist principles, and plans to activate the intrinsic curiosity of children who will learn by creating, publishing, and sharing. In this presentation we will explore how the design of this system and the ecology that produced it supports these objectives.

If you think the iPod is hot, just wait until these gadgets start rolling off the production lines and into the mainstream press. The OLPC laptop is about to become part of our global popular culture. Will we anticipate and plan for its arrival, or lament our neglect later?

There is still time to register for Popular Culture in the Classroom: "Teach, Think, Play" Conference 2007, March 24 & 25 at Teachers College in New York City. Please come on out and participate in this conversation - "Eighty percent of success is showing up."

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Posted on February 28, 2007 by Guest Writer in Commentary: OLPC News, Software: Operating System

My name is Christoph Derndorfer and I previously wrote about OLPC videos at CES in January. Now, while I was sitting here in Barcelona video-less, I'm reading through OLPC News and the interesting points that people raised since then about One Laptop Per Child.

In my exploration, I do keep wondering why so little discussion has been about the machines itself lately. Everyone seems to be focusing on the impact OLPC production will have on Taiwan's IT industry, why the XO won't be coming to US schools anytime soon and a billion other questions *surrounding* the project.


olpc sugar ui
The Sugar User Interface

When was the last time anyone actually mentioned the children and teachers that are going to be using the Children's Machine XO? How many children and teachers have actually used the Sugar UI?

We all know that geeks (yes, I'm also guilty of belonging to that group of people) find the user interface very interesting. But has anyone done any large scale usability testing of the hardware and/or software with children in developing countries? Or any children at all?

Why does it seem to make sense to send out the latest batch of OLPC XO BTest-2 laptops to developers when none of the millions of people who are supposed to be using this computer by the end of the year has ever used one? Was my professor in User Interface Design wrong when he suggested that it makes a lot of sense to review the user experience early on in the development process?

Has anyone considered the fact that a bunch relatively well-off, well educated Western developers with decades of computer experience are writing software for people who have a very different view of the world and also use different mental models throughout their daily life?

sugar ui olpc
The browser in action

Most of OLPC's job descriptions include something about "frequent travels to Asia" because that's where the hardware manufacturers are located. Wouldn't it make more sense to look for people who are "willing to spend a significant amount of time in remote areas of the world" with 20 B2 machines and a classroom full of students?

Don't get me wrong, OLPC environmental issues are important just like the question of Quanta's working conditions for its employees.

But the core issue at hand here is whether OLPC succeeds in providing an effective educational tool with the Children's Machine X0. And I don't see that happening unless the project starts spending more time with the people who are supposed to be using the OLPC X0.

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Posted on February 27, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Software: Applications, Sales Talk: Countries, Prototypes: OLPC

Are you excited by the clock-stopping hot OLPC XO technology like dual mode screens or instant suspend/resume? Do you want to be one of the lucky Children's Machine XO BTest-2 owners?

Since there are no OLPC eBay sales just quite yet, you only have four ways to play for your very own "$100 laptop":

olpc ownership
How did Mike Pirnat get one?
  • Join the OLPC Developers Program: If you are a free and open-source developer or research organization interested in contributing to furthering OLPC's goals, you can join the Develoeprs Program.

    There, in exchange for participating in the good, the bad, and the ugly process of hardware and software debug that computer system manufacturers hide from you, you could get your very own OLPC XO, like Eduardo Silva did.

  • Be a Participating Country Representative: If you are from an OLPC launch country, and you represent an educational or technology-related Ministry, you already have a few OLPC's. Brazil already has classrooms of OLPC's while Rwanda has four laptops for evaluation.
  • Start a pro-OLPC User Group: If you start a local FOSS user group that is focused on introducing one laptop per your country's children, you can petition OLPC for a laptop to help convince decision makers that Children Machine XO's are the way to go. OLPC Nepal is all over the country showing off their OLPC XO.
  • Win an OLPC Contest: If you entered the OLPC Game Design Challenge, you could have your very own OLPC XO next week. Then you could be like University of Adelaide student Joel Stanley. He won an OLPC last month, becoming one of only two Australian OLPC owners.
bad olpc posture
Btest-2'ing with bad OLPC posture
Of course, if you don't want to deal with buggy software and incomplete hardware, you need not wait long. Nicholas Negroponte just promised that we'll be seeing Children Machine XO's in everyone's future very soon, from Africa to Adelaide, according to The Australian:
OLPC founder Nicholas Negroponte told The Australian the not-for-profit project, to provide every child in a developing country with a laptop, would be extended to nations with a high gross domestic product from as early as July.

"The program will go out worldwide within 60 days," Professor Negroponte said in Abu Dhabi, in the United Arab Emirates, attending the Education Without Borders conference.

"We'll be looking for expressions of interest (from Australian governments, business or non-government organisations) and that is a means for countries to request to be part of the program."

Sixty days from now means we'll all have one hell of a geeked-out May Day watching OLPC XO's roll out worldwide!

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Posted on February 27, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Hardware: Power Supply, Hardware: Wireless, Prototypes: XO

OLPC has announced that OLPC XO BTest-2 laptops are now shipping to those who can test and develop the "$100 laptop".

While full BTest-2 release notes are forthcoming, OLPC says that:
The BTest-2 hardware is continuing beta test for the electronics, beta test of the new screen (this time with a diffuser improving it futher) and touch pad. The industrial design is only somewhat improved from BTest-1; most of the learning from BTest-1 on mechanical improvements could not be incorporated in time for BTest-2 and so BTest-3 will be significantly more rugged than BTest-1 or BTest-2.

BTest-2's focus will start the process of testing the mesh network, and we are also working on suspend/resume, though as of this writing, suspend/resume is not yet running, though the preparatory work is now complete.
Oh and if you are one of the lucky Developer Program participants to get a BTest-2, be sure to note there are a few quirks in the hardware.

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Posted on February 23, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Hardware: Keyboard, Implementation: Plan

Greg Bright, of Keynamics, recently alerted me to his One Laptop Per Child posture website. While I find the site's layout visually painful, he makes an interesting point: educational laptops are not designed for a child's physical health.
Society has yet to see the long term effects of a child who has been hunching over a laptop, since the age of 5.

A quick look around any college campus, will show numerous examples of young bodies hunched over laptops in unsafe postures. Culminating repetitive stain injuries with every keystroke. They all look like Smeagol.
Now the Children's Machine XO design isn't unique - it follows the basic laptop layout that Mr. Bright warns us about, maybe for the benefit of his company. But could OLPC help improve the posture of young computer users before they become slump-shouldered adults? Might a good computer posture tutorial be part of the basic laptop orientation program?

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Posted on February 22, 2007 by Robert Arrowsmith in Use Cases: Business, Countries: USA

If you, like I, want to buy OLPC XO "$100 laptops" in retail stores, then you may get another choice for clock-stopping technology to become available. If the new Dell IdeaStorm website is anything to go by then Dell may be having a rethink on what their customers are after.

According to a post on SlashDot:
"Within only a few days of Dell opening a new customer feedback website, they discovered that the feature most requested (by an almost 2-to-1 margin!) is an option on all new Dell PCs: pre-installed Linux. (And the number 3 request is pre-installed Open Office.)
I believe they'll have a harder time now with the tired old mantra 'There's no customer demand for Linux'." After reading through some of the ideas that people have posted it's obvious that the OLPC initiative has struck a chord with computer users. People want Linux operating systems preinstalled and green, energy efficient computers.

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Posted on February 21, 2007 by Wayan Vota in People: Leadership, People: Negroponte, Commentary: Press

Do you have an opinion on revolutionizing education in the developing world, using OLPC XO technology? Might you enjoy a good debate about One Laptop Per Child with Walter Bender, Ethan Zuckerman and I? Then listen in tonight at 7pm Eastern Time to Christopher Lydon's Radio Open Source: One Laptop Per Child?

There, we will see who is positive or negative, or even schizophrenic on OLPC XO's. But no matter your stance, we can all agree that Nicholas Negroponte has helped resurrect technology as a form of international development from its post-dot.com, dot.bomb malaise.

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Posted on February 20, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Content: Localization, Software: Operating System, Commentary: Press, Countries: Uruguay

Dear Daniel Olivera of UTUTO:

Thank you for your interest in the One Laptop Per Child program. It's wonderful to have another voice in the debate around the worthy goal of improving education using information and communication technologies, such as per-student computers.

And kudos to producing UTUTO, a "GNU/Linux distribution whose name is reminiscent of a small lizard from northern Argentina". I am sure that this operating system is an improvement to the basic Linux distribution and hopefully you've developed a user interface that is localized to your users and application and content useful to them.

But according to your quotes in Computadoras baratas de EEUU son "dominación cultural", dice Proyecto UTUTO, you may have missed the aims and the practicalities of One Laptop Per Child in your zeal to promote UTUTO as an OS option for Children's Machine XO's in Uruguay.

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Posted on February 19, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Sales Talk: Countries, Countries: Greece, Software: Localization, Content: Localization

Last fall, did you head the call for Volunteers for a low-cost Greek laptop by the OLPC Greek Development Team to start localizing One Laptop Per Greek Child?
Volunteers with the time and disposition to get involved in localising the low-cost laptop for school pupils for the Greek market, currently being developed by the international non-profit organisation "One Laptop per Child (OLPC)" on the initiative of the founder of the MIT Media Lab, Prof. N. Negroponte, are being sought by [the Secretariat for the Information Society] to localise the computer for the Greek market.
From that call, did you join the olpc@ellak.gr mailing list?

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Posted on February 16, 2007 by Wayan Vota in People: Negroponte, Commentary: Press

We now have a second OLPC conspiracy theory! Spanish-language blogger, Danieloso, has finally realized that Nicholas Negroponte, Chairman of One laptop Per Child has a brother, John Negroponte, who was Director of the US Central Intelligence Agency. And what might that mean? According to Danieloso (via Google Translate>:
You would give the education of your children to the Council of National Intelligence of the United States? This is exactly what million parents in the world are on the verge of making thanks to project OLPC (One Laptop Per Child).
Yes, according to Danieloso because the Negroponte's are brothers, the CIA will be spying on the educational activities of millions of students in the developing world through the Children's Machine XO.

Danieloso, to be polite: bullshit.

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Posted on February 15, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Hardware: Production, Prototypes: XO

Wow! Thanks to One Laptop Per Child, these are boom times for Taiwanese computer manufacturers like Quanta Computer. With 2,500 computers rolling off OLPC XO laptop production lines in the first quarter of 2007, ramping up to 10 million laptops in a year, Quanta Chairman Barry Lam projects Quanta's 2007 revenues will be $15 billion US dollars, up from 14 billion US dollars in 2006.

OLPC is not just changing Quanta's fortunes with its laptop revolution. All the OLPC Children's Machine XO parts makers are also ramping up capacity to handle 10 million computers, a 20% increase in the total worldwide laptop production for the year and the largest single computer distribution ever.

In total, this production ramp-up will represent a $1.5 Billion dollar transfer of wealth from the developing world to Taiwan, via taxes, loans, and donations financing an unproven educational learning tool. So yet again, I ask for Open Source OLPC software and hardware.

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Posted on February 14, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Internet: Access, Hardware: Wireless

The OLPC Wiki is an interesting experiment in collaborative expression. And also sometimes confusing. Someone reading the School Gateways section of the New Ask OLPC A Question page may get the wrong impression about One Laptop Per Child's commitment to Internet connectivity:
The OLPC networking concept is not Internet-based. We assume that there will be no Internet connectivity and no Internet gateways. The laptops are being deployed into countries which do not have a lot of native-language content available on the Internet.
That sounds quite official, like the OLPC Children's Machine XO will not be Internet-enabled. But then you read what Nicholas Negroponte says in Kevin Allison's "Clever kit to benefit the poor" Financial Times article and you get a whole other impression.

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Posted on February 14, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Content: Games, Software: Third Party, Prototypes: XO

Win a OLPC XO laptop at the 2007 Game Developers Conference - all you have to do is provide a 100 word description of your OLPC game design idea in the One Laptop Per Child Game Design Challenge.

Yes, you read that right, you don't even need to actually code the game, just write a general idea of one for the Children's Machine XO. Here's the official judging criteria that Samuel J. Klein, OLPC Director of Content, will use to score submissions:
Each entrant must supply a 100 word description of their game design idea which may be accompanied by an optional sketch or screenshot. The judges will be looking for game design ideas with particular attention given to games that make use of the laptop's special features -- its wireless mesh, human power, sunlight-readable display, and ebook or rotated-screen modes.
As you start to put pencil, pen, or stylus to work on how to bring new life for old games on the Children's Machine XO, do check the contest fine print: only registered conference attendees qualify to enter, and you must be present to win.

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Posted on February 13, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Sales Talk: Countries, Use Cases: Education, Commentary: Press, Countries: USA

One common complaint about the One Laptop Per Child program is its lack of focus on American children. I am often asked, "Shouldn't students in the USA get OLPC XO's before children in other lands?"

Ashley Morris is raising a fuss about One Laptop Per New Orleans Child and Edward Cherlin has even started OLPC USA. Even Keith Regan's recent article, Does the $100 Laptop Have a Future in the US?, says:
The OLPC made headlines recently by saying that its long-term plans could include selling a slightly higher priced version in the U.S., as well as in other developed markets.

The OLPC's plans for tapping domestic schools and the overall low-cost technology push will likely have at least an indirect impact on the educational technology market.
But what does One Laptop Per Child have to say about it? Or better yet, its eloquent spokesman, Nicholas Negroponte. Why didn't he focus on American schools when he started his grant educational computer mission?

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Posted on February 12, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Prototypes: OLPC, Commentary: Press, Sales Talk: Price

Finally, news reports are dropping the inaccurate "$100 laptop" moniker for the OLPC Children's Machine XO for the slightly more realistic $150 dollar laptop price point. In Jason Szep's Developing nations to test new $150 laptops Reuters article out today, you'll note that he is continuing a trend away from Nicholas Negroponte's media-savvy but cost-inaccurate initial $100 dollar laptop price point.
olpc laptop
A $150 Dollar Ebook?
In fact, he never even uses "$100 laptop" in his article when he talks OLPC XO price:
[T]he non-profit "One Laptop per Child" project will roll out nearly 2,500 of its $150-laptops to eight nations in February.
This a great relief from previous "$100 laptop" news reports that are still fooled by the OLPC marketing spin that is so pervasive, the OLPC website is even titled:
"One Laptop per Child (OLPC), a $100 laptop for the world's children education."
Pervasive but not so persuasive marketing if we look a little deeper into the current cost conversation, a conversation not complete until you apply OLPC costs to national budgets like Nigeria's.

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Posted on February 09, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Commentary: OLPC News, Commentary: Press

If you follow One Laptop Per Child as obsessively as I do, you'll note a certain schizophrenic support for the Children's Machine XO. On one side, you have an unchecked love of the literally clock-stopping hot OLPC technology. On the other hand, there is an uneasiness about the grand plans, great cost, and minimal testing of the OLPC implementation.

Two articles in the Christian Science Monitor are a great example of the schism. In Gregory M. Lamb's A closer look at what '$100 laptop' will be, he opens with hope around the OLPC XO's design and cost.

But not three weeks earlier, the Christian Science Monitor's editorial board came at the OLPC plans from a whole other angle. In Laptops: easy fix for global education?, the Monitor's View starts by grouping OLPC with prior unsuccessful attempts.

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Posted on February 08, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Content: Education, People: Leadership

The Battle of Emails between One Laptop Per Child and FAIR International is heating up again, and this time Knut Foseide of FAIR is asking Antonio M. Battro, MD, PhD, Chief Education Officer, if children in OLPC's target group can actually understand a constructivist-centric computer .

Yes, you read that right, FAIR International is now questioning the very basis of OLPC's program - to revolutionize learning in the developing world, leveraging children to educate themselves through the "learning learning" process.

It all started when Antonio sent FAIR an email defending the millions of laptops in children's' hands dream against FAIR's recycled computer model

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Posted on February 08, 2007 by Wayan Vota in Use Cases: Education, Software: Third Party

In the long list of use cases you've thought of for One Laptop Per Child, did planetarium software ever occur to you as the killer application for the Children's Machine XO? Yeah, me neither.

But then again, we're not David W Hogg, we didn't developOLPC Planetarium, and we didn't realize that:
The OLPC is the best platform ever devised for electronic support of by-eye astronomical observing. It is a low power device that can be mechanically powered by the user; it has a reflected-light mode in which it does not contribute to local illumination (so the observer can read the display with a red flashlight and it won't compromise dark adaptation), and it is light and rugged.
Now that we know the OLPC XO technology rocks (Was that ever in doubt?), David educates us on why planetarium software, vs. say an electronic Library of Alexandria, is the ultimate third-party educational software for children's schooling:<

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Posted on February 07, 2007 by Wayan Vota in People: Leadership, Implementation: Maintenance, Software: Operating System

What computer security will One Laptop Per Child's initial 10 million Children's Machine XO's have? That is a question that Ivan Krstić has wrestled with since his start with OLPC.

Now he has taken a great leap in implementation and released Bitfrost the OLPC security platform. Reading the Bitfrost Approach I can only wish that more computer security design professionals, be they specialists in Windows, Apple, or Linux, would follow Ivan's lead. His five security goals are radical, simple, and loooong overdue:
    Goals:
  • No user passwords
  • No unencrypted authentication
  • Out-of-the-box security
  • Limited institutional PKI
  • No permanent data loss
If you're the technical type, you can read the full Bitfrost specification on the OLPC Git Repository.

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Posted on February 06, 2007 by Wayan Vota in People: Leadership, Hardware: Screen

Did you read the excellent IEEE Spectrum article on Mary Lou Jepsen? Were you in awe of her job hunting luck:
If you’re an engineer and a job interview turns into a brainstorming session, that’s probably a good sign. It certainly was for Jepsen, who spent 2 hours of her “interview” kicking around ideas for the laptop with Nicholas Negroponte, the Media Lab’s cofounder.
Or better yet her amazing globe trotting lifestyle where she survives 13 hour flights with apparent ease - she doesn't even suffer from jet lag!

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Posted on February 05, 2007 by Guest Writer in People: Leadership, Hardware: Production

One Laptop Per Child is now putting its finishing touches on the BTest-3 Children's Machine XO's and Quanta Computer Chairman Barry Lam couldn't be happier.

Quanta is the Original Design Manufacturer (ODM) of the $100 $150 dollar laptops and according to Deutsche Presse-Agentur, Chairman Lam echoed Quanta President Michael Wang's earlier announcement that OLPC XO production will increase from 5 million to 10 million units for 2007 at Quanta's laptop manufacturing plant in Changshou, Jiansu Province, China.

I am Lorenz Matzat a freelance journalist and I ask if a philanthropic program like One Laptop Per