Reply from the MIT group working on the $100 laptop. --
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--- Begin Message ---We appreciate your interest in the $100 Laptop initiative. Please know we receive more than 100 emails per day regarding the project. We are a small team working on making this project a reality and unfortunately we are unable to answer each e-mail personally. Following please find informative details on the project. Inquiries about buying the laptop regretfully cannot be answered. Please note that the $100 laptops--not yet in production--will not be available for sale. The laptops will only be distributed to schools directly through large government initiatives. All public information will be listed on our website. Thank you. Executive Summary The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the One Laptop per Child (OLPC) non-profit association have launched a global program to equip hundreds of millions of students and their teachers with ultra-low-cost, individual, connected laptop computers to dramatically enhance the children’s primary and secondary education. These will be fully powered, general-purpose laptops, sized for children and adolescents, running Open Source software, with wireless mesh-network connectivity. The machines will be built and sold at cost to ministries of education, with a floating price targeted at $100 and thereafter floating down. According to the present schedule, integrated prototypes of the Gen-1 laptop will be available Q3, ’06. Manufacturing begins Q4. The first 10 to 15 million Gen-1 pilot-phase machines will ship by or before Q1, ’07, to five or six large, geographically and culturally diverse countries. Each of these nations will identify three or more regions within their country emphasizing, when possible, rural and remote areas where all students in all primary and secondary grades receive a personal and connected machine: One Laptop per Child. An essential feature of the pilot program will be training, logistics and an administrative initiative based in the host country. Here, in partnership with local educational organizations or other groups to be determined, MIT will help create the means to implement a carefully designed, exponential process to impart the necessary technological and pedagogical skills to classroom teachers over a period of approximately six months. OLPC technology incorporates design and engineering advances developed at MIT's Media Lab, plus innovations in manufacturing and distribution to bring costs in line with the host countries’ budget structures. The laptops will be made available only to schoolchildren and their teachers, through government programs and not through retail or commercial channels. In parallel, OLPC is in discussion with a handful of well known large and global companies to release a commercial version circa $200 at the same time. Hardware Its hardware specifications, as of October 2005, are: 500 MHz CPU (Processor) by AMD (Advanced Micro Devices) Inc. 1 GB of flash memory (no hard drive) SVGA 8" diagonal display (dual LCD Color/Black & White mode for power conservation and outdoor reading); estimated cost $35 128 MB of DRAM AC Cord that doubles as carrying strap as the power source and a hand-crank (one minute of cranking gives enough power for 10 minutes of operating). The cost of materials and assembly for each laptop is estimated to be approximately $100. Software All of the software on the $100 Laptop will be open-source. The projected software as of November 2005 is: Red Hat Linux variant as operating system A web browser A word processor An email program A programming system Participating countries Brazil, Thailand, Egypt, United States (Massachusetts), Cambodia, Costa Rica and Tunisia have already committed in various ways. The laptops will be sold only to governments, to be distributed through the ministries of education willing to adopt the policy of “one laptop per child”. We will begin with five pilot countries and one U.S. state. Once this occurs, we hope to extend our reach to other nations. Prototype Nicholas Negroponte is scheduled to demo a working prototype of the device on November 16, 2005 at a United Nations technology conference in Tunisia. However, the device shown will be a rough estimation, as work is still being done on the development of the device for both performance and pricing issues. Negroponte estimated that the screen alone required three more months of development. For updates please visit: http://laptop.media.mit.edu http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/$100_laptop
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