OLPC talk:Five principles

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Revision as of 07:49, 12 April 2009 by SvenAERTS (talk | contribs)
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RfC: Help discuss our five core principles

Child Ownership, Low Ages, Saturation, Connection, and Free and Open Source.

1. Child Ownership / The kids keep the laptops
2. Low Ages / Focus on early education
3. Saturation / No one gets left out
4. Connection / Connection to the internet
5. Free and Open Source / Free to grow and adapt

--SvenAERTS 07:49, 12 April 2009 (UTC)

RfC: KENIF: the Mnemotechnic means to remember the 5 OLPC Core-Principles = KENIF

The written text is different from the http://olpc.tv - video... I think every word is important, so please consensus and discussions on every line and word eventually + mnemotechnic way to remember it so we all go out with exact the same message.

1. Child Ownership / The kids keep the laptops
2. Low Ages / Focus on early education
3. Saturation / No one gets left out
4. Connection / Connection to the internet
5. Free and Open Source / Free to grow and adapt

Mnemotechnic means to remember: Kids Education No Internet Free = KENIF.

So this could be the name for a fictive character that the kids can talk to on their laptop and turn to for help.

More: Mnemotechnic means to remember OLPC Stuff

--SvenAERTS 07:37, 12 April 2009 (UTC)

RfC: Child Ownership undermined by Government Ownership

Most contracts are that the Governments pay and link this to the Ministry of Education owning them. This means e.g. that the CO2e-Certificates from the laptop and the Photo Voltaics are owned by the Gvt and the revenues from the sale don't go to the account of the kids, but the Gvt. Looking forward to your comments. --SvenAERTS 07:37, 12 April 2009 (UTC)

== What an incredible and noble project this is! I'd like to learn == how these tools will be prevented from becoming a tool of sexual predators (since they are all interconnected and owned by children) or appropriated and exploited by adults for their own gain. I wish such questions didn't need to be asked, but t's a corrupt world out there. A response: The world is indeed a dangerous place for children, but "sexual predators" are the least of it. Much more damage is done to children by the commercial predators who convince children to eat junk food, convince their parents to give them dangerous drugs, create an excessive focus on materialism, and fill parents and children full of fears that prevent them from integrating themselves as equals in the human family. A tool which helps connect children with each other is an excellent defense against all these predators.

reading required

I have an (illiterate) 4yo and 2yo who each have an XO-1, and the laptop is not very interesting to them because of the level of reading required. More work needs to go into the UI if we really want to make it friendly to kids who have no reading. -D Risacher 2008-01-06

We are targeting 6–16. 2–4 is a bit of a stretch for many of the activities. --Walter 08:21, 7 January 2008 (EST)
Perhaps some of the GCompris activities would be more appropriate? (Screenshots here) —Joe 11:09, 7 January 2008 (EST)

Is "Free and Open Source" still a core principle?

If it is, then what are we to make of reports in ComputerWorld that the group's XO laptop may evolve to use only Windows XP as its operating system, with open-source educational applications such as the homegrown Sugar software running on top Report: OLPC may eventually switch from Linux to Windows XP nsistence on open source scares people away, Negroponte says.

If it's no longer a core principle, then shouldn't this section be removed? 68.163.107.22 17:20, 7 May 2008 (EDT)

It's clear that it's not a core principle. Does anyone even bother updating this wiki, or is this another casualty of the removal of this principle? 24.84.218.221 00:44, 16 May 2008 (EDT)

I'm guessing that doing deals to get "Saturation" (principle #3) has been given precedence over staying "Open Source" (principle #5). Very sad indeed. pengo 06:14, 17 May 2008 (EDT)

"I have good XO shoes for a long walk. "

Isn't this stretching the metaphor a little too far? What does it even mean? pengo 06:15, 17 May 2008 (EDT)