Mailnews_old

Views 538 Votes 0 Comment 0
?

Shortcut

PrevPrev Article

NextNext Article

Larger Font Smaller Font Up Down Go comment Print
?

Shortcut

PrevPrev Article

NextNext Article

Larger Font Smaller Font Up Down Go comment Print
austraLasia 1331

What's green, cranked, cheap, and educational?
...find out because some Salesian students in Asia, Africa and the Arab world will soon benefit from it.

TUNIS: 16th November 2005 -- The live webcast from Tunis and the WSIS Summit (cf. today's ANS) finished one minute ago, and it has to have been the most entertaining non-technical, educational hour one could have spent glued to a tiny screen!  Kofi Annan and Nicholas Negroponte, developer of the $100 'green machine' OLPC project (One Laptop Per Child), launched the first working prototype of what they called 'the re-invention of the laptop'.  But leave aside any of the technical aspects (and they were few, but fascinating), the most captivating aspect of the press conference was the educational passion of the man who has driven this project, set up a non-profit association to develop it, and is in consultation with 6 major world nations to put it into the hands of the first 6 million children.
    "This is an educational solution, not a laptop one", Negroponte said, neatly deflecting a number of questions of the 'geeky' type.  At the same time, he called on a man standing at the back of the room, Alan Kay, who actually invented the laptop back in 1958.  Kay came forward and said "Yes, and I did it initially for kids".  Negroponte revealed in his response to questions from journalists all around the world, that he had worked in Cambodia building schools with money he was earning from the internet boom, then became a firm friend of the man who is now Prime Minister of Thailand but who was then in telecommunications.  No surprise then that Thailand is firmly committed to being one of the first six countries to take up OLPC, which means they will purchase a minimum of one million units, and will ensure these get to children for no more than the figure quoted, and that the children own their machine.  Negroponte said that was essential. "Does anyone ever wash a rented car?" he asked? "No, the children must own their machine".  And it will look like a kids machine - who else would want to use a green box with a crank handle?
    He spoke passionately about his experience in another situation of giving laptops to children in rural villages where the machine was the brightest light source in the house -which had no electricity.  It goes without saying that the 'green machine' will work without electricity, or with it.  Its crank can produce enough to run it.  It will connect to the internet and 'mesh' with many other similar machines connectively.  In fact there is little that it won't do that children need to do with it.  Since it is not yet in production, there has been no real field testing, other than giving it to kids to jump on, drop, twist, chew or whatever: it is safe, then, and as indestructible as one could hope for.  It works on Open Source software, which means the community worldwide is effectively helping to develop it.
    Negroponte said many things about education in the course of the hour.  He said that all the world's problems required education as part of their solution.  He also said, in response to a question as to why he wouldn't deal with business but with governments to distribute the machine, that he believed firmly that education was a public good and therefore a responsibility of government.  To deal with business rather than government, he said, was to sanction the latter also turning their back on their educational responsibilities.  That does not mean he is not using advice and expertise from the private sector.  And he hopes commercial interests will help produce it - maybe even more cheaply!  Google are a sponsor, so is Rupert Murdoch.
    And who might the other five countries be?  He let some names slip:  Nigeria, Egypt, Brazil, and it's a toss up between China and India.  There will be one other African country. February should see the first models produced and once they have a few million they will be immediately shipped.

_________________________________
AustraLasia is an email service for the Salesian Family of Asia Pacific.  It also functions as an agency for ANS based in Rome.  For RSS feeds, subscribe to www.bosconet.aust.com/rssala.xml.  If you subscribe, email this information and your name will come off the regular email list.  RSS eliminates problems such as multiple mailings, viruses, email bloat.  Think about it!

List of Articles
No. Category Subject Views
2470 ITM 1775_Situation tense in East Timor; Salesian work affected by violence and food shortage 407
2469 KOR 2627_Ordinations in Korea too 407
2468 CIN 3028_Noah's Ark reinvented by China Salesian Youth Services! 407
2467 CIN 0043_DOUBLE-HAPPINESS FOR CHINA PROVINCE 408
2466 VIE 0695_VIETNAM: GOVERNMENT INVITES SDBs INTO FORMER DMZ AREA - AND 'HOME' 408
2465 KOR 1365_Living the Gospel of life - the Korean way. 408
2464 CIN 1764_Stalwart member of the Region (Fr Denis Martin) remembered in new book 408
2463 AUL 0077_A SALESIAN 'FIRST' - WE THINK! 409
2462 AUL 1104_Forum contribution by lay partner: 'Community rediscovered'. 409
2461 Cambodia 1913_Cambodia: reading empowers the children 409
2460 RMG 2123_Writing words that satisfy 16,000 people 409
2459 FIN 2424_News in brief: catch up! 409
2458 Cambodia 2922_Cambodia - Don Bosco looking North? 409
2457 0200_Missing 410
2456 Pac. 0775_SUMBA MISSION (ITM) - A SPACE TO WATCH, THANKS TO KIND BISHOP 410
2455 AUL 0858_Australian Salesian Brother honoured with the 'Order of Australia' Medal 410
2454 Pac. 1207_Salesian Sisters 'investigating the possibilities' in Melanesia 410
2453 FIS 1964_Cebu City's DB Technology Centre's first - and very successful - Engineering graduates 410
2452 FIS 2429_Stories of hope from Pakistan.... 410
2451 Cambodia 2508_Frontpage for friends 410
Board Pagination Prev 1 ... 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 ... 177 Next
/ 177