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A first look at the "Sugar" interface - Image courtesy Laptop.org
New interfaces, ship dates and commitments let everyone know OLPC is ready to teach the world

This article was first published on HWUpgrade.com.

The OLPC project, which will finally begin to start shipping its XO laptops worldwide this July, is attempting to accomplish than just an economic feat. The main goal is not just to provide a low-cost computer, but to help introduce a new approach to technology for children in developing markets. The driving focus of the project is that children are being taught the use of office applications instead of how to create and develop new things.

To achieve its goal of transforming the learning process, OLPCs will come with a slim and unique version of Linux that is geared towards education. Instead of the conventional windows and files approach, the home screen of these computers will be centered on a stick-figure icon. A white ring surrounding the stick-figure will display all programs that the student is currently running. The desktop (or “neighborhood” as the OLPC project terms it) also features a black frame that displays additional icons.

At the core of the XO interface, developers are now announcing the first details of Sugar, the OLPC Human Interface. Sugar provides chat and sharing functions for the core applications featured on the OLPC. Christopher Blizzard, a lead developer for the OLPC project, emphasizes "We want this interface to be social. This means that kids can communicate in every app that they can show each other things, that they can take each other on tours of the web and many other ways of collaborating."

The end-result of the OLPC will be a computer that will offer a new approach to learning. Blizzard adds “90 percent of the underlying programming code was cobbled together from technologies that long existed in the open-source programming community.”  All of the tools available on the XO will be freely modifiable by anyone.

When finally delivered to students around the world, the low-cost laptops are expected to transform education. The laptops will come with a wide range of programs, including a Web browser, word processor and even an RSS reader.

Nicholas Negroponte, who originally launched the project two years ago at MIT’s technology labs, is quite optimistic regarding the future of the OLPC. In an email interview with the Associated Press, Negroponte wrote "I have to laugh when people refer to XO as a weak or crippled machine and how kids should get a 'real' one. Trust me, I will give up my real one very soon and use only XO. It will be far better, in many new and important ways."

The OLPC project will attempt to take full advantage of their low-cost computers, which as of right now will feature a 366-megahertz AMD processor along with 512 megabytes of flash memory, which will be the primary means of storage. USB 2.0 ports will also be included for further memory expansion along with a built-in camera.

The machines are currently being manufactured by Quanta Computer Inc. Each country will receive a localized version of the laptop specific to the official language of the country. In addition, OLPC representatives will be sent to schools for one month in order to help teachers and students adjust to the new computers. The project has so far received $29 million in funding from many notable companies, including Google Inc., News Corp. and Red Hat.

The OLPC project page expects Sugar to start beta testing this February with the first OLPC shipments starting in July 2007.


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366MHz?
By JBird7986 on 1/2/2007 5:16:16 PM , Rating: 2
Is that even fast enough to run software these days?

I thought that the processors were supposed to clock in at 500MHz (not that that's terribly faster).




RE: 366MHz?
By ADDAvenger on 1/2/2007 8:25:54 PM , Rating: 2
Last I knew it was 500Mhz as well, but either way they're either Geodes or Alchemys, AMD's K7 based chips that they use for embedded processors. So it's at least a decent design, even if the Mhz is really low, I'm sure they perform better than a PII clocked at the same speed.


RE: 366MHz?
By PhatoseAlpha on 1/3/2007 12:25:18 AM , Rating: 2
Should be plenty. Probably quite comparable to the processor the powered the original Xbox. Like a console, they have a static hardware configuration and should be able to strip a lot of overhead out because of that. Plus, they aren't exactly expecting the things to manage multi-terabyte databases, perform complex physics calculations or run Quake 5. I'd be somewhat surprised if the user wasn't the limiting factor in all the apps they plan to run anyway. 366 should be plenty.


RE: 366MHz?
By frobizzle on 1/3/2007 3:08:28 PM , Rating: 2
Is AMD still fabbing these chips?


Sample 'Chat'
By michal1980 on 1/2/07, Rating: -1
RE: Sample 'Chat'
By Enoch2001 on 1/2/2007 2:46:01 PM , Rating: 2
Brilliant!


RE: Sample 'Chat'
By Master Kenobi (blog) on 1/2/2007 2:52:11 PM , Rating: 2
LOL Win!


RE: Sample 'Chat'
By Homerboy on 1/2/2007 3:04:48 PM , Rating: 2
not exactly the situation that these machines are designed for though is it?


RE: Sample 'Chat'
By ADDAvenger on 1/2/2007 8:30:54 PM , Rating: 5
No, that's not even close to the situation that these are being aimed at. This comes up every single time DT reports on the OLPC, but people make the cracks anyway. I would rant, but I'll betcha they've already read several, those posters just aren't 1. taking it seriously, or 2. being serious about what they post.

OLPC is meant for places like inland China where they have good water and maybe electricity, maybe no electricity, but their living conditions are well established. Well established doesn't mean developed, but someplace well maintained with effective sewage and all the other necessities.


RE: Sample 'Chat'
By PrinceGaz on 1/2/2007 8:47:34 PM , Rating: 2
You ADDAvenger said:
quote:
where they have good water and maybe electricity, maybe no electricity


So what is wrong with the OP making fun of the OLPC users not having light bulbs if you yourself said they might not have electricity? :p


RE: Sample 'Chat'
By Dfere on 1/4/2007 1:09:57 PM , Rating: 2
So the OLPC is made for poor epople in an industrializing nation which makes most of the computers today? Does this make sense to anyone? How come China was not an original buyer to the OLPC project early on? Perhaps the US should buy some and distribute them to Appalachia and in inner city areas?


RE: Sample 'Chat'
By creathir on 1/2/2007 3:06:54 PM , Rating: 5
Student 3: "You were talking about digital white boards?"
Student 1: "Yeah..."
Student 3: "My daddy works for El Presidente Chavez... we have three at home"
Student 2: "Really?? What does it do?"
Student 1: "We are really curious?!?"
Student 3: "I get to watch my daddy formulate how many more votes we want to win the election next year."
Student 2: "My daddy says El Presidente Chavez is ruthless."
Student 3: "That is why you do not have a light bulb."

- Creathir


RE: Sample 'Chat'
By thegrimreaper3 on 1/2/2007 3:26:44 PM , Rating: 1
HA! I know someone from venisweal(SP) who no longer lives there for that reason. Dam chaves and his citgo gas! DONT BUY CITGO! IF YOU BUY CITGO GAS YOU SUPPORT CHAVES!


RE: Sample 'Chat'
By Homerboy on 1/2/2007 3:33:27 PM , Rating: 2
quote:
venisweal(SP)


are you kidding me?


RE: Sample 'Chat'
By frobizzle on 1/3/2007 3:16:02 PM , Rating: 2
Sure...right near Kolombea and Braseal


RE: Sample 'Chat'
By borowki on 1/2/2007 10:48:53 PM , Rating: 1
Hehe. The sad thing is that your scene is actually overly optimistic. A more realistic one would look like this:

Student 1: fkjsdh37w84y3
Student 2: jfdlsk 8938fklsd fds

Somewhere along the line people forgot that children have to be taught to read and write. Then again, what do I know. Maybe if you put a laptop in front of a poor kid he'll magically learn those skills by pressing random buttons.


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