for a headline that promises a "big debate" there's only one quote in  
the whole article that's at all critical of the idea...

------

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/30/technology/30laptop.html? 
hp&ex=1164949200&en=65317907d3a0f6d7&ei=5094&partner=homepage

November 30, 2006
For $150, Third-World Laptop Stirs a Big Debate
By JOHN MARKOFF

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — When computer industry executives heard about a  
plan to build a $100 laptop for the developing world’s children, they  
generally ridiculed the idea. How could you build such a computer,  
they asked, when screens alone cost about $100?

Mary Lou Jepsen, the chief technologist for the project, likes to  
refer to the insight that transformed the machine from utopian dream  
to working prototype as “a really wacky idea.”

Ms. Jepsen, a former Intel chip designer, found a way to modify  
conventional laptop displays, cutting the screen’s manufacturing cost  
to $40 while reducing its power consumption by more than 80 percent.  
As a bonus, the display is clearly visible in sunlight.

That advance and others have allowed the nonprofit project, One  
Laptop Per Child, to win over many skeptics over the last two and a  
half years. Five countries — Argentina, Brazil, Libya, Nigeria and  
Thailand — have made tentative commitments to put the computers into  
the hands of millions of students, with production in Taiwan expected  
to begin by mid-2007.

The laptop does not come with a Microsoft Windows operating system or  
even a hard drive, and the screen is small. And the cost is now  
closer to $150 than $100. But the price tag, even compared with low- 
end $500 laptops now widely available, transforms the economic  
equation for developing countries.

That has not prevented the effort, conceived by Nicholas Negroponte,  
a prominent computer researcher, from becoming the focal point of a  
debate over the value of computers to both learning and economic  
development.

The detractors include two computer industry giants, Intel and  
Microsoft, pushing alternative approaches. Intel has developed a $400  
laptop aimed at schools as well as an education program that focuses  
on teachers instead of students. And Bill Gates, Microsoft’s chairman  
and a leading philanthropist for the third world, has questioned  
whether the concept is “just taking what we do in the rich world” and  
assuming that that is something good for the developing world, too.

Mr. Negroponte, the founding director of the M.I.T. Media Laboratory,  
said he was amused by the attention his little machine was getting.  
It is not the first time he has been challenged for proclaiming  
technology’s promise.

“It’s as if people spent all of their attention focusing on  
Columbus’s boat and not on where he was going,” he said in an  
interview here. “You have to remember that what this is about is  
education.”

Seymour Papert, a computer scientist and educator who is an adviser  
to the project, has argued that if young people are given computers  
and allowed to explore, they will “learn how to learn.” That, Mr.  
Papert argues, is a more valuable skill than traditional teaching  
strategies that focus on memorization and testing.

The idea is also that children can take on much of the responsibility  
for maintaining the systems, rather than relying on or creating  
bureaucracies to do so.

“We believe you have to leverage the kids themselves,” Ms. Jepsen  
said. “They’re learning machines.” As an example, she pointed to the  
backlight used by the laptop. Although it is designed to last five  
years, if it fails it can be replaced as simply as batteries are  
replaced in a flashlight. It is something a child can do, she said.

That philosophy, at the heart of the project’s world view, has  
stirred criticism for its focus on getting equipment to students  
rather than issues like teacher training and curriculum.

“I think it’s wonderful that the machines can be put in the hands of  
children and parents, and it will have an impact on their lives if  
they have access to electricity,” Larry Cuban, a Stanford University  
education professor, said in an interview. “However, if part of their  
rationale is that it will revolutionize education in various  
countries, I don’t think it will happen, and they are naïve and  
innocent about the reality of formal schooling.”

The debate is certain to enter a new phase when the machines go into  
full-scale production by Taiwan-based Quanta Computer, the world’s  
second-largest laptop maker. (The manufacturer, unlike the project  
itself, will make a profit.) Overnight, even though it will not be  
available to consumers, the laptop could become the best-selling  
portable computer in the world.

The project now has tentative commitments for three million computers  
and will begin large-scale manufacturing when it reaches five million  
with separate commitments from at least one country each in Africa,  
Latin America and Asia. Based on current negotiations, Mr. Negroponte  
says he expects that goal to be reached by mid-2007.

It got a significant boost on Nov. 15 when the Inter-American  
Development Bank signed an agreement to supply both loans and grants  
to buy the machines.

“Several years ago, I thought it was an illusion or a utopian idea,”  
said Juan José Daboub, managing director of the World Bank and an  
independent economic-development expert. “But this is now real and  
encouraging.”

Mr. Negroponte said the manufacturing cost was now below $150 and  
that it would fall below $100 by the end of 2008.

One factor setting the project apart from earlier efforts to create  
inexpensive computers for education is the inclusion of a wireless  
network capability in each machine.

The project leaders say they will employ a variety of methods for  
connecting to the Internet, depending on local conditions. In some  
countries, like Libya, satellite downlinks will be used. In others,  
like Nigeria, the existing cellular data network will provide  
connections, and in some places specially designed long-range Wi-Fi  
antennas will extend the wireless Internet to rural areas.

When students take their computers home after school, each machine  
will stay connected wirelessly to its neighbors in a self-assembling  
“mesh” at ranges up to a third of a mile. In the process each  
computer can potentially become an Internet repeater, allowing the  
Internet to flow out into communities that have not previously had  
access to it.

“The soldiers inside this Trojan horse are children with laptops,”  
said Walter Bender, a computer researcher who served as director of  
the Media Laboratory after Mr. Negroponte and now heads software  
development for the laptop project.

Each machine will come with a simple mechanism for recharging itself  
when a standard power outlet is not available. The designers  
experimented with a crank, but eventually discarded that idea because  
it seemed too fragile. Now they have settled on several alternatives,  
including a foot pedal as well as a hand-pulled device that works  
like a salad spinner.

Ms. Jepsen’s display, which removes most of the color filters but can  
operate in either color or monochrome modes, has made it possible to  
build a computer that consumes just 2 watts of power, compared with  
the 25 to 45 watts consumed by a conventional laptop. The ultra-low- 
power operation is possible because of the lack of a hard drive (the  
laptop uses solid-state memory, which has no moving parts and has  
fallen sharply in cost) and because the Advanced Micro Devices  
microprocessor shuts down whenever the computer is not processing  
information.

The designers have also gambled in designing the laptop’s software,  
which is based on the freely available Linux operating system, a  
rival to Microsoft’s Windows. Dispensing with a traditional desktop  
display, the software substitutes an iconic interface intended to  
give students a simpler view of their programs and documents and a  
maplike view of other connected users nearby.

A video-camera lens sits just to the right of the display, for use in  
videoconferencing and taking digital still photos of reasonable  
quality. The computer comes with a stripped-down Web browser, a  
simple word processor and a number of learning programs. For e-mail,  
the designers intend to use Google’s Web-based Gmail service.

Only one program at a time can be viewed on the laptop because of its  
small 7.5-inch display.

Mr. Negroponte has been a globetrotting salesman for the project,  
winning Libya’s participation when he was summoned by Col. Muammar el- 
Qaddafi to a meeting in a desert tent on a sweltering August night.  
But there have also been setbacks. The Indian Education Ministry  
rejected a proposal to order a million computers, noting that the  
money could be better spent on primary and secondary education.

Mr. Negroponte said he had been re-energized by the recent arrival of  
the first 1,000 working prototypes. The prototypes, he said, will  
give him new ammunition to convince government leaders that his tiny  
machines can be a positive force for social development. [On a visit  
to Brazil on Nov. 24, Mr. Negroponte presented one of the prototypes  
to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.]

He said a program would be created to enable those in the developed  
world to underwrite a laptop for a child in a designated country and  
to correspond with the recipient by e-mail as a sort of “glorified  
pen-pal program.” But however attractive the idea of a $100 or $150  
laptop, he said there were no plans to make it generally available to  
consumers.

“They should buy Dell’s $499 laptop for now,” he said. “Ours is  
really designed for developing nations — dusty, dirty, no or  
unreliable power and so on.”

In his two decades as director of the Media Laboratory, Mr.  
Negroponte often faced criticism because the institution’s impressive  
demonstrations of technology only occasionally led to commercial  
applications.

“He has spent his whole career being accused of being all icing and  
no cake,” said Michael Hawley, a computer scientist and one of Mr.  
Negroponte’s former students. To that kind of scoffing, he said, the  
laptop’s success would be Mr. Negroponte’s best retort.


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