Talk:OLPC FAQ: Difference between revisions
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:You misunderstand the goals of the OLPC and the customers. The goal is to educate children but the customers are national Ministries of Education. It is up to them to choose the keyboard layout. |
:You misunderstand the goals of the OLPC and the customers. The goal is to educate children but the customers are national Ministries of Education. It is up to them to choose the keyboard layout. |
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==Is it possible to add a pen input interface (e.g. touchsreen) for OLPC Laptop?== |
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If OLPC Laptop has the pen input interface, it will be a good start point for the R&D of the handwirting recognition in the open source community and good for children in the furture. |
Revision as of 03:22, 9 June 2006
'Others have already started a website that sells our laptop for $300, so the balance of money can be used to support the poorest children.'
Where is this website? It might be good to have a link so interested parties can sign up. -206.58.200.30 19:35, 12 February 2006 (EST)
http://www.pledgebank.com/100laptop Foneros 11:33, 25 May 2006 (EDT)
Which countries are confirmed?
Why not have the product available to poverty level children in the USA? We have an art project for low income kids that could use this. http://www.riversidenet.info/
I remember reading something about Costa Rica, is this Central Anmerican country at the project? --Dagoflores 02:57, 19 March 2006 (EST) Answer: ___
Where/how should interested parties ask questions about OLPC?
I think it would be useful to put that question in the FAQ (aka "What if my question isn't listed here in the FAQ?")
A very nice idea. --Walter
In addition to the FAQ, I wonder if an "AQ"--Asked Questions, i.e. not necessarily frequent--area might be useful, since many people might come with a specific question or two, but might not easily find what they want by browsing the wiki.
Perhaps we can use this Talk page for these sorts of things. --Walter
Here are some questions of mine (Qwertie):
- I've heard that individuals won't be allowed to buy OLPC laptops, or that it won't be available to the public. If so, why not? Wouldn't it be good for the project? You can sell them without having to provide a general-purpose OS preinstalled, after all.
- OLPC relies on economy of scale to reach low prices. To improve scale, why not sell important parts separately from the laptop? For example, the screen technology could be sold for use in home theatre remotes and in-car computers at higher prices to subsidize OLPC somewhat. Assuming there is some central OLPC organization with employees, I would suggest creating a few non-laptop departments focused on other mass-market uses of the technology--then again, attempting to find companies that would be interesting in buying a million or two units might be a better strategy.
I feel like restricting the laptop and its components to one purpose is unnecessary--then again, I haven't studied the problem. Maybe someone can explain why it's necessary, but I wonder if it's just a lack of managerial resources.
The bottom line is that our mission is learning, not laptops. While we will be working with a commercial partner at some point for both machines and interesting parts--we've been looking at models where by the commercial side can help drive down the cost for the kids--our immediate priority is the non-commercial machine. --Walter
What is the $100 Laptop, really?
I moved these discussions from the article page to this discussion page. Walter 01:57, 5 May 2006 (EDT)
Hello. Wouldn't it be better to have a small HD instead? As far as I know, Flash memory has a much higher Gb cost than that of a standard HD. I also know that there are ridiculously small HDs with really large storage capacity, at least in comparison to the meager 512Mb you currently propose. Wouldn't a larger capacity storage help to extend the life of such a machine?
- The biggest single point of failure of laptops is the HD. We are opting for robustness over more on-board storage. Synchronization with the "school server" should help mitigate some of the capacity challenges raised. Walter 02:03, 5 May 2006 (EDT)
- Actually, I have been told that HDs are only the 2nd biggest point of failure; internal connectors breaking is Number 1. We are trying to eliminate most of those as well.Walter 03:40, 7 June 2006 (EDT)
Somewhere in this wiki (in the discussion of system software), the starting paragraph "seriously questions" Linux for OLPC. But in this FAQ, it starts off by saying it will be Linux-based. To cut short the argument, why not try PuppyLinux now so that the project can move forward to content, training and localization concerns?
- The Fedora kernel[1] is sufficiently far-enough along that developers can start exploring some of these higher-level issues. Also, we hope that many of these issues will be addressed upstream such that they benefit the entire community, not just those using this particular platform. Walter 02:03, 5 May 2006 (EDT)
How do I request an answer?
How do I request an answer? --Dagoflores 01:45, 24 May 2006 (EDT)
- What is the question in question? Walter 06:37, 24 May 2006 (EDT)
Cambodia test?
The FAQ mentions Cambodia twice. Can you link to more information about the pilot in Cambodia? Or provide details about it in the FAQ? When? How many devices? What hardware? What ages? What type of network access? What software was used? What operating systems?
*BSD operating systems
Has there been work with using any BSD operating systems on the hardware? journaling flash file system for any BSD?
Inclusion of BASIC / easy to learn programming?
The inclusion of BASIC in the early home computers in the west created a generation of children who could program, many of whom turned into professional programmers. The UK IT industry for one owes a lot to these early home computers. Will a language, such as BASIC, be included with these laptops? - Dan Huby, dan at huby dot me dot uk.
- We will ship with at least three "Turing machines": Python, Javascript, and Logo. Walter 14:44, 24 May 2006 (EDT)
How will these socieites will be impacted
How will the poorest socieites in the world will be impacted by a sudden injection of technology on this scale? This is a critical question that needs much deeper answers than this FAQ has given. I've added some necessary questions to dig deeper:
- How will the success of the project be gauged?
- How much research has been conducted on how the societies will be impacted?
- How will family, community, and religious structures that have existed for generations be impacted?
- How will the project affect relationships between generations or traditional social structures based on age?
Everythingisok 11:21, 25 May 2006 (EDT)
Does anyone remember the Cybiko?
I made a quick page about it, Cybiko, and I can add more if anyone wants to know. This was back in 2001 that I spent 24/7/365 working with the device over RS-232. http://wiki.laptop.org/index.php/Cybiko
Would optional sound capabilities lower the price?
I wonder if the sound capabilities are really necessary, an option would be to leave them out to lower the price of the basic PC, and produce an optional USB device for sound capabilities for those that need it (blind people, analphabets learning to read, etc.). --Dagoflores 01:04, 17 March 2006 (EST)
- The sound card can also do modem. A modem can attach to radio and phone lines, that gives you the internet. 62.252.0.11 10:12, 18 March 2006 (EST)
- Music is fundumental and will not be compromised. We will have sound. Also the microphone input can be used for sensor input. Finally, a modem is of little use without a phone. Walter 10:56, 26 May 2006 (EDT)
Will the display be able to rotate orientation??
I visualize a display with the ability to switch orientation, from a horizontal (traditional PC) display for work with width needs, such as Internet pages, into a vertical (book page format) for reading e-books, with the lines running vertically, hopefully in two columns of text, (which has been demostrated to be easier to read, and to add graphics into it at one column width). --Dagoflores 00:54, 17 March 2006 (EST) Answer: ____ not yet. --Dagoflores 13:48, 23 March 2006 (EST)
- yes Walter 11:00, 26 May 2006 (EDT)
What software will be used with the $100 laptop?
- (User-contributed) - PuppyLinux is one open-source project very much suited to the OLPC machine. Its creator and lead developer is an Australian professor, Barry Kauler, bkauler at goosee dot com.
FAQ from Teachers
I was talking with some teachers in Laos about this project. Here the FAQ from teachers OLPC_Laos.
Wording
Are "OLPC" and the "$100 Computer" the same?
- No. One Laptop per Child (OLPC) is the name of a non-profit association whose mission is to provide a laptop computer for every child as "both a window and a tool: a window into the world and a tool with which to think." The $100 Computer (or Laptop) is the machine we are developing towards the realization of this mission. Walter 15:35, 4 June 2006 (EDT)
Are there efforts to make olpc an international organisation?
At the moment olpc is an american based non profit organisation. The develpment of the $100 laptop hardware design was an excellent work! But isn't it time now to make this a more international movement?
- The open source community is called "External Developers".
- Some countries are not able to take part in olpc because they fear the american influence.
- The Boss of the United Nations traditionaly is from Africa and is black - couldn't olpc do the same?
You could probably lock this
The wifi spammer hit this page, probably because FAQ usually means lots of readers. However, this page would work just fine if it was locked and had a comment at the top directing people to use the Discussion tab. And the side benefit is that more people learn that the Discussion tab exists.
- I had locked down the Main Page for the same reason. I'm using a redirect hack to try to work around it. We'll see how well (and how long) it works. Walter 18:26, 7 June 2006 (EDT)
Could you get the next generation off of staggered QWERTY keyboards?
- QWERTY keyboards are only used in countries with a Latin-based alphabet. Many of the target countries will not use QWERTY because they have a totally different writing system.
First, congratulations! This is a wonderful project that plenty of folks said couldn't be done.
Since your targetted users have no investment in the legacy typewriter keyboard, I really wish you could take this opportunity to move the world off of the darned things.
- Many of the target countries DO have a substantial investment in their existing typewriter keyboard layouts.
Could you provide a keyboard with the keys arranged in columns, with a more sensible layout as the default?
- Can you cite any studies that demonstrate columnar arrngements to be superior to staggered arrangements. I suspect that staggered arrangements are better for fast typists.
SHIFT and BACKSPACE under the thumbs somehow instead of the pinkies? Seems like this is the *ideal* opportunity to get a new generation of users onto a better typing foundation -- faster learning, faster typing, fewer errors, less stress on the tendons, etc. Your volumes are such that the development of inexpensive keyboards that match your design would be inevitable.
Getting the next generation of users on a decent keyboard would do the world a big favor (to add to the HUGE favor you are already doing it!). If there are extra one-time engineering costs associated with doing the right thing keyboard-wise, I would personally contribute $100 toward them -- and I'll bet lots of other people would do the same.
- You misunderstand the goals of the OLPC and the customers. The goal is to educate children but the customers are national Ministries of Education. It is up to them to choose the keyboard layout.
Is it possible to add a pen input interface (e.g. touchsreen) for OLPC Laptop?
If OLPC Laptop has the pen input interface, it will be a good start point for the R&D of the handwirting recognition in the open source community and good for children in the furture.