Xo laptop where to buy




















SIM card enabled? This functionality is useful in rural places with no Internet connectivity available. The XO Laptop is Linux-based, with a dual-mode display, one mode is full-color and transmissive, the second is black and white, reflective, and sunlight-readable at three times the resolution.

The XO Laptop are available with up to a 1. The laptops have wireless broadband that, among other things, allows them to work as an ad-hoc network: laptops can send data to their nearest neighbors, creating a local area network even if there are no routers nearby. The laptops are designed to be power efficient, enabling the use of innovative power systems such as solar, human power, generators, wind or water power.

More detailed information on specifications can be found on the provider specs section from their web page. Users and clients can contact provider for technical support over help laptop. OLPC also offers a support strategy program and a wiki page for support.

There are diverse channels proposed to access replacement components in the OLPC wiki page. The zero effect could be explained by the fact that the program did not involve compulsory teacher training and that laptops in class are mainly used to search for information on the internet. In three of these countries the OLPC project was considered successful and in the other three countries the project did not necessarily live up to the expectations.

Its LiFePO4 batteries contain no toxic heavy metals, plus it features enhanced battery management for an extended recharge-cycle lifetime. Solutions Library. The E4C Solutions Library is a living database of products and services that are intended to be accessible and appropriate for those living in resource-constrained environments.

The data in the Solutions Library is curated technical and market performance information that is normalized across all products, enabling side-by-side comparison and analysis of market influences. Find out more. Sign Up Forgot Password? You are now logged in. Let us know about any errors or inconsistencies you see in our data. I agree, that probably was asking for too much core 2 duo chip, ddr2 ram, hard drive, cell phone, etc. It would be fine if it was basically the same, just modestly enhanced such as more flash memory and ram, different color, and a faster processor.

I really think it's a very bad idea for this project to not sell these at retail and use profits to fund more laptops in target countries , or relegate it to the future as a non-essential priority. I think many people would buy these, not just because of activism, but it would be nice to have a very durable, inexpensive computer that can be used for basic needs, like taking notes in classes.

Also, even people with expensive, powerful laptops might like a secondary one they can take around. I love this project but I love this laptop as well - I want to have one :! Gates states at all - but high tech: It is a high quality product inbetween a notebook and a PDA and could be something very usefull to anybody in the world.

But please consider another thing: What about poor children or people in general living in a "rich western" country? They might not be poor compared to people living in a developing country - but could be not rich enough to buy a "normal" laptop anyway - for them such a commercial version of this laptop could help decreasing the digital divide as well. Developing a seperate version other than in relatively superficial ways like case changes would likely bring up prices far too much to be worth it, the focus should be on producing the same cheap product in such a way that the most proffit can be garnered through the same process, said proffit could then be passed on to the countries.

And the whole thing runs off the static energy delivered by stroking the plastic shell with a piece of woolen cloth. I just wanted to know if it could be done. All the power management functions work. It shouldn't be that difficult to place a Sugar UI on it; but, then to what end? The XO-1 and the XS servers do what they are supposed to - as is. There was a sign-up page at pledgebank. This has now expired far short of its goal. More information is available on the Retail page. I suggest that the decision not to sell these to the general public be reconsidered.

Sales of these laptops could help fund their global charitable distribution. Among first world consumers, these laptops could become quite popular as a meaningful symbol of global activism. Widespread usage of the devices would, in turn, fuel innovation, enhance infrastructure and make the devices that much more useful to the global community for which they were originally intended. In the UK there are many families who could use a basic machine capable of alas Word compatible wordprocessing and Web access.

I'd pay a factor of three to four for a machine like this on a sponsorship basis, provided I knew the surplus was providing screens in target countries. I think that the only way of avoiding a violent "black market" for olpc laptops is to saturate the market quickly, at least within each region.

The trick is to lower the perceived value to a point where it is not worth stealing them. I think Simon has hit the nail on the head.

If you don't make them avaialable to non 3rd world conmsumers, then you may end up undermining the program - rich westerners could simply offer cash money - possibly less than the cost price - since the owner probably won't have paid for it - and quite possibly gain themselves an OLPCC.

I mean you offer some one the opportunity to feed their family for a week or two or more or say to buy warm clothes or medicine by selling their OLPC and I think a number might take that offer up. And who can blame them? Sure that's short term thinking, but I suspect it is probably kind of hard to keep a long term perspective when you are starving, cold or sick and the solution to your problem is selling your or maybe even your child's OLPC.

On the other hand we western gadget geeks would probably prefer a new one if we can over a grubbby second hadn one so we would probalby be happy to pay full price rather than buy a cheap black market one.

Even better offer us a slightly up specced version fo r more money and there is no way we will want a basic OLPC. Before getting too excited about this idea, it is best to read the Retail page to understand why this is happening for 12 days in November Also, read this article. Buy One, Get One Free will be coming soon, do the companies in your local area care enough about educating the community in which they are based, lets find out.

Companies complain about vandalism and Graffiti and a lack of community spirit when it comes to theft, well here is a chance to create some real community relations, permanently! I came here to submit exactly this idea. Pay two, get one! I feel it is important that the OLPC hardware is freely available on the market at low price. It serves very well as client device for distributed applications even in large companies or public institutions. I were proud to deliver those applications to my customers.

I think that to really give the program a chance a rollout within the poor in the U. Agree with all posters above. Demand for the laptop in affluent parts of the world will be huge too, because, lets face it, we are addicted to gadgets, and this is the coolest one to come along since the powerbook.

This demand is a double edged sword though. Buy 2 or more! On the other hand, a larger user base of developers would mature the software platform faster, and if the laptop does eventually get connected to backbone "in the wild" instead of just a local ad hoc network, knowledge transfer can happen in a more open way.

These special laptops could be produced in limited numbers so as not to produce too big of a demand on the manufacturers. At that price it would be an impulse buy, especially for us techies and poor college students. I would probably open the thing up and mod the heck out of it.

When an NGO especially an educational NGO, but not limited to those goes into an area the laptops will be cost effective enough for them to supply all of their staff with the units, and have an equal number or more to distribute to local kids. This has the added benefit of doubling the numbers of laptops in an area, thus increasing the size of the local network.

Make them laptops available in lots of 10, for the price of 1 mid-range standard laptop. Imagine an organization like Medicins sans Frontiers equipping all their staff with OLPC units and seeding their areas of operation with the extras.

If a mobile clinic was going to be at a village, a network broadcast could be sent to notify local laptops that the clinic was coming, or when new vaccines arrived, or if services at a clinic were going to change. They provide not just a huge market, but a very effective way to further distribute these laptops and increase their penetration of any given area. I just came here to give my opinion about selling and donation together.

I was told that the executive had mis-spoke. I changed the "plan" to a "possibility" and added a quote from the project's founder Nicholas Negroponte who said a commercial approach had been "considered". What makes the OLPC people high and mighty enough to determine who is deemed worthy of paying extra, and who is deemed worthy of getting one for free? Being impoverished is global. My neighbor is mentally impaired, and is not able to function independently.

Is my neighbor somehow better off than those in other countries? The only reason my neighbor is my neighbor is because the property renter allows them to stay there out of the kindness of his heart. Why are they not given the same opportunity afforded to others? A child there may never be given any opportunity to move on to anything other than a gas station attendant, if they are lucky.

But Oli Warner sure is :. It was a key moment for Negroponte. They needed a new kind of device. The real issue was a lack of access to computers. These pronouncements made headlines. Even fans of OLPC were somewhat dubious. Groundbreaking technologies like the crank and mesh networking system were still mostly theoretical.

It distracted people from the promise of what OLPC was actually building: a tiny, low-power laptop at an incredible price. OLPC announced plans to launch by the end of , shipping a million laptops apiece to seven countries, as well as smaller numbers to developer communities elsewhere.

Quanta was even supposed to explore building a commercial version of the laptop. OLPC had made genuine technical breakthroughs. In its very early concept designs , the laptop used a rear projection screen that gave it a tent-like look; the final product featured a custom LCD display designed by CTO and co-founder Mary Lou Jepsen. The screen toggled between full-color and black-and-white modes, consuming a fraction of the power that a standard display would need. Behar says the team spent almost a year sending prototypes to schools around the world for feedback, as they slowly negotiated a compromise between looks and practicality.

Every flourish on the XO-1 was designed to serve a purpose. Its screen folded into the keyboard to create a tablet, controlled by a few buttons on its bezel. A decorative XO logo was printed in hundreds of color permutations, so kids could tell their laptops apart. And a dustproof one-piece rubber keyboard made it easy to print any key layout. Walter Bender, meanwhile, was working on a lightweight operating system designed specifically for children. Then, everything started to fall apart.

The XO-1 was easy to take apart — there were even a few spare screws inside its handle. But things like the screen could only be replaced with OLPC-specific parts. The solid-state storage was sturdier than a traditional hard drive, but so expensive that the XO-1 could hold only a single gigabyte of data. Some users complained that the one-piece rubber keyboard fell to pieces after too much typing. The internet-sharing system barely worked, and it was quickly removed from Sugar.



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