Tag Archive for 'One Laptop Per Child'

IT News - January 1-6, 2008

Updates on: Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Wikia Search release, Lenovo computers enter US markets, Intel leaves One Laptop Per Child project, Netflix and LG team up on Internet-connected TV, Creative Commons dual-license option, the fight between HD DVD and Blu-ray format, San Francisco’s free wi-fi

More than 20,000 new gadgets and technologies from more than 2,700 companies will be on display at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) January 7-10 in Las Vegas. The round-up so far: robot toys by Wowwee; radio for the deaf project by National Public Radio, technology firm Harris Corporation and Towson University; wireless High-Definition Television (HDTV); and technology allowing users to control their homes remotely. — BBC News

Wikia Search, an open source search engine promising to offer transparency, will go public in rough form next week. Co-founder Jimmy Though Wales has expressed a fondness for Google but has also criticized the search engine and said he wants to encourage Web communities to produce something better. He believes search should be open, transparent, participatory, and democratic. — Information Week

441430573_80cae3d7ae_m.jpgChina’s Lenovo Group Ltd introduced its first consumer computers in the United States, expanding in a region it entered in 2005 with the purchase of IBM’s PC business. The unveiling of three new notebook computers with advanced features is part of a broader expansion by Lenovo into the global consumer PC market. The company also plans to sell the new consumer computers in France, Russia, South Africa, India, Australia, Singapore and Malaysia, among other markets. — Reuters

Citing “philosophical” differences, Intel has withdrawn its funding and technical help from the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) project. Intel joined the OLPC in July 2007 and was widely expected to work on a version of the project’s laptop that used an Intel chip. Many expected this machine to be unveiled at the CES technology fair which opens in Las Vegas on January 5. The first versions of the OLPC or XO laptop were powered by a chip made by Intel’s arch-rival AMD. — BBC News

DVD-by-mail service Netflix Inc. will begin delivering movies and other programming directly to televisions later this year through a set-top box, made by LG Electronics, that will stream entertainment over a high-speed Internet connection. — CNN

The Creative Commons foundation recently released the CC+ protocol, which allows authors and other content makers to release their work for free (under the Creative Commons noncommercial license) and charge a fee for commercial use at the same time. CC+, an extension that may be applied to the existing Creative Commons license, is an option for those who wish to dual-license their work. — Campus Technology

Toshiba Corp has insisted that its HD DVD high-definition video format is far from dead despite being dealt a major setback by Warner Bros studio’s decision to exclusively back Sony Corp’s rival Blu-ray technology. Toshiba’s defiant remarks were the latest salvo in a long-running battle over which format will dominate the next generation of technology for delivering high-definition movies to consumers. The rivalry has been compared to the video-cassette-recorder format war of the late 1970s and early 1980s which ultimately Sony’s Betamax lost and JVC’s VHS won. — Reuters

san franciscoMeraki Networks‘ plan to cover San Francisco with free Wi-Fi, with residents’ help, could be a way around the political and business barriers some municipal wireless projects have run into. The startup, partly funded by Google, believes it will succeed where EarthLink and Google did not: Building Wi-Fi access throughout San Francisco at no cost to the city. It expects to finish by year’s end, filling the whole city with 1M bps (bit per second) coverage. — PC World

The OLPC Project

By Leigh Gautreau, Guest Contributor

It’s an education project, not a laptop project,” according to Nicholas Negroponte, founder of Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Media Lab, who has made One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) his life’s mission. OLPC hopes to promote the constructionist theory of intuitive learning, laid out by MIT Professor Seymour Papert in the 1960s. The XO laptop created by OLPC features a unique user interface, Sugar, which enables students to collaborate on activities (applications) through a mesh network that provides connectivity even in the absence of Internet connection. The activities on the XO laptop were designed to enable children to harness their innate creativity and to alter underlying code. The XO laptop debuted at the January 2005 World Economic Forum in Switzerland and was heralded as the $100 laptop. In November 2007, the XO laptop went into large-scale production, with a unit cost of $188. However it is hoped that economies of scale will aid in reducing the price, thereby making it more attractive to developing countries.

One Laptop Per Child’s XO laptop hinges on: Constructionism

The visionaries of One Laptop Per Child believe that the most effective way to combat poverty and promote peace around the world is to educate the world’s children. One Laptop per Child is neither a laptop distribution scheme nor a race to sell the most laptops to the developing world; rather it is a project to promote the constructionist learning paradigm. OLPC hopes to encourage children to learn how to learn, to give them a window on the world, to enable them to unleash their creativity, so that they may grow and help their countries to compete in the ever-changing global information economy. A number of technological advancements have been introduced in the XO laptop to foster the constructionist approach to learning.

  • The Sugar user interface
  • The Journal file organizing feature
  • The mesh network
  • The use of open source software

The Sugar interface is a vast departure from the standard ones used today, resulting from the small screen of the XO laptop and the desire to make the XO highly collaborative. Sugar allows the user to share and simultaneously edit files. When a user selects file-sharing, a color-coded icon of the file becomes available on the network (about 400 color combinations exist). A slider key allows the XO user to pan through four different zoom levels that provide the user with information about the status of his or her activities and greater network. The first zoom level pertains to the main activity in use. The second zoom features all opened activities as a ring at the center of the screen, with each as a different fraction of the ring based on size and system requirements. When the ring is full, no additional activities can be opened. The third zoom is the user’s XO avatar surrounded by the avatars of the selected friends in the mesh network. The forth zoom shows a spatial representation of all of the users connected to the mesh network.

The innovative mesh network facilitates the exploitation of Sugar’s collaborative features. In the mesh network, each laptop acts as both a router and laptop. When one laptop is switched on in proximity to Internet connection, it can relay its connection to other laptops within the mesh. Internet connection shared through the mesh diminishes with distance, but even in the absence of Internet connection information can be shared between laptops. One key feature of the mesh network is its ability to disseminate updates to thousands of laptops from a remote location. The network obliterates the need to build an extensive Internet infrastructure in countries where general infrastructure is lean at best, and provides children access to connectivity and collaboration they would not otherwise have.

Another integral part of the One Laptop Per Child’s educational mission is the inclusion of open source software in the XO laptops. Open source software not only represents a cheaper alternative to traditional shrink-wrapped, proprietary software, but also allows for code alteration. This idea of a children’s open source programming language can be traced to the 1960s with Logo, put in practice by Seymour Papert. OLPC’s open source software will focus on the creation of drawigs, songs, stories, games, and programs to foster constructionist learning.

One Laptop Per Child’s XO laptop hinges on: Developing World Needs

One Laptop Per Child aspired to create a laptop to meet the requirements of the developing world, considering the issues of power consumption, durability, and expense. The XO laptop design lacks a hard drive, or any moving parts, making it robust and unique. It consumes just 2W of power compared to the 25-45 W of power of traditional laptops. OLPC chose an AMD 433 MHz Geode LX 700 processor, which much slower than contemporary laptop processors, but saves energy since it does not require a fan and is designed to shut itself down. The WiFi adapter is suited to the developing world as it can operate independently of the main processor through its own built-in low power chip. Its dual antennas (rabbit ears) are capable of boosting the range of connectivity. The laptop screen is a 7.5 inch dual mode display featuring a full color mode which consumes 1W of power, and a ultra low power black and white mode which consumes 0.2W of power and is readable in direct sunlight. This display configuration results in a cost savings from $2 to $4 per diagonal inch over traditional displays. The laptop battery, composed of either 2-4 cells lithium ferrous phosphate (LiFePO4) or 6 cells nickel metal hydride, can hold its charge longer (6 to 20 hours vs. 4 hours) and can be charged more times prior to replacement (2000 times vs. 500 times). The laptops can also be charged with a 18W power adapter, a solar panel, or a manual pull-cord with 10 minutes of charge for each minute of pulling.

Power conservation is not the only concern that must be addressed in designing laptops for children in the developing world. In addition, laptop durability must also be tackled. The laptops must be able withstand possible dropping, submersion, scratching, dust, etc. Durable design features include:

  • Waterproof keyboard
  • Waterproof, dust-proof hard plastic case
  • Antennas’ locking mechanism
  • External port cover

OLPC’s primary strategy to reduce the price of the XO laptop was to leverage economies of scale. The original goal had been to offer laptops to seven countries in lots of 250,000. The base price of the XO laptop at the beginning of production at Quanta Computer, Inc Taiwan was $188/laptop, with a projected scale of 3 million units required to reduce the price to $100/laptop. The first mass production in November 2007 slated to produce only 300,000 laptops. Delays in production caused by Quanta meant OLPC’s production volume was off by 10%. However, even if they would have been able to reach full production volume, OLPC lacked the necessary interest to sell 3 million. When production began the only firm commitment was from Uruguay for 100,000 laptops. OLPC sealed a deal with Peru for another 250,00 laptops on November 30, 2007.

What went wrong?

Late design upgrades in addition to the inability to realize the economies of scale had hurt OLPC’s ability to sell their laptop at $100. OLPC upgraded the XO laptop’s processor (from an AMD Geode Gx2 500 to an AMD Geode LX 700) and its memory (from 128 MB DDR 266 to 256 MB RAM) in late April 2007, in an effort to make the XO faster and more energy efficient, but at the expense of a higher price tag.

Offering the XO laptop at a higher price put it in direct competition with Intel’s Classmate PC and Asus’s Eee PC. Asus is selling its Eee PC for profit in the United States with a price point of $399, enabling it to offer the same laptop to schools in the U.S. and abroad for $199. Asus has also entered talks with various government entities and has looked into diversifying its offerings to fulfill demand at different price points (a $500 model will feature a larger screen, while a $349 and $299 model will be more cost effective). Furthermore, Intel’s Classmate PC is offered to governments in the developing world for educational purposes at a price point of $200-300. OLPC’s founder Nicholas Negroponte has accused Intel of selling the Classmate PC below cost in an attempt to push OLPC out of the market. Intel has maintained that any under-pricing was a vehicle to establish a new market in the developing world. Intel has cannibalized some of OLPC’s market share in the developing world since its inception, selling the Classmate PC to governments in Nigeria, Libya, and Pakistan – all of which had originally spoken with OLPC. In July 2007, Intel and OLPC put aside their differences and drafted a partnering agreement; OLPC will begin developing a laptop based on Intel components in January 2008.

In addition to Asus and Intel, other splinter competition exists. Quanta, the maker of the OLPC’s XO laptop announced in March 2007 plans to sell $200 laptops using the underlying technologies associated with the XO laptop. In India, after the initial rejection of the XO on the basis of fears surrounding the health and psychological impacts of providing children with laptops, two low cost laptop designs have since emerged. When Nicholas Negroponte stepped onto the uncharted frontier of laptop deployment with his $100/laptop vision, his goal had been to educate the developing world’s youth, not to lasso in laptop sales. But because the laptop market in the developed world is so saturated, computer companies are looking to increase their sales in the developing world, further complicating OLPC’s mission to educate children with the unique innovations found in the XO laptop.

The Classmate PC and Eee PC are easier sells than the XO laptop because there is less fear of the unknown associated with them. For one, Classmate and Eee both run Windows, commonly considered the worldwide standard for computing, whereas the XO utilizes the Sugar open source user interface that requires users to break from the familiar. Governments in the developing world wonder why they are being sold laptops with non-standard software, and fail to see Sugar’s technological innovations and the learning paradigm it seeks to instill. They only see value in instructing children on how to use standard global software, which pits OLPC in competition against Microsoft. In fact, Microsoft recently announced that it will offer developing countries a $3 educational software package (including Windows, a student version of Microsoft Office, and other educational programs) and it has already received commitments to buy from Libya, Egypt, and Russia.

Additionally, governments see OLPC as a liability because it is not a traditional computer industry giant that can provide post-sales service. OLPC has never promised post-sales service either. Instead, it has maintained that if and when the computers have problems the children can fix them. Expecting governments to spend a large chunk of their education budgets on laptops to be fixed by children is incredible, no matter how robust the laptop. Libya withdrew its decision to buy 1.2 million XO laptops because of their lack of Windows, service, and teacher training, and bought 150,000 Classmate PCs instead. Governments might also be scared to buy the XO because of associated infrastructure costs not spelled out upfront. A pilot study performed at the Galdima School in Abuja, Nigeria provides a rough price estimate for installing the infrastructure to support the OLPC project:

$5,000 - 15KVa electricity generator (power supply)
$3,000 - VSAT dish (Internet connectivity)
$50 - WiFi access points (connect laptops to VSAT & one another, provided by Accelon)
$100 - electrical wiring of the classrooms (facilitate battery recharging)
$600 - solar panels (alternate power source)
$250 - gang charger
$9,000- total initial installation costs

With an estimated 41,531 primary schools in Nigeria and a $9000 initial installation cost at each school, the cost of XO implementation equals $374 million, equivalent to an additional $24 per child on top of the $100 per child per laptop. Besides installation costs, once the electric generator is installed its associated life cycle costs are not trivial as it requires costly gasoline and repairs.

Dealing with governments has an associated volatility. When Thailand’s Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra was overthrown in a military coup, so too was his promise to buy the XO laptop for his people. Not only does OLPC face political uncertainties and competition, but recently a copyright-infringement lawsuit was filed against them by the Nigerian Lagos Analysis Corp of Natick, claiming that OLPC stole its keyboard design, even though the keyboard was designed prior to the Nigerian patent filing. OLPC is operating in a difficult space. Governments are unable to recognize and appreciate its mission, and are buying their competitors products despite lack of the unique developing world laptop tailoring.

In response to lower than anticipated sales in the developing world, OLPC announced a scheme to allow consumers in the United States and Canada to purchase a laptop for themselves for $399, meanwhile donating a laptop to a child in a developing country. This initiative, “Give One, Get One” (G1G1) started on November 12, 2007 and was to last 2 weeks, but as a result of overwhelming response the deadline for the program has been extended to December 31, 2007. In the first 9 days of the G1G1 campaign 45,000 two laptop orders were made, with nearly half of those orders being placed on the first day. Since its inception the G1G1 campaign has received approximately $2 million in orders a day totaling 190,000 laptops (half of which are being donated to children in the developing world).

OLPC has also encouraged countries and charities in the developed world to donate XO laptops to the developing world, where giving 100-1000 laptops each laptop would cost $299/laptop, 1,000-10,000 laptop donations would cost $249/laptop, and 10,000+ laptop donations would cost $199/laptop. Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim has purchased 50,000 XO laptops for distribution in Mexico.

Despite all of the obstacles OLPC faces in terms of selling the XO laptop, it is not in grave danger of folding. According to Robert Fadel, OLPC’s director of Finance and Operations, OLPC has received $16.5 million in contributions from its corporate benefactors this year and it stands to receive $1/laptop to cover its administrative costs. OLPC had $8.7 million on hand in September 2007, its budget for 2007 is estimated at $9.5 million, and its revenues for 2006 (even before the sales of any laptops) were $7.6 million.

 Check out the official One Laptop Per Child Web site by clicking HERE.

IT news - December 3, 2007

Updates on: Pearson Inform, Steven Kirsch’s spam e-mail filter, Microsofts’s acqisition of WebFives, LiveJournal’s acquisition, lawsuit against One Laptop Per Child, Nvidia’s C-compiler, Toon Boom Animation’s new animation program for kids, Amazon’s launch of Askville.com

Pearson School Systems has released an update to Pearson Inform, a data analysis tool for K-12 schools. The new release, Inform 4.2, adds a new Academic Intervention Plan feature for planning individualize and group instruction. – T.H.E. Journal

Twenty-five years ago Steven T. Kirsch crated the computer mouse with optical sensor. Now he believes he has found a way to create a better trap — for spam, not mice. He founded Abaca, a company with a new approach to detecting junk mail and a claim that its product can filter out 99 percent of spam e-mail. — New York Times

Microsoft acquired WebFives, a social newtworking website for sharing photos and phone videos. After the acquisition, WebFives service will stop as Microsoft plans to implement the technology used in the website instead of maintaining the community. — Seattle Times

The owner of LiveJournal, a blogging and social-networking site, agreed to sell the company to SUP, a Russian online media company, in the latest example of deal-making in the social-networking sector. — New York Times

Lagos Analysis Corp, a Massachusetts-based hardware company, is suing the One Laptop Per Child project, claiming in a lawsuit filed in Nigeria that the group reverse-engineered a keyboard designed for foreign languages. — AHN

Nvidia has released a public beta of CUDA 1.1, an update to the company’s C-compiler with a Linux display. More than 20 universities around the world have adopted CUDA for multi-core and parallel processing programming — Campus Technology

Toon Boom Animation, a developer of 2D animation technologies, including Toon Boom Studio, this week released Flip Boom, a new animation program aimed specifically at kids. The software is based on traditional 2D animation principles, focused on teaching the principles of timing and motion in the animation process. — T.H.E. Journal

Amazon.com recently launched Askville.com, a website where users ask and answer questions, and discover answers to thousands of questions on everything from how to buy an HDTV to the best way to lose weight. Askville.com users who share their knowledge by answering questions will receive Quest Gold, which, for a limited time and while supplies last, can be redeemed for $100 or $50 Amazon.com Gift Cards. Askville.com is now available to all Amazon customers around the world. – Financial News USA

IT News — November 26, 2007

Updates on: Microsoft Vista’s (un)popularity, Forterra Systems and CIA’s partnership to develop a secure virtual world, Career Education Corporation’s choice of data loss prevention solution, and One Laptop Per Child Program’s extension

Sales of Microsoft’s year-old Windows Vista operating system have hit 88 million. But a recent survey by King Research showed that 90 percent of IT professionals have concerns about migrating to Vista and about half reported they have considered non-Windows operating systems, such as Linux and Macintosh, to avoid Vista. Meanwhile, a Forrester report showed that that 88 percent of companies with 5,000 to 20,000 users have standardized on the XP operating system and their demand forced Microsoft in September to extend XP’s availability another five months. — AHN

Forterra Systems Inc., a California-based computer-simulation company, announced it received a “strategic investment” from In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s privately run venture affiliate, to develop computer-based virtual-conferencing systems for the nation’s intelligence community. Forterra says its “virtual world” product is an organized version of the increasingly popular Second Life, a freewheeling online “reality game” produced by Linden Lab of San Francisco. Some of the technologies will include in-depth data mining to track potential terrorists, high-speed image analysis, and online behavior-pattern recognition. — OrlandoSentinel.com

Career Education Corporation implemented Vontu, a Data Loss Prevention solution, to protect the private information of its students and make online credit card transactions compliant with security regulations. — CNN

One Laptop Per Child

The “Give One, Get One” program will now run through December 31, instead of ending on November 26, according to the One Laptop Per Child Program, a nonprofit spinoff from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The program was extended because people and local and national groups requested more time to participate. — Associated Press

Schools and Programs in the News - November 16, 2007

Updates on: Capella University, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Bainbridge College, One Laptop Per Child

The Minnesota Tekne Awards named Capella University (www.capella.edu), an accredited, fully online university based in Minneapolis, the winner in its Technology User category at an award ceremony last night at the Minneapolis Convention Center. — PR USA

MC Strategies announced today that USA Prepare, its emergency preparedness unit, and the Allied Health Sciences School at UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas will distribute UT Southwestern’s online lectures to emergency medical technicians and paramedics via www.JEMSprepare.com. — PR Web  

Bainbridge College (BC), which offers many online courses in a variety of subjects and is part of the Georgia ONmyLINE initiative of the University System of Georgia (USG), is observing Nov. 12-16 as National Distance Learning Week. — Bainbridge College

The city of Birmingham, Ala., has purchased more than 15,000 laptops from the One Laptop Per Child organization. — Mass High Tech

Games in the News — November 12, 2007

Updates on: Electronic Arts, One Laptop Per Child, game development, IBM, Brandeis

Game developer, Electronic Arts (EA), has announced donating its original 1989 classic, “SimCity”, to the One Laptop per Child (OLPC) Project. — Tech Tree

NEW DELHI: If you have an idea to make learning fun, campuses are all game. And with scores of firms introducing educational games targeting school, colleges, besides management students and professionals alike, learning could be just fun. Companies in the education space — Educomp, NIIT, 24×7 learning, Gurukul Online, Applect Learning Systems and Tutorvista, to name a few — are either planning to launch or have launched education-based computer games. — Economic Times

IBM is working with Brandeis International Business School (IBS) to test “serious games,” video games designed  to help students build combined business and IT skills often required in today’s work environments. — Campus Technology

Schools and Programs in the News - November 12, 2007

Updates on: One Laptop Per Child, Hoover City Schools in Alabama, PBS and Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s literacy initiative, No Child Left Behind, and LeTourneau’s Tyler Educational Site

India is the latest of the countries where the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) experiment has started. Children from the village of Khairat were given the opportunity to learn how to use the XO laptop. — Wiki News Reports 

Hoover City Schools in Alabama is expanding access to library services with the adoption of a centralized, Web-based system that allows students to search for and reserve books online and have them delivered to their desks the next day using Follett’s Destiny Library Manager. The district is also using the system to provide library enhancements, including providing previews of books. — T.H.E. Journal

In January PBS and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting will launch a five-year literacy initiative for preschoolers and young learners aimed at teachers, parents, and caregivers. Funded in part through a grant from the United States Department of Education, the multi-pronged initiative, dubbed “PBS Kids Raising Readers,” will include a wide range of new tools and media, including television series, Web content, professional development, and a preschool curriculum, designed to develop literacy skills in kids aged 2 to 8. — T.H.E. Journal

No Child Left Behind is up for reauthorization this year, giving supporters and opponents alike a chance to change the federal law. Bush signed the bill into law in January 2002. The law has become one of his most prominent domestic achievements. Bush has asked Congress to reauthorize the law, saying No Child Left Behind “is working for all kinds of children in all kinds of schools in every part of the country.” — The Durango Herald

LeTourneau is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Most students follow a “blended” track by attending classes at LeTourneau’s Tyler Educational Site and also taking some courses online. This article profiles the institution and some of the students who have benefited from its flexible program. — Tyler Paper

Schools and Programs in the News - November 7, 2007

Updates on: Kaplan Higher Education, Concord Law School, Hamilton College, Career Education Corp, American InterContinental University, One Laptop per Child, Gallaudet University, University of Massachusetts

Kaplan Higher Education has announced it will merge with Concord Law School to create the first law school program that may be completed entirely online. — University Degree Finder

Hamilton College in Mason City, Iowa, is now a part of Kaplan University. The change will allow the school to offer a wider selection of programs and more online courses. — KIMT

Shares of Career Education Corp. rose the most in five months Thursday after an accrediting association panel said no corrective action should be taken on student records and recruiting concerns at the company’s American InterContinental University campuses. The company has battled a shareholder revolt, along with investigations and lawsuits over its admissions, financial aid and job placement practices. — Chicago Tribute

Uruguay is the first country to place an official order for child-friendly laptops from the One Laptop per Child (OLPC) initiative, and Peru looks set to follow. — SciDev Net

Students at Gallaudet University in Washington, DC, the only liberal arts university in the world for the deaf and hard of hearing, are benefiting from lecture capture software that includes closed captioning.  — Campus Technology

Fueled by a $650,000 development grant from the Sloan Foundation received last January to help expand access to the University of Massachusetts through blended learning innovations, UMassOnline announced that in addition to five inaugural course offerings launched last month, an additional round of five more certificate, degree or professional development courses will join the portfolio this January. — PR Inside

IT News - November 7, 2007

Updates on: Microsoft, India’s Reliance Communications, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum, One Laptop per Child, T-Mobile, ASUS, Apple, and Advanced Media Design

Microsoft and India’s Reliance Communications have signed a 500-million-dollar deal to launch India’s first high-definition Internet TV service, executives from both firms said. — AFP

The Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum in Austin might be coming back the only way dead folks can: virtually–through a site like Second Life. The  LBJ crew wants to create a world that touches on his major issues like civil rights and the Vietnam War. — CBS News

Following a number of delays, the One Laptop per Child Foundation’s much-awaited XO laptop for needy kids has finally gone into mass production. Early Tuesday (local time), Taiwan’s Quanta Computer started producing the green-and-white computer in its new Changshu manufacturing center, two hours northwest of Shanghai. — News Blog

T-Mobile USA announced that if you make a donation of one laptop to the One Laptop per Child Foundation ($399, $200 of which is tax-deductible) during this month’s Give One Get One promotion, then T-Mobile will reward you with one free year of access at its Hotspots (a $360 value). — Wi-Fi Planet

According to Taiwanese computer maker ASUS, Apple is in the process of designing a new tablet computer and they’ve hired ASUS to do the manufacturing. — SciFi Blog

AV technology developer Advanced Media Design has started shipping a new model in its MediaPointe family of digital media recorders, the DMR210e, designed for capturing presentations and classroom lectures. — Campus Technology

IT News - November 5, 2007

Updates on: Linux, One Laptop Per Child, Google, MyArtSpace

As component prices drop, the aggressive pricing of commercial Linux notebooks could hamper efforts by One Laptop Per Child to supply inexpensive laptops to children in developing markets. — PC World

Google late last week said it released a set of “open APIs” that will enable developers to build applications to run across a broad range of social networking environments. — Campus Technology

MyArtSpace is a software solution and service that allows museums and other cultural sites to catalogue materials so that students can interact with them and gather information using mobile phones. — I Think Ed Blog