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A Hundred-Dollar Laptop for Hungry Minds

The MIT Media Lab is working with corporations and governments to turn their vision of a computer for every child into a reality.

By Kevin Bullis

September 28, 2005

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At Technology Review's Emerging Technology Conference at MIT today, Nicholas Negroponte, founder of MIT's Media Lab, showed off the design of a laptop he hopes can be sold for just $100. At that price, governments in developing countries could afford to buy one laptop for every child, he said, opening up educational opportunities for millions.


Click here to see the $100 laptop design.

"If you take any world problem, any issue on the planet, the solution to that problem certainly includes education," Negroponte said during his opening keynote speech for the conference. And "in education, the roadblock is the laptop."

Negroponte said he had learned from previous work with schools in Senegal, Costa Rica, India, and other countries that simply providing access to a computer is the key to turning on a child's innate creativity and curiosity.

"Even in the developing parts of the world, kids take to computers like fish to water," Negroponte said.

Negroponte, along with MIT researchers Seymour Papert, Joseph Jacobson, and other colleagues, announced the $100 Laptop initiative in January, with corporate sponsorship from AMD, Brightstar, Google, News Corp., and Red Hat.

The same companies will work together to manufacture the device, which, although still under development, will at a minimum feature a full-color screen, Wi-Fi connectivity, a processor that runs at approximately 500 MHz, and 1 GB of Flash memory. It will also have a hand crank for generating power in areas of the world without electricity.

Children would be able to take the computers with them wherever they go, learning languages, math, science, geography, and economics, as well as playing games and chatting online with friends. They will likely also be able to use the devices to draw and compose music.

Already, Brazil, Thailand, and Egypt have expressed interest in buying 500,000 to a million of these "revolutionary" laptops each as soon as they're available. And dozens more countries have made inquiries.

Seymour Papert, an emeritus MIT mathematician and educational theorist who has spent decades promoting the use of computers for learning, told Technology Review earlier this week that he believes the laptops will help students enjoy subjects such as math, which is typically less engaging when done with pencil and paper. And while students will be able to play electronic games, they'll also be able to write their own games, honing their planning and reasoning skills in the process.

A laptop's multimedia capabilities, Papert says, can make it a good platform for communicating complex thinking about subjects such as global warming, which are often better understood visually.

Through the Internet, the computers will also provide a connection to the wider world, potentially creating a sense of openness and global community that could counter ills such as terrorism.

"I think there is good reason to believe that if everything were open, fewer bad things could happen," says Papert. "So give everyone the tools to observe and communicate what is happening."

Story continues below


But not everyone agrees that providing laptops, even inexpensive ones, is the best way to help children around the world. Many would rather spend the money to hire additional teachers and to reduce class sizes.

That, in fact, was the popular sentiment in Maine when then-governor Angus King proposed giving a laptop to every seventh grader. According to Papert, email to the governor's office ran against the initiative by a whopping 15 to 1 margin.

Comments

  • Stay in touch & How to participate
    Hi,

    I would like to stay in touch with the project progress and since I come from Bolivia and live the reality of poor childrens in small towns, I would like to know what are the requirements to take part of the project?

    Thanks for any information,
       Carlos Ugarte

    E-mail: ugartecarlos@yahoo.de
    or: carlos.ugarte@update.com
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Carlos Ugarte)
    11/22/2005
    Posts:1
  • Good initiative
    As far as the laptop computer meet safety standard and considering LCD stand to protect sight effect of the age group hence the invention is highly recommendable.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Uzoma)
    12/28/2005
    Posts:1
  • Stay in touch & How to participate
    Hi,

    I would like to stay in touch with the project progress and since I come from Bolivia and live the reality of poor childrens in small towns, I would like to know what are the requirements to take part of the project?

    Thanks for any information,
       Carlos Ugarte

    E-mail: ugartecarlos@yahoo.de
    or: carlos.ugarte@update.com
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Carlos Ugarte)
    11/22/2005
    Posts:1
  • Good initiative
    As far as the laptop computer meet safety standard and considering LCD stand to protect sight effect of the age group hence the invention is highly recommendable.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Uzoma)
    12/28/2005
    Posts:1
  • when does it comes out
    when does it come out, and is it gonna be in america too
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (nick)
    03/11/2006
    Posts:1
  • sudent
    so 46- to1- thi tran soc son- soc son- ha noi- Viet Nam
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (nguyen huu hieu)
    03/17/2006
    Posts:1
  • $ 100 laptop
    This laptop should be made available to anyone who can pay the cost and certain percentage of profit. In India many students are paying an equivalent sum for one years education from private institutes and still have no access to a computer. When it is not given free more systems can be made available for the people. Even it is given free these systems reaches the hands of the affordable people through illeagal means or the poor who got it pawn it to a money lender who sells it to the affordable. Many people above the poverty line can afford it.
    ramababu_velaga@yahoo.com
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Sreeramababu Velaga)
    03/19/2006
    Posts:1
  • Operating system for $100 laptop
    Recently I came across a linux distro by the name of Puppy linux which comes bundled with the basic requiredments. The software is 62MB and can be installed form a usb stick and it is good and satisfied me with its appearance and all other things. I dont have any knowledge about the OS provided by Redhat. I prefer the laptop should be designed to be compatible with such distros. The mother board should have provison to be upgraded with faster processors and higher RAM. My request is that this laptop should be suitable to work for longer time.
    I am a teacher teaching for 13 yaer old to 16 years. Many of my students are paying $400 as school fees per anum and many of them has no PC at home. These children also should be considered for this project. These can afford the PC and doesnt ned any coaching in using it.
    Sreeramababu Velaga,
    Physics teacher,
    Aditya IIT Talent school,
    Kakinada, Andhra Pradesh, India.
    PIN 533003.
    email; ramababu_velaga@yahoo.com
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Sreeramababu Velaga)
    03/19/2006
    Posts:1

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