One Laptop per Child Executive Goes For-Profit
The ambitious project to create a $100 laptop for the developing world is finding itself in the headlines once again. Mary Lou Jepsen, a top executive of the One Laptop per Child program is leaving the non-profit to start her own for-profit company to market the technology she developed for OLPC. Jepsen believes that by working with greater volume, she believes she can have a greater impact.
Since founder Nicholas Negroponte announced his intention to create $100 laptop in 2005, the project has not quite met it's lofty goals. Despite pilot projects in a few countries, many foreign governments aren't buying. Critics are also questioning whether the laptop is living up to its educational expectations.
"We don't have any reports that this play and enjoyment is transferring into real learned knowledge and real growth and development of the child," Wayan Vota, editor of OLPCNews.com said. "And that's really the key metric Negroponte needs to show to have OLPC grow and take off with the developing world."


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Non-Profits vs. Profits
It seems to me that this has implications for what tasks NGO's try to take on-- the results of how much more efficient Jepsen's new company can handle the task of getting technology into the hands of the world's poor may have larger takeaway lessons beyond One Laptop per Child.
Check out an online interview with Negroponte
The International Herald Tribunehas an interview with Negroponte discussing updates regarding One Laptop per Child.
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