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Laptop for poor children set for mass production

Laptop for poor children set for mass production

Laptop for poor children set for mass production
mongabay.com
July 23, 2007

The “$100 laptop” is set to go into mass production after the One Laptop Per Child Foundation (OLPC) received orders for 3 million machines, the requisite number to make the project viable.



The initiative will sell the PCs to education ministries in an effort to get the computers in the hands of some world’s poorest children.



The laptops have been billed as a durable low-cost PC for students in developing countries. The project has received support from Google, AMD, Brightstar, News Corporation, Quanta Computer, and Red Hat. The laptop, which was tested by the U.S. State Department in last November, is WiFi- and cell phone-enabled, and can be powered using a hand-crank. It is designed to be used in harsh environments such as remote rural areas in developing countries. The weather-proof laptops will available in some 30 colors.


So far the governments of Uruguay, Argentina, Brazil, Pakistan, Thailand, Nigeria and Libya have agreed to pay about $175 for each OLPC laptop, though the price is eventually expected to approach its $100 target. The Associated Press reports that the laptop’s manufacturer, Quanta Computer Inc., will earn a profit of $3 per machine, below it’s normal margin. The foundation behind the project will also collect $1 from each laptop sold. Some American computer manufacturers have expressed concern that OLPC laptops could end up in U.S. schools, creating fierce competition in the domestic PC market.



The laptop has faced other criticism, notably from some development experts who say that developing countries should not be asked to foot the bill for what is an unproven technology. Nevertheless the OLPC computer has won acclaim from the U.N. and the U.S. state department.



Earlier this month Intel announced that it had teamed with the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) program, agreeing to contribute funding and join the board of the nonprofit group. The announcement despite Intel chairman Craig Barrett’s earlier criticism of the project. Intel had sought to boost support for its own child-focused Classmate PC.



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