Countries

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Revision as of 09:46, 26 November 2006 by Mokurai (talk | contribs) (→‎Country News: News on Argentina and Brazil)
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General News

OLPC News (27-05-2006)

A two-day meeting was held at OLPC for representatives from the launch countries. This was the first meeting held in the new OLPC office space in Cambridge. The first day's agenda was focused on “learning learning.” Day Two's agenda targeted issues of deployment. In attendance were representatives from Argentina, Brazil, China, Egypt, India, and Nigeria. Guests included Clotilde Fonesca from the Omar Dengo Foundation in Costa Rica, Bette Manchester from the Maine Laptop Program, Hal Abelson and Pete Barr-Watson from Creative Commons, and Andres Chisco from Brightstar. 2707111925802073996774

Country News

The announced plan calls for five countries to commit to purchase one million units each before production begins. We seem to have two at the moment, Brazil and Libya. There are unfounded rumors in the press about others. If you don't see a deal announced on $100 LAPTOP NEWS FOR THE COMMUNITY, it is unlikely to be real.

Argentina

Nov. 25, 2006

Antonio Battro, David Cavallo, and Nicholas spent two days in Argentina working closely with education minister Daniel Filmus, and Alejandro Piscitelli and Laura Serra of educ.ar, the independent government organization coordinating OLPC activities.

USA

MIT News Office October 5, 2005

Gov. Mitt Romney wants Massachusetts schoolchildren to get the $100 hand-crank laptops developed at the MIT Media Lab.

Spain

OLPC News (2006-07-01)

Extremadura is the poorest region of Spain; it is also the site of the first large-scale deployment of Linux desktop systems in the world, primarily into schools. Over 80,000 desktops have been deployed to date, with near saturation (>50%) in high schools, but fewer numbers in elementary schools (typically in computer labs). The deployment is seen as a success, and is now spreading beyond schools and libraries to the regional government as a whole. Jim visited the project in order to gain insight into the issues that arise in the schools. Although Extremadura's experiences are only partially applicable to ours, they are generally positive.

Brazil

OLPC News (2006-07-08)

The main headline and story on the front page of Friday's edition of Valor, one of the major business newspapers of Brazil, affirmed the government's intention to enter into agreement with OLPC this year. The story highlighted Cezar Alvarez, a top staff member of President Lula, who is in charge of all projects for social and economic inclusion. There were also two other related articles in the Business Section, including a picture of a smiling Prof. Marcelo Zuffo holding a development board and discussing how the work-groups and Brazilian labs intended to build related products and services on top of the platform.

Positivo, a major educational publisher and services company that provides one of the major educational portals demonstrated their adaptation of their portal and content to run on the laptop and within the screen size. They intend to have all their content ready in time for the introduction of the laptop in Brazil.

OLPC News (2006-08-26)

David Cavallo reports that the Brazilian government is finalizing their plans for all aspects of laptop roll-out. As the project to date has been coordinated by the presidency with the assistance of the Ministry of Education, they will now begin to work more deeply with other ministries.

OLPC News (2006-10-21)

The presidency has created a new working group inside the Ministry of Education to focus solely on laptops and learning. The group is comprehensive, covering all the necessary departments: basic education; teacher and content development; technology; distance support; and integration and coordination. This group will coordinate all activities needed for the deployment of laptops.

Nov. 25, 2006

Nicholas and David spent Friday in São Paulo, to meet with President Lula. Rodrigo Mesquita, to whom we owe our presence in Brazil, organized and attended the meeting. Lula publicly reaffirmed Brazil’s commitment to one laptop per child. He expressed a deep connection to those in Brazil that lack opportunity, his belief in the children, and his faith in the importance of connected laptops available to all.

Libya

New York Times story

OLPC News (2006-10-14) Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)

Libya and OLPC signed an MOU in which they agreed to work together towards the deployment of one OLPC laptop for every school-age child in Libya and contributing laptops to poor African nations. OLPC will provide the support needed by Libya to plan and carry out such a deployment. The signing took place during a visit by Nicholas, Walter Bender, and Khaled Hassounah, where they met with members of the newly formed OLPC4Libya steering committee. The committee was presented with the outline of a comprehensive plan to distribute the laptops, create connectivity and server infrastructure, and prepare teachers and students. Libya will send a team to the OLPC office in Cambridge to focus on software (Linux), infrastructure, and education content.

India

3 Jul, 2006 The Times of India reports that the government of India has rejected the OLPC program for now.

OLPC Groups

see also:

OLPC Albania Albanian

OLPC Argentina Spanish

OLPC Brazil Portuguese

OLPC Chile Spanish

OLPC China Chinese, Mongolian, Tibetan, others

OLPC Egypt Arabic, Coptic

OLPC Ethiopia Amharic, others

OLPC France French

OLPC Germany German

OLPC Greece Greek

OLPC India 22 official languages, 10 writing systems

OLPC Israel Hebrew, Yiddish, Arabic, English

OLPC Laos Laotian

Libya Arabic New York Times story

OLPC Nepal Nepalese

OLPC New Zealand / Pacific Maori, English, Samoan, Tongan, Fijian, Cook Island, Pidgin, French

OLPC Nigeria Yoruba, Hausa, Igbo

diaspora project

OLPC Poland Polish

OLPC Russia Russian, others

OLPC South Africa English, Afrikaans, Xhosa, others

OLPC Thailand Thai

OLPC4USA English, Cajun French, Spanish, Native American languages, dozens of immigrant community languages including Vietnamese, Lao, Cambodian, Kreyol Haisyen, etc.


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