One Laptop Per Child, an ambitious project to bring computing to the developing worlds children, has considerable momentum. Years of work by engineers and scientists have paid off in a pioneering low-cost machine that is light, rugged and surprisingly versatile. The early reviews have been glowing, and mass production is set to start next month. Orders, however, are slow. That might change with the introduction of a new marketing program, called Give 1 Get 1, in which Americans and Canadians can buy two laptops for $399. One of the machines will be given to a child in a developing nation, and the other one will be shipped to the purchaser by Christmas. Read more about the details of this plan in this article from The New York Times.
Posted by Steve Groft on 25 September 2007 in Global Literacy , Literacy and Technology