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A Child's View of the OLPC
Posted by
kdawson
on Thu Dec 13, 2007 08:36 AM
from the all-this-and-games-too dept.
from the all-this-and-games-too dept.
Finallyjoined!!! sends us a BBC account of a dad who traveled to Nigeria and brought back an XO laptop for his 9-year-old, Rufus. Here is Rufus's review, a child's view of OLPC. "Because it looks rather like a simple plastic toy, I had thought it might suffer the same fate as the radio-controlled dinosaur or the roller-skates he got last Christmas - enjoyed for a day or two, then ignored. Instead, it seems to provide enduring fascination... With no help from his Dad, he has learned far more about computers than he knew a couple of weeks ago, and the XO appears to be a more creative tool than the games consoles which occupy rather too much of his time."
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In Soviet Russia... (Score:5, Funny)
Already? (Score:5, Interesting)
I returned from Nigeria with a sample of the XO laptop
I did RTFA, and no mention of HOW he got the laptop... I know everyone was talking about these things ending up all over the world in the black market, don't tell me it's ALREADY there.
Re:Already? (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
Re:Already? (Score:5, Funny)
[/obligatory Simpsons quote]
Parent
Re:Already? (Score:5, Funny)
That's nothin'. I returned from Nigeria with my late uncle's ashes and 30% of his $20,000,000 estate.
Parent
Re:How about the kids in Iraq? Any OLPCs there yet (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, I think they just need more maps.
Parent
Re:Already? (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
How long will that one work? (Score:4, Interesting)
Isn't the article's premise the exact situation which the OLPC designers feared?
Of course, the article mentions "a sample of the XO laptop", so I hope this this specific laptop wasn't obtained through such a secondary market...
Re:How long will that one work? (Score:5, Informative)
First, the target markets are not all African schools. They have target countries on other continents as well. (Off the top of my head, I know there are several in South America.)
Second, it's not an automatic kill switch. It allows you to disable the laptop if it is reported stolen, and will disable the laptop if it hasn't been able to check with the server for a certain time period. If the laptop is properly configured with a school server, then (even across the Internet) it will still be able to maintain its lease, and it won't shut off.
Parent
Re:How long will that one work? (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Re:How long will that one work? (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re:How long will that one work? (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re:How long will that one work? (Score:5, Informative)
So conceptually you have a point, but practically you're way off base.
Parent
Different languages (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Different languages (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Re:Different languages (Score:5, Funny)
Lisa: It's from my pen-pal Anya! [reads]
Anya: [voice over] Dear Lisa, as I write this, I am very sad. Our
president has been overthrown and
[voice changes to that of a man]
replaced by the benevolent general Krull. All hail Krull and his
glorious new regime! Sincerely, Little Girl.
Parent
BBC reporter (Score:5, Informative)
Smart kid (Score:4, Funny)
The kid has made such a fast advancement that he has already been offered a job by Chris Hansen.
Re:Smart kid (Score:4, Insightful)
And in his spare time, working on the next version of the Linux core...
Parent
Re:Smart kid (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
A child's view of the $100 laptop is good and all (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, somebody might have pointed this out already, but this guy took a laptop from Nigeria to bring to the UK? That seems to defeat the point (from how it's stated in the article, it doesn't seem that it was from the buy one/give one program).
children are overrated (Score:5, Interesting)
I even tried to entice my son by talking a bit about encryption, thinking he would make the connection of "aha! I can hide stuff from the old man!" but even that lure failed to get him to open the Missing Manual book. I keep hoping to find an encrypted container indicating that he's learned something, but alas he lacks my secretiveness. Kids today!
Parent
Re:children are overrated (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Conclusion: would be a great christmas present (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't doubt for a moment that this thread will be filled with the usual /. grousing about the usefulness of the entire project, but let's give credit where credit is due: it looks like they have made a product that appeals to children. Perhaps they know what they are doing?
Interesting reading about the chat feature (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Why yes, signed 32bit integer values can be very interesting from many points of view!
The miracle machine (Score:3, Funny)
419 (Score:5, Funny)
So...did he scam a Nigerian?
Re:419 (Score:5, Funny)
The Central Bank of Nigeria is now in possession of 500 "One Laptop Per Child" that is earmarked for our schools. Unfortunately, our minister of education recently died in a tragic car accident. You have been named as his beneficiary and will be responsible for their distribution. As one of the benefits, you will be able to keep one for your own child. To release those laptops, we will need your credit card number and personal details concerning your children so that we may chat with him on our Jabber server.
Please respond to 1-888-OLP-CCON with your information.
Regards,
M'Bol Zarhari
Esteemeed Grand Puba, Central Bank of NIgeria.
Parent
My kid made the honor role (Score:4, Funny)
Sounds like Rufus is a lot smarter than your kid. Figuring out all this stuff on his own. Before you know it, he'll be like his Dad, buying goods off the black market.
Another Kid's Review (Score:5, Informative)
Por fin... they can get ahead the EU & US (Score:4, Interesting)
This is actually a tool that would allow these counties to get ahead of EU & US. Because this will empower children when they are most active at learning, at 9 years old you can learn alot, that will get us alot of creative people, writers, programmers and artist in a 4-9 years.
The question is will these children need to learn english, or can they just create local economies, based on heir own language?
The Diamond Age (Score:4, Insightful)
First George Orwell, now this. Where does it end?
Review (Score:5, Insightful)
No surprises (Score:4, Insightful)
So far as the length of his fascination - let's hear back in another week or two, or another month, or next year. From late November to now is a matter of three weeks, tops. Even for a nine year old this isn't particularly long.
This project is going to change things (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Something smells...and it aint my pants (Score:5, Informative)
The XO laptops connect through a school Jabber server, so if his laptop was set to use the same Jabber server, then he could see all of the people at that school, even if he's not on their local wireless network.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh yeah, it has no bearing at all.
Maybe you should go read up on the OLPC software stack.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Something smells...and it aint my pants (Score:5, Funny)
Something smells...and it aint my pants
It's your pants. Totally.
Parent
Re:Emulator? (Score:5, Informative)
Wolfgang Rohrmoser and Kurt Gramlich are proud to announce the initial version of their OLPC XO-LiveCD. This new project targets these goals:
give children, students, teachers and parents the opportunity to participate and use the Sugar educational software on a common PC;
support demonstration of OLPC software to non-developers;
provide an easy maintainable Live-System for developers to test activities on the sugar desktop, this could be regarded as an alternative to existing OLPC virtualbox and qemu images.
The technology they choose embeds an unmodified official Redhat build into a framework (LiveBackup), which provides everything needed to run a live system. Going this way we are able to minimize the work for updates as new OLPC builds get released.
The ISO image are available at:
ftp://rohrmoser-engineering.de/pub/XO-LiveCD/ [rohrmoser-engineering.de]
as: XO-LiveCD_.iso
Images will be mirrored to:
http://skolelinux.de/XO-LiveCD/ [skolelinux.de]
Wolfgang and Kurt encourage everybody to try it out and give them feedback for improvements; please send mail to:
XO-LiveCD@skolelinux.de. Further information is available in the XO-LiveCD.pdf document at:
http://skolelinux.de/XO-LiveCD/XO-LiveCD.pdf [skolelinux.de]
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
It runs a customized, stripped-down version of Fedora Core 7 (details here [laptop.org]). There isn't an "XO emulator", but since it's s standard x86 system, you can emulate an XO [laptop.org] using Qemu, VMware, Virtualbox, or another virtualization program. (It's not perfect, but it is close enough to see how the system works.)
Re:Emulator? (Score:4, Informative)
Enjoy. It's a modified RedHat distro with a special WM called Sugar.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
That typically comes from paying a high price for a low return (not just financially/materially either). In this case it is financial/material, and it seems more like a low price/high return.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Kids and computer (Score:5, Interesting)
Not really.
My son learned how to do most of that (not counting playing CS. Although he does play some Web-based games at Noggin.com) at about 3 - 3/12. Now before you go saying "Well your son is just a genius." Please be aware, my son has Autism. He's not "normal" in any sense of the word, other than being physically healthy.
His learning is definitely behind that of his peers, requiring him to need a special in-school tutor to help him along. He's 5 now, and struggling along in 1st grade. Still, we're impressed with his progress so far, and are now looking for ways we can use his affinity for computers to help educate him.
The truth is, if parents would take just 5-15 minutes to sit down with their child at a computer and begin to use it with them, they would find that most kids would very quickly latch onto it, and soon be doing things with it themselves. I suspect that this will begin to happen more and more and the generation that was born into a world with computers and the internet as a common thing have kids of their own. Heck, it's ALREADY happening, if my son is any indication.
Don't sell your kids short. Get them in front of a computer and learning today. Their peers have already started.
Parent
Re:Kids and computer (Score:5, Insightful)
That's some pretty good parenting, right there.
Parent
You didn't miss it (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.laptopgiving.org/ [laptopgiving.org]
Parent
Here we go again (Score:5, Insightful)
The acquisition and distribution costs alone pay for the OLPC. The other benefits are pure gravy.
It is also pathetically patronizing to tell these people to stop growing their own food and rely on handouts from foreigners for such basic necessities. "We're foreigners and we're here to help because you are too dumb to grow your own food" just doesn't cut it. Far better to grow their own food and rely on OLPC handouts that they *can't* make themselves; at least that is the beginning of a way up the ladder to a better life. Begging for food isn't.
Parent
Re:Here we go again (Score:4, Informative)
I know a chemistry professor at the school where I teach who's an Ethiopian immigrant, and he used to organize textbook donation drives every few years. People would give him books, and he would send them to Ethiopia. He eventually stopped doing it, however, because it was too difficult to get the books to the students due to political corruption. Assuming the OLPC machines really do get to the kids (rather than being sold to enrich politically connected adults) in places like Nigeria, a big advantage would be that it would give the kids direct access to books that can't easily be interfered with.
OTOH, I maintain a catalog of free books (see my sig), and AFAIK there is essentially nothing out there as far as free elementary school books, and almost nothing for high school either. I do know of a South African project to produce a high school physics text (http://www.fhsst.org/), for example, but the project seems to have been moving along extremely slowly. Something like Wikibooks would seem like a natural vehicle for creating such books (ease of use + ease of translation), but Wikibooks has turned out to be a failure at its original goal of producing university-level textbooks (much better at producing gaming guides). In general, I don't think group authoring has been at all successful as a model for creating free textbooks. Authoring by an individual teacher scratching his/her own itch has been much more successful, but virtually all of that activity has been (a) in English, (b) in rich, industrialized countries, and (c) at the university level.
Parent