[LINK] Designers on quest to build $12 computer
Bernard Robertson-Dunn
brd at iimetro.com.au
Wed Aug 6 19:44:44 AEST 2008
Designers on quest to build $12 computer
Boston Herald
By Jerry Kronenberg
Monday, August 4, 2008
http://news.bostonherald.com/business/technology/general/view/2008_08_04_Designers_on_quest_to_build__12_computer/
Derek Lomas, Jesse Austin-Breneman and other designers want to create a
computer that Third World residents can buy for less than you probably
spend on lunch.
“We see this as a model that could increase economic opportunities for
people in developing countries,” said Lomas, part of a team that’s
trying to develop a $12 computer at this month’s MIT International
Development Design Summit. “If you just know how to type, that can be
the difference between earning $1 an hour instead of $1 a day.”
MIT’s Nicholas Negroponte has been working since 2005 to provide $100
laptops to Third World kids, but Lomas and his colleagues want to knock
the price down even further. They aim to build a stripped down
computer-like device for about one-tenth of what Negroponte’s One Laptop
Per Child project is creating.
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A $12 computer of sorts - a cheap keyboard and Nintendo-like console -
already exists in India, where people hook the devices to home TVs to
run simple games and programs.
But Lomas, an American graduate student who stumbled across the
computers in Bangalore while on an internship last summer, hit on the
idea of upgrading the devices’ 1980s-era technology.
He and others at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology symposium
hope to soup up the systems - which are based on old Apple II computers
- with rudimentary Web access and more.
“My generation all had Apple IIs that we learned to type and play games
on,” the 27-year-old said. “If we can get buy-in from programmers, we
can develop these devices and give (Third World) schools Apple II
computer labs like the ones I grew up with.”
A six-member team at the MIT conference is working on writing improved
programs and hooking the devices to the Web through cell phones. The
group also wants to add memory chips - which the devices currently lack
- to allow users to write and store their own programs.
Team members have already recruited Apple II enthusiasts to help with
the programming.
The group has also contacted an Indian nonprofit that expressed interest
in using the devices to train village “micro-loan” officers.
Also, the team’s foreign members - who hail from Brazil, Ghana and India
- plan to do market research on the souped-up devices back home.
“We think we can develop a really good educational tool that could give
kids exposure to keyboards, typing and mouse usage at an early age,”
said Austin-Breneman, a 25-year-old MIT graduate and a mechanical engineer.
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Regards
brd
Bernard Robertson-Dunn
Canberra Australia
brd at iimetro.com.au
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