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== Documentation == |
== Documentation == |
Revision as of 23:39, 3 February 2008
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Documentation
Although I'm more technical than most, I'm not really a very sophisticated OLPC user. I have lots of questions about my own XO that I haven't been able to resolve yet. For example, I had a few minutes before work this morning, and I was just not able to connect to my access point. Instead of checking my email and the wiki, I spent all my time trying and failing to connect to the Internet.
I kept trying, because sometimes I CAN connect. I wish I new why it was intermittent, and what I can do about it.
This morning I read a help request from someone in the G1G1 community who says his Journal is corrupted. He wanted instructions on how to fix it. I remember the same question coming up a few days ago, and I went looking for it so I could read the response in case it was something that would help in this new case.
I just spent as much time looking for that info as I spent this morning trying to connect to the Internet. I failed again.
So, I've decided to set myself a new goal. That goal is this: Become familiar with the wiki. Really, really familiar. And then, once I've become familiar with the wiki, I'm going to start editing it and adding bits of useful information I find as I go. Then, I'll have a documentation repository that I can reference whenever I have a question, and everyone else can benefit too.
Please, let me know if you have any comments. Ed 11:17, 31 January 2008 (EST)
Issues I'm tracking
WPA Support
In help ticket #5695, Katie notes: "WPA was not supported in the Sugar release that shipped with the XO, only via a command line interface. In early December an update for full WPA support and enhanced WEP support was released. If you have access to a public or non-WPA hotspot, you can perform the update online. If not, you can download the WPA script to access your home hotspot and then upgrade."
About Me
Who am I?
I'm sort of a jack-of-all-trades (*ahem*: the quote ends: master of none, but I usually leave that off). I have a bachelor's degree in English, but the closest I ever got to using that degree was when I was a Technical Writer ten or twelve years ago. After that I followed my interests, gradually migrating from writing to Web development to programming. I worked at a variety of startups in Silicon Valley during the heady 1.0 days. I made no money, but it was fun.
These days I'm a "Programmer/Analyst" and I work for the City of Fresno, California. Things are mellow now. My son Thor just turned seven. Technology is still fun. Our primary environment at home is Apple (iMac and iPhone). Family members have wintel PC's, and at work I'm in front of an XP workstation all day long. I have a love for Open Source, though, that dates back to the crazy ad-hoc days of startupdom, and I have a laptop running Ubuntu.
How does this tie in to OLPC?
The concepts of Open Source and collaborative development can reach beyond the computer screen, into the real world. My nature as a generalist, as opposed to specialist, means that I like to learn new things all the time. Wouldn't it be great if all people could just (er, get along?) collaborate? If we can give children tools that allow them, nay encourage them, to learn?
Have you read Cory Doctorow?
A year or so ago I found out about Cory Doctorow through his contributions to the Boing Boing blog. Since then I've read everything on his site, which includes most of the books he's written. He's a science fiction writer, and he portrays vision of the future which are extremely alluring. Start with Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom: http://www.craphound.com/down/
How does this tie in to OLPC again?
Now Thor has an XO laptop. It was a textbook example of G1G1 done right. We ordered, using Paypal; It arrived a week before Christmas; T-Mobile account activiated without a hitch; We've had zero hardware or software problems with the unit we received (and I even got the WEP workaround working, so we can connect to our FON access point!)
There IS a barrier to entry, though. Even though I am familiar with Linux, and Open Source. Even though I'm comfortable going off the support/consumer grid. I know I can't just return this thing to Best Buy if I don't like it, or it's broken, or I can't use it. But still, Thor and I would like to know how to use the thing. How to really USE the thing.
Thor is at just the right age to start thinking abstractly. He's reading now. And he's got a sharp sense of environmentalism that I really want to nurture. It's nice that the thing is low power, but we'd like to take it up a notch and figure out solar power. Or bicycle power! Wouldn't it be great if you could say to your kid, unlimited computer time, son. Catch is, you have to power the unit yourself by riding your bicycle with the battery hooked up to a hub-generator. Battery is dead? Time to get outside and ride! So, I started poking around on laptop.org, and I found the wiki, and I started learning.
It all came together, though, quite recently. Someone calling himself isforinsects on Flickr commented on one of my pictures (http://www.flickr.com/photos/writesmith/2217493771/in/pool-olpc). I checked out his profile, and I ended up on somebody's Web site (I'll have to try and figure out the details here). This Web site informed me that OLPC could use some volunteer help, and to contact A. Holt for more information.
I sent Adam an email, with just a few lines about me. I included my phone number. I was really amazed when I actually got a call, just a few hours later. Adam embraced me with much enthusiasm, got me all logged in and in the IRC channel. Now I'm really poking around. And I'm finding an ad-hoc community like the one in Down and Out. Wow, this is cool! Imagine what it would be like if this crazy social experiment actually works.
So Here I Am
My goals:
* Learn more about the XO * Help others get the most out of their XO's!
I think those are complementary. Just like we hope there is a kid in the class who just "gets it" and then starts to show the other kids how to do cool stuff, and he ends up learning more in the process. For once, I'd like to be that kid.
Thanks for reading.
Ed