I recently I had the extraordinary experience of hearing MIT professor and
project leader Nicholas Negroponte explain what the
One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) project will mean.
It’s obviously going to transform the lives of children living in developing
countries. It may also directly affect people like you and me running businesses
or working in IT.
In Negroponte’s words, the goal of the project is to bring the maximum number
of laptops to kids in developing countries, on a one-to-one basis, for the
purpose of education. This means that each child owns their laptop, which
Negroponte said was a crucial part of the plan as it will motivate them to care
for and repair their laptops themselves.
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These ideas are based on 40 years of research by Negroponte and others, plus
experience from two similar projects – one in Costa Rica that began in 1988
using desktop computers, and a more recent initiative with about 50 laptops in
Cambodia.
The Costa Rica project was successful and now nearly all the children of that
country have access to desktop computers. This seems to have transformed the
country’s economy – 51 percent of its exports are now integrated circuits.
The OLPC project is set to change the world by helping to educate some of the
half billion or so children living in developing countries. It shifted from a
grand plan to an imminent reality last December when Quanta, one of the largest
laptop manufacturers, said it would build the laptops.
Brazil, Thailand, Argentina and Nigeria have placed orders and are likely to
receive the first deliveries next year. China, India and Egypt are expected to
be the next recipients. Initially each device will cost about $130, and the
price should drop to $50 by 2010.
OLPC aims to sell 100 million units a year by 2008, and each unit will use
processors made by AMD. This will revolutionise the economies of scale for AMD,
which could be good for you and me. Likewise, a few years from now Linux will be
the dominant desktop operating system in many of the developing countries around
the world.
The Costa Rica experience shows recipients of OLPC devices are likely to
become economically significant in their own right, and a percentage will likely
migrate to the UK and other countries for work. The laptops will use
peer-to-peer wireless mesh network technologies to provide internet access with
the minimum of infrastructure, particularly useful for people living in remote
locations.
This is a hugely significant project. It will reshape the future of many
developing countries, and in doing so it could reshape IT in the developed world
as well.
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