The OLPC Wiki: Difference between revisions

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==What's new==
==What's new==
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|A recent article in [http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS7131519895.html DesktopLinux] reported that four countries have each committed to buy 1 million laptops. The OLPC spokesperson was misquoted: no agreement had been signed. We continue to cooperate with Thailand, Brasil, Argentina, and Nigeria, but no one has committed to purchase laptops nor has OLPC asked anyone to sign a purchase agreement yet. We apologize for any confusion.
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|The latest industrial design is in from [http://www.fuseproject.com Fuse Project]. More [[Current_events|OLPC news]] can be found [http://laptop.media.mit.edu/laptopnews.nsf/latest/news here].
|The latest industrial design is in from [http://www.fuseproject.com Fuse Project]. More [[Current_events|OLPC news]] can be found [http://laptop.media.mit.edu/laptopnews.nsf/latest/news here].

Revision as of 00:16, 2 August 2006

  This page is monitored by the OLPC team.

What's new

A recent article in DesktopLinux reported that four countries have each committed to buy 1 million laptops. The OLPC spokesperson was misquoted: no agreement had been signed. We continue to cooperate with Thailand, Brasil, Argentina, and Nigeria, but no one has committed to purchase laptops nor has OLPC asked anyone to sign a purchase agreement yet. We apologize for any confusion.
The latest industrial design is in from Fuse Project. More OLPC news can be found here.
Red Machine.jpg
Red eBook.jpg

About One Laptop per Child

  It's an education project, not a laptop project.

       — Nicholas Negroponte

This is the wiki for the One Laptop per Child association. The mission of this non-profit association is to develop a low-cost laptop—the "$100 Laptop"—a technology that could revolutionize how we educate the world's children. Our goal is to provide children around the world with new opportunities to explore, experiment, and express themselves.

Why do children in developing nations need laptops? Laptops are both a window and a tool: a window into the world and a tool with which to think. They are a wonderful way for all children to learn learning through independent interaction and exploration.

What you'll find inside

A good place to start exploring this wiki is the One Laptop per Child page, which gives an overview of the project. There is a list of frequently asked questions (FAQ); a place to ask a question; and numerous pages on hardware, software, content, and the developer program—and a separate wiki for software development. There are also discussion pages on issues of deployment and country-specific discussions. An extended table of contents is also available.

About this Wiki

The purpose of this wiki is to both share information about the project and to solicit ideas and feedback. The articles and discussion vary from technical to epistemological. We invite comments on every page (please use the "discussion" tab at the top of each page). Please restrict edits to the article pages themselves to facts, not opinions. You are encouraged to sign your work and to make liberal use of citations and links. (Please feel free to make an account and please use ~~~~ as a signature for your comments.) Please note that pages that include the {{OLPC}} template—such as this one—are maintained by the OLPC team and are generally representative of the current state of the project. Other pages—created and maintained by the public—should be read with that in mind.