Clearly not named with marketing in mind, the OLPC (One Laptop Per Child) $100 laptop 2B1 Children's Machine laptop developed by MIT's Media Lab has finally made it to the real world. The first few hand-built units of this machine made it from Taiwan to the US a few days ago. It's a little green-and-white device that looks suitably toy-like. I hope it is robust, given its intended market.
The technology is interesting: it's intended to be both a computer and a wireless router, so that each machine forms part of a mesh even when the laptop is closed. It comes with a small solar-powered repeater that can be nailed into a tree to get better range. The laptops run Linux using AMD's Geode processor, and have 128MB of memory and 500MB of flash memory rather than a hard disk.
Apparently a bunch of Central American countries have put in a purchase order, so it's going to get out there as soon as production-line versions are available. Congratulations to Nick Negroponte and the MIT Media Lab, and of course to OLPC.
Tuesday, 5 December 2006
MIT's $100 laptop finally ships
Posted by Godfrey Parkin at 13:47
Labels: developing nations, education, laptop, technology
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