Uruguay Places First Order for 'One Laptop per Child'
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| The 'XO' laptop is durable, waterproof and solar-powered. Photo Credit: Wikipedia |
The Uruguayan government made the first official order of 100,000 laptops at the end of October and there are plans to purchase another 300,000 by 2009 to provide one for every Uruguayan schoolchild.
The order was placed on behalf of the state-run Laboratorio Tecnológico del Uruguay, which runs a large educational and communication project called Ceibal, according to BBC News. Eight or nine of the country's nineteen regions will receive the first batch of computers.
The Peruvian president, Alan García, announced on 29 October that the government has set up a 6.5 million USD fund to buy the first 44,000 laptops for Peruvian schoolchildren in the near future.
One hundred thousand teachers will also receive USD 150 from the government and a loan of 350 USD from Peru Central Bank to buy their own laptops, that they can pay back at a rate of 9 USD a month for four years.
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The One Laptop per Child (OLPC) laptop — called the 'XO' — is designed to be used by children in developing countries. It is durable, waterproof, solar-powered and has a special display that is readable outside, even in harsh sunlight.
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"OLPC is in discussion with a number of other developing countries and looks forward to them coming on board soon," adds Lustig.
OLPC was founded by Nicholas Negroponte of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab, and its board is made up of various people from the computing industry and education.
The OLPC laptop — called the 'XO' — is designed to be used by children in developing countries. It is durable, waterproof, solar-powered and has a special display that is readable outside, even in harsh sunlight.
The laptops were intended to cost 100 USD — they were originally known as "100 USD laptops" — but the cost is currently 188 USD.
"The long-term goal is for the laptop cost to be 100 USD. Mass production began yesterday [5 November] in China and as the volume [of production] ramps up and economies of scale are achieved, the per unit cost will come down," said Lustig.
Contributed by Daniela Hirschfeld, journalist for the Science and Development Network. Reprinted with permission from SciDev.net.
To read another Global Envision article about the development of the One Laptop per Child initiative, see PCs For the Poor: As Good As Their Hype.
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