I saw it, used it and like it. I was skeptical prior to seeing this. i also 
have a video clip, and am waiting to get the green light.
   
  it is a rugged little PC, but works like a charm.
   
  It looks a lot like etch a sketch..except it is green in color.
   
  it has no moving parts, no disk drive. but has 3-4 USB drives. 
   
  you can instant connect with others on the network.
   
  it takes a while to boot up but once it is up and running it is pretty neat 
and if they sold it in India, i would probably buy one given the power cut and 
other hassles here.
   
  kamla

ashok _ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  I thought this project would never see the light of day, but they have
started shipping.
Has anyone on this list seen / used any prototypes of this ?

When I look at the features, it seems to have the bare minimums of
everything - color screen, email, browser, word processor... something
that the average user might be satisfied with.

Eight Countries to Receive 2,500 OLPC Test Machines


DesktopLinux.com reports that eight countries will receive a share of
the initial 2,500 OLPC machines in February.

"The experiment is a prelude to mass production of the kid-friendly,
lime-green-and-white laptops scheduled to begin in July, when 5
million will be built.

State educators in Brazil, Uruguay, Libya, Rwanda, Pakistan, Thailand
and possibly Ethiopia and the West Bank will receive the first of the
machines in February's pilot before a wider rollout to Indonesia and a
handful of other countries."

With a goal of 150 million delivered by 2010, OLPC will alter the
landscape of computing around the world. Further, it could help Linux
marketshare reach 20% or more globally, entirely as a side effect of
the project's primary purpose.




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