On Thu, Apr 24, 2008 at 1:57 PM, Nan A. Canter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Let's get to work..... > > I have three (3) OLPC's as I call them...I am 63 > years old with NOt an inkling of what you all talk > about. > > I am taking/donating my three (3) GOGO OLPC's to > KYRGYZSTAN this JUNE. They will reside in an > elementary school in a farming community in the > eastern most corner, up in the mountains betwen > Kazakstan and China. I ill only be bringing them. I > have no idea what they will be able to do....
Yay. I'll bet they think of something. ;-) > There is no internet access up there but there are > internet cafes in the town about 2 hours away. And we > need a Cyrillic keyboard until they kids/teachers > learn some english... which is part of what I hope > they will get out of this adventure... The cyrillic keyboard layout for Russian is built in. In the terminal activity, use the command setxkbmap ru to activate it. Kyrgyz requires some extra letters, accessed using the alt gr key (Unicode fonts required to view properly): өӨүҮңҢ setxkbmap kg and of course setxkbmap us to get back to US English. We will have to write some scripts with Cyrillic names for more convenient keyboard switching. Do you have any friends who know Linux near where you live? If all else fails, you can talk to NYLUG.org: The New York Linux Users Group http://www.nylug.org/ to ask for help locally. There is a pilot OLPC XO project in NYC. Somebody here can put you in touch with them. I hope that you can interest students there in writing to make new friends in Kyrgyzstan. Tell the children that they are welcome on this list in any language. > I am looking for someone help us get started. I want > to put together an OLPC Kit to bring with basics so > the kids/teachers can just start them themselves > without the internet part. They should have flash drives and a solar panel connected to a car battery with a US socket. Or you can use a battery with a local power socket if you provide the international power adapter for it. What else would you like the children to be able to do? > I hope to find someone who lives nearby to be the > go-between with the school, the internet, and you > folks.... someone who can downoad programs and bring > them up and teach them..... Fine. My Russian is rusty, so I will need assistance, but I'm sure we will cope. The Russian localization is in fairly good shape. Somebody can point you to the Wiki page that explains how to download and install it on your XOs. If your users would like to start a Kyrgyz localization, we can create the project and explain to them what they need to do. They don't have to be on the Internet to translate, as long as someone can send and receive files in town. Somebody needs to provide the files for them after the project is set up. Have them contact me to get going. We can ask for help to set up a point-to-point wireless link between the school and the town so that the school can have Internet. Or for donations to fund a satellite dish. > I am in New York City. What are your Kyrgyz connections there? I see the Kyrgyz mission to the UN, but nothing about local communities. > HELP!!!!! OUT THERE... PLEASE HAVE PITY ON US NON TECH > FOLKS > > NANA Certainly. Thanks for doing this, and thanks for asking. -- Edward Cherlin End Poverty at a Profit by teaching children business http://www.EarthTreasury.org/ "The best way to predict the future is to invent it."--Alan Kay _______________________________________________ Grassroots mailing list [email protected] http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/grassroots

