Projo Subterranean Homepage NewsBottom-up journalism from the pros: News, tech and culture by Sheila Lennon |
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Through the Give One Get One program, which runs through Dec. 31 at Nicholas Negroponte's One Laptop per Child (Laptop.org), you can get a XO laptop for a child you know and send one to a child in in Afghanistan, Cambodia, Haiti, Mongolia or Rwanda. The price for both: $399, up to $200 which may be tax-deductible, They're bright and child-sized (7 1/2-inch screens), heatproof, sealed against dust, chargeable in all sorts of ways; they run on the Linux-based Sugar operating system, and come with impressive collaboration software and apps with which to Paint, Write, Chat, compose music, play games and read RSS feeds. Each contains an 802.11b/g wireless card. I think it’s possible that when I’m done telling everyone I know about the project in the next few months I’ll donate it to an organization that will have more use for it than I will. Aaron's review begins, "I got my XO Laptop shipped via FedEx this morning. In the box was..." and, along the way, he offers an overview of his first hours with it that's worth reading if you want a quick overview of the little Linux computer: (Here's the link again) Power users will snort at the specs of this machine. It has only one gigabyte of storage — all flash memory — with 20 percent of that occupied by the XO’s system software. And the processor is feeble by conventional standards. Starting up takes two minutes, and switching between programs is poky. Several tech bloggers noted that this could be a first programming environment similar to their own experiences with the Commodore 64 of the early '80s. Laptop Magazine offered a walkthrough review in September (Hands-On with One Laptop Per Child's XO Laptop) of the slower pre-production model, useful for its rundown on features and potential and many photos. Because of the built-in networking and sharing of these little machines, it might not make sense to buy (and give) just one if you know little folks who could use these. They would use them -- together -- in different ways from the tech-savvy folks who review them. If you like the concept but have no need to own one, you can also simply donate one or many for $200 each, and your entire contribution will be tax-deductible. Related: Laptop Project Enlivens Peruvian Hamlet, AP, Dec. 24, 2007 1 CommentsLeave a comment |
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merci pour le parce vous avez realiser tou ca cool bravo pour le rwanda
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