Here's some demos on You Tube http://www.eetimes.com/news/semi/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=196100148
-- Steve Lee www.oatsoft.org www.schoolforge.org.uk www.fullmeasure.co.uk On 11/16/06, Henrik Nilsen Omma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi All, David Colven and I talked a bit about the One Laptop Per Child project when we met in Oxford in September. See: http://www.ace-centre.org.uk/ I think both the software and the little machine itself could be of interest to the wider AT community. The software - Sugar The machines run a simplified version of Redhat/Fedora Linux using some Gnome components. The user interface has been completely redesigned however, to make it much easier to navigate for children. The result is called 'Sugar'. See: http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Software I think this interface could serve as a useful base for many AT deployments, being uncomplicated for both users to use and AT experts to configure ;) And of course it's fully open source, so features can be added or removed. The hardware - small, rugged and affordable A major issue in the AT world is the cost of highly specialised hardware. I think the more functionality we can provide on commodity hardware, the better for the user. It's cheaper and easier to service and upgrade. PCs have traditionally been fairly chunky in a home or mobile setting. Laptops are better, taking less space and with less cable clutter, but have traditionally been expensive. Neither is esp. rugged. The OLPC solves all these issues. It's small, light, rugged and clutter free. It has some standard inputs/outputs like USB and sound. It runs Linux and has various standard interface libraries like Cairo, Gecko, Pango, etc. installed, so it should be fairly easy to write suitable AT applications for it. See: http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Hardware_specification and http://wiki.laptop.org/go/B1_Pictures Chris Jones of the Ubuntu accessibility team has already started to work with the OLPC hardware (main board) to investigate which of the existing AT tools for Linux might be suitable for it. I'll likely receive a beta-version laptop at some point as well for AT testing purposes. This is mainly just an introduction. Some members of he OLPC team came to the recent Ubuntu Development Summit and suggested we collaborate on accessibility amongst other things. I know that there are many AT experts on the oatsoft list, with both software and hardware experience. Please feel free to add your suggestions to the sugar mailing list: http://mailman.laptop.org/mailman/listinfo/sugar Henrik Ubuntu Accessibility Coordinator
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