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ONE LAPTOP PER CHILD DRIVES |
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By Culturekiosque Staff NEW YORK, 25 DECEMBER 2009 One Laptop per Child (OLPC), a nonprofit organization whose mission is to help provide every child in the world access to a modern education, announced Tuesday its product road map to deliver robust laptop performance and innovative design for use in the most remote, poor and rural communities and at the lowest power and cost in the industry. "The first version of OLPCs child-centric laptop, the XO, is a revolution in low-cost, low-power computing. The XO has been distributed to more than 1.4 million children in 35 countries and in 25 languages," said Nicholas Negroponte, founder and chairman of One Laptop per Child. "To fulfill our mission of reaching 500 million children in all remote corners of the planet, OLPC will continue to innovate in design and performance. Because we are a non-profit, we hope that industry will copy us." The new versions of the XO laptop will be as follows: XO 1.5 The XO 1.5 is the same industrial design as the XO 1.0. Based on a VIA processor (replacing AMD), it will provide 2x the speed, 4x DRAM memory and 4x FLASH memory. It will run both the Linux and Windows operating systems. XO 1.5 will be available in January 2010 at about $200 per unit. The actual price floats in accordance with spot markets, particularly for those of DRAM and FLASH.
About One Laptop per Child One Laptop per Child (OLPC at http://www.laptop.org) is a non-profit organization created by Nicholas Negroponte and others from the MIT Media Lab to design, manufacture and distribute laptop computers that are inexpensive enough to provide every child in the world access to knowledge and modern forms of education. Headline photo above: The XO 3.0's New Design Related Culturekiosque Archives Life Quality Quantified: The Brutality of Happenstance The Nexus of Art and Social Documentary: The Photographs of Sebastiao Salgado Film Review: To Sir: But Without the Love Best Board Books for Very Young Children Dying Darfur: Sudan Genocide Subject of New DVD, Book Steve McCurry: Capturing the Face of Asia Gioia's 2004 NEA report on the decline of literacy in the U. S. | |
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