Predecessors of $100 Laptop: Difference between revisions

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#REDIRECT [[Predecessors of OLPC]]
The OLPC is not entirely new. Like most developments in our modern world, it is built on what has come before. This page is intended to list some of the predecessors of the OLPC or key parts of its technology. We won't be mentioning mainstream stuff like laptops here, but things that are less well-known but which can teach us lessons as the OLPC design evolves.

* [[Dynabook]] was [[Alan Kay]]'s vision of a book-sized portable learning device.
* [[LOGO]] is a programming language developed by [[Seymour Papert]] in order to teach kids how to control robots called turtles.
* various [[Minimal Linux distros]] have been developed in order to use Linux on machines with limited memory and storage.
* [[Cybiko]] was a wireless messaging device for kids that was sold in the USA and UK for several years.
* [[Ricochet]] is a wireless mesh network that was deployed throughout San Francisco and the Bay Area in 1997. I remember that it reached our offices in Redwood City. This is not wi-fi.
* Apple's [[E-mate]] was a laptop version of their Newton and was intended to be a child's personal computer. They are still available on Ebay.
* [[Simputer]] is a handheld computer originating in India with some similiar ideas
* [http://www.ndiyo.org/systems Ndiyo Nivo] is a "ultra-thin-client hardware" - not a laptop, but another idea on cost reduction (maybe a "thin" OLPC along such lines could of interest in future iterations?)
* [[AlphaSmart]] is a widescreen Palm-based '''laptop''' intended to be given to every child in a class.

Latest revision as of 10:27, 10 June 2006