Re: a small project for all scvers - What If Every Child Had A Laptop?
- From: ":))" <bennypooh0@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 14 Sep 2007 19:23:07 -0700
On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 18:50:17 -0700, ww <lbt006@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
:Kho^ng bie^'t co' sponsor be^n vn -du*o*.c kho^ng?
:
:"..He recruited a cadre of geeks who designed a low-cost laptop -
:under $200 dollars - specifically for poor children....Negroponte
:wanted this for all children, everywhere, but he realized conventional
:computers were too expensive. And so his dream of a hundred-dollar
:laptop was born...
:
:Negroponte is already closer to getting the laptop into production. He
:and Intel have decided to get together. In fact, Intel is now on the
:board of One Laptop Per Child. And if you're wondering whether the
:laptop will be available in the U.S., Negroponte says it will be, but
:you'll have to buy two. One for your child, and one for a child in a
:poor country. "
:
:**********************************
Ca'i hay cua laptop na`y kho^ng ca^`n bin & ca('m ddie^.n va` co' the
network duoc vo*'i nhau. Vietnam co' trong danh sa'ch sau Tha'i Lia.
Ca^`n pha?i va^.n ddo^.ng thie^m...
Muo^'n mua rie^ng thi` pha?i mua 2 ca'i, etc, etc...
Search green laptop gi` ddo' ho. co' no'i ve^` c/t na`i cu?a U.N.
http://laptopfoundation.org/index.shtml
Pooh
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
:
:http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/05/20/60minutes/main2830058.shtml
:
:What If Every Child Had A Laptop?
:Lesley Stahl Reports On The Dream And The Difficulties Of Getting A
:Computer To Every Child
:Aug. 26, 2007
:
:Nicholas Negroponte, a professor at MIT, had a dream. In it every
:child on the planet had his own computer. In that way, he figured,
:children from the most impoverished places - from deserts and jungles
:and slums could become educated and part of the modern world. Poor
:kids would have new possibilities.
:
:As correspondent Lesley Stahl reports, it was a big dream.
:
:Negroponte thought he had a chance of actually seeing it happen if he
:could help invent a really inexpensive laptop.
:
:So, two years ago he founded a non-profit organization called "One
:Laptop Per Child." He recruited a cadre of geeks who designed a low-
:cost laptop - under $200 dollars - specifically for poor children.
:
:But let's go back to the beginning when Negroponte first got his idea
:in Cambodia.
:
:The idea came to him in a remote village called Reaksmy - a 4-hour
:drive on a dirt Road from the nearest town. It's as far from MIT as
:you can get. They don't even have running water.
:
:Negroponte and his family founded a school here in 1999, putting in a
:satellite dish and generators. Then they gave the children laptops.
:Instantly, school became a lot more popular.
:
:Kids who had never seen a computer before were now crossing the
:digital divide.
:
:Nicholas Negroponte was knocked out.
:
:"The first English word of every child in that village was 'Google',"
:he says. "The village has no electricity, no telephone, no television.
:And the children take laptops home that are connected broadband to the
:Internet."
:
:When they take the laptops home, the kids often teach the whole family
:how to use it. Negroponte says the families loved the computers
:because, in a village with no electricity, it was the brightest light
:source in the house.
:
:"Talk about a metaphor and a reality simultaneously," he says. "It
:just illuminated that household."
:
:Once the computers were there, school attendance went way up.
:
:Negroponte says that in Cambodia this year 50 percent more children
:showed up for the first grade because the kids who were in first grade
:last year told the other kids, "school is pretty cool."
:
:Negroponte wanted this for all children, everywhere, but he realized
:conventional computers were too expensive. And so his dream of a
:hundred-dollar laptop was born.
:
:
:(CBS)And this is it!
:
:A low-budget computer for children like second graders in a poor
:school in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Each child has been given his or her own
:machine - as part of a test for the Brazilian government to see if
:they should buy them for all their school children.
:
:"It's very exciting," Negroponte says. "It's very gratifying. It's
:been two years in the making."
:
:The children seemed to especially like the built-in camera that takes
:stills and video.
:
:It also has Wi-Fi.
:
:Negroponte's idea was that kids don't need teachers to learn the how
:to use the computer. They can pick it up by experimenting on their own
:- with help from a friend.
:
:"That is what we are doing... is that that kid is showing this kid -
:that is key," he says.
:
:"They get it instantly. It takes a 10-year-old child about three
:minutes."
:
:When Stahl asks if he means children who have never used any computer
:before, Negroponte responds, "Children who've never, in some cases,
:seen electricity."
:
:"You go into countries where there may not be enough food, where the
:children may not have good enough education to even teach them to
:read, why a laptop?" Stahl asks. "It almost sounds like a luxury for
:these people who need so much more than that."
:
:"Let me take two countries, Pakistan and Nigeria. Fifty per cent of
:the children in both of those countries are not in school," Negroponte
:says. "At all. They have no schools, they don't even have trees under
:which a teacher might stand..."
:
:"You're saying give them a laptop even if they don't go to school?"
:Stahl asks.
:
:"Especially if they don't go to school. If they don't go to school,
:this is school in a box."
:
:Negroponte took a leave of absence from MIT two years ago, and has
:done little else but work on this ever since.
:
:He says it's purely humanitarian, and non-profit. With start up money
:from Google and other big companies, he assembled a team of engineers
:and programmers to come up something that would stand up to Third
:World conditions.
:
:"You can pour water on the keyboard. You can dip into - you know, you
:can dip the base into a bathtub. You can carry it the rain," he says.
:"It's more robust than your normal laptop. It doesn't even have holes
:in the side of it. If you look at it: dirt, sand, I mean, there's no
:place or it to go into the machine."
:
:Negroponte says it's designed for a child.
:
:It looks like a toy - on purpose. But it's a serious computer with
:many innovations. For instance, it's the first laptop with a screen
:you can use outdoors, in full sunlight. Walter Bender, the president
:of software on the project, says there are loads of new features. You
:can draw on it...or compose music.
:
:"It actually looks like an animal. These are meant to look like ears,
:right?" Stahl asks.
:
:"Right. These ears are the way the laptop communicates with the rest
:of the world so the laptop listens with these ears," Bender says.
:"Those are radio antennas, sorta like the..."
:
:"I don't have that on my computer," Stahl says.
:
:"No. And one of the reasons why this computer has probably two or
:three times better Wi-Fi range than your computer is because you don't
:have that."
:
:"It has 2 to 3 times better range?"
:
:"Better range than your $3000 dollar laptop."
:
:"How long does the battery work?"
:
:"By the time we're done with all our tuning, the battery should last
:10, 12 hours with heavy use."
:
:If the battery does run out and you live in a thatch hut in the middle
:of nowhere, you can charge it up with a crank... or a salad spinner.
:
:A minute or two of spinning, Bener says, and you get 10 or 20 minutes
:of reading.
:
:Wayan Vota is director of Geekcorps, a type of Peace Corps that brings
:technology to developing countries.
:
:"The One Laptop Per Child computer is a computing revolution," he
:says.
:
:He's so fascinated by this computer he has a website devoted to it.
:
:"It's an entire change in the way you use computers," Vota says. "It's
:waterproof... I can't wait to type outside without worrying about dust
:or heat. So the One Laptop Per Child technology is cutting edge. It's
:clock-stopping hot."
:
:But he doesn't buy Negroponte's contention that kids can figure it out
:without a teacher.
:
:"If you hand a child a violin or a piano they can make noise with it,
:right? But will they be able to make music?" Vota says. "And if you
:give a child a computer they'll be able to operate the computer// but
:will they really be able to learn without having a teacher, whether
:it's formal, informal, to help them along that learning path?"
:
:He says there are other problems. For poor countries like Cambodia,
:there are costs beyond the price of the computer like satellites to
:connect to the Internet. And what about theft?
:
:"What says an older kid isn't just going to swipe this thing?" Stahl
:asks. "It seems like it's inevitable."
:
:"Well we spent a lot of time on security," Negroponte says. "If this
:is stolen from a child, within 24 hours it stops working. It will not
:be useable."
:
:But lately One Laptop has had to contend with a new challenge:
:competition. This lab in Sao Paulo is testing two other laptops the
:Brazilian government is thinking of buying for school children,
:including one made in India and Negroponte's biggest competitor: the
:Classmate by Intel, the giant chip maker.
:
:If Negroponte's program is purely humanitarian and only to benefit
:children, why would for-profit companies pursue the same goal?
:
:"Because the numbers are so large," Negroponte says. "They look at
:those numbers and they say, 'if we're not in those, we're toast'."
:
:In Brazil there are 55 million schoolchildren, most of them poor, many
:live in favelas, or shanty towns. In China there are 200 million
:children. Worldwide Nicholas Negroponte says the potential number of
:kids who could get laptops is over a billion, a fact which has not
:gone unnoticed by Intel and other hi-tech companies.
:
:Intel gave every student in this class in Mexico a Classmate - which
:Negroponte believes is part of an effort to kill him off.
:
:At a recent lecture at MIT he accused Intel of dumping, of going to
:the same governments he's trying to sell to and offering the Classmate
:below cost.
:
:"Intel should be ashamed of itself," Negroponte says. "It's just -
:it's just shameless."
:
:"Negroponte believes that you're trying to drive him out," Stahl told
:Craig Barrett, Intel's Chairman of the Board.
:
:"We're not trying to drive him out of business. We're trying to bring
:capability to young people," Barrett responds. "And it's more than
:just Intel. It's going to take the whole industry to do this."
:
:Barrett flies around the world bringing computers to schools in places
:like Malinalco, Mexico.
:
:He says that like Negroponte, Intel just wants to help kids get
:affordable computers. And that they would be willing to reach an
:accommodation with One Laptop.
:
:"There are lots of opportunities for us to work together," Barrett
:says. "That's why when you say this is competition, we're tying to
:drive him out of business: this is crazy."
:
:Not to Negroponte who says the rivalry goes back to when he first
:introduced the One Laptop and Barrett dismissed it as "a gadget."
:
:For Nicholas Negroponte it's not just business - it's personal. It's
:about his dream, his baby.
:
:"Has Intel hurt you and the mission?" Stahl asks.
:
:"Yes, Intel has hurt the mission enormously," Negroponte says.
:
:These laptops are prototypes. To get them into mass production,
:Negroponte needs at least 3 million orders which he thought he'd have
:by now. But so far he has lots of promises but no definite orders.
:
:And he blames Intel. He spends almost all his time - about 330 days a
:year he says - lobbying government officials, going from one country
:to the next.
:
:He says he's confident he'll get his orders, even though he's about to
:face even more competition as other companies are working on low-cost
:laptops.
:
:That will result in more kids getting them - which is, after all, what
:Negroponte said he wanted in the first place.
:
:"You call your project 'One Laptop Per Child,' and you mean that every
:kid in the entire world is going to have a laptop. Is that realistic?"
:Stahl asks.
:
:"If I was realistic I wouldn't have started this project, okay?"
:Negroponte responds.
:
:"Okay."
:
:"So it's not realistic," Negroponte continues. "But we'll come
:close."
:
:Negroponte is already closer to getting the laptop into production. He
:and Intel have decided to get together. In fact, Intel is now on the
:board of One Laptop Per Child. And if you're wondering whether the
:laptop will be available in the U.S., Negroponte says it will be, but
:you'll have to buy two. One for your child, and one for a child in a
:poor country.
.
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