OLPC Germany
2007 status: yellow | ||||
yellow | ||||
Gegenwärtiger Status: Gelb |
Introduction
Germany is a country located in Western Europe with a population of 82 million people. The official language is German, however, there are minor parts in which other languages are spoken (Danish, Sorbic, Platt). As a result of immigration, languages such as Turkish, Arabic, Italian etc are spoken by parts of its population.
The GDP per capita is around $30.000. Over 99% of those of age 15 and above are estimated to be able to read and write. In 2004, 4.435 million people in Germany were under the age of 6, 7.489 million between 6 and 15. By OECD standards, 13.5 per cent of the population has to be considered poor. Germany is on place 20 of the Human Development Index. School education is not a responsibility of the federal government, but is organized by the federal states (Bundeslaender).
All these things considered, Germany is not a candidate for the first round of OLPC distribution to children. See the OLPC FAQ for details.
However, people living in Germany can take part in this project by almost every thinkable means. This includes software and hardware development (especially ebook reader), creating content, promotion etc.
Getting involved
- With IRC via #olpc-groups and #olpc-europe on freenode.net
- Via the olpc-germany mailing list
Initiative OLPC Deutschland
Three students from the Darmstadt University of Applied Sciences have created the "Initiative OLPC Deutschland". It is meant to be an information- and communication platform to focus existent interest for the OLPC in Germany.
Participants
Here we list members of OLPC Deutschland until we have different means to do so.
- Bert Freudenberg (Magdeburg)
- Chris Hager (OLPC Austria)
- Christoph Derndorfer (OLPC Austria)
- Felix Fietkau, OpenWrt Hamburg
- Gregor Martynus, Darmstadt/Frankfurt
- Holger Levsen, Hamburg
- Jens Denger, Darmstadt/Heidelberg
- Jens Muecke, OpenWrt Hamburg
- John Crispin, OpenWrt Hamburg
- Joko Keuschnig, Berlin
- Marco Rauschenbach, Darmstadt
- Michael Reschke, Köln
- Sebastian Umlauft, Hamburg
- Daniel H. Ottersbach, Duisburg/Essen/Köln/Wuppertal
- Martin Jess, Halle(Saale)
- Rudolf Simon, Stuttgart
Events
Event | date, time | Comments |
---|---|---|
Open Day | June 3, 200 8 | OLPC Presentation by Jan Wildeboer (Red Hat, Munnich) |
Press
Press coverage about the OLPC has been on a regular basis, especially during the WSIS in Tunis in 2005.
- January 9, 2008 Frankfurter Rundschau Billig-Laptops kommen in Brasilien gut an
- January 8, 2008 Telepolis 100-Dollar-Laptop in Bedrängnis
- December 29, 2007 SPIEGEL, Der coolste Computer der Welt
- Mai 21, 2007 heise.de: 100-Dollar-Laptop: Negroponte greift Intel scharf an
- January 28, 2007 Die Zeit, Ein Spielzeug, das die Welt verändern will (Interview mit N. Negroponte)
- April 6, 2006 tecchannel.de: Negroponte: Linux ist fett geworden
- April 6, 2006 netzwelt.de: OLPC: 100-Dollar-Notebook kommt 2007
- April 5, 2006 winfuture.de: Weitere Details zum "100-Dollar-Laptop" verfügbar
- April 5, 2006 infoweek.ch: Negroponte schiesst gegen Linux, Microsoft und Intel
- April 5, 2006 computerpartner.de: Nicholas Negroponte: Der 100-Dollar-Laptop braucht ein schlankeres Linux
- April 5, 2006 spiegel.de: Negroponte stichelt zurück
- April 5, 2006 heise.de: Kritik am 100-Dollar-Laptop lässt Negroponte kalt
- April 5, 2006 Golem.de: 100-Dollar-Notebook: Design geändert, Auslieferung 2007 by Nico Ernst
- March 29, 2006 Stuttgarter Zeitung: Der Digerati und der Digitalai Lama; by Peter Glaser
- March 17, 2006 Frankfurter Rundschau: Billig-Rechner für die Dritte Welt / Laptop für 100 Dollar soll in Entwicklungsländern zum Einsatz kommen / Zahlreiche technische Finessen by Thorsten Kleinz
- March 16, 2006 Spiegel Online: Gates verhöhnt Rechner für arme Kinder by Christian Stöcker
- January 25, 2006 HandelsZeitung: Brücke über den digitalen Graben by Matthias Niklowitz
- December 29, 2005 Süddeutsche Zeitung: Per Handkurbel ins Internet; by Michael Lang
- November 19, 2005: Die Presse: Kurbel macht Laptop vom Netz unabhängig
- November 18, 2005 Hamburger Abendblatt: 100-Dollar-Laptop für die Dritte Welt
- November 17, 2005 Spiegel Online: Hightech mit Handkurbel by Frank Patalong
- November 17, 2005 Deutsche Presseagentur: Billig-Laptop soll digitale Kluft überwinden helfen - 100 Dollar by Renate Grimming
- October 8, 2005 General-Anzeiger (Bonn): Kurbel-Notebook für die Dritte Welt / HARDWARE: Unternehmen MIT Media Lab will Billig-Laptop für Schüler in Entwicklungsländern anbieten. Preis soll bei etwa 100 Dollar liegen by Axel Vogel