Photos: The $100 laptop on Linux - TechRepublic

Photos: The $100 laptop on Linux

  • Negroponte at LinuxWorld

    Nicolas Negroponte, head of The One Laptop Per Child organization, on Tuesday tells the LinuxWorld audience in Boston that the inexpensive machine will use Linux, but the operating system suffers the same code bloat as Windows.

    Stephen Shankland
  • As initially envisioned, Negroponte’s $100 laptops sported a hand crank on the side to generate power, but the idea was scrapped because the twisting forces would be bad for the machine. Instead, some form of power generation device, likely a pedal, will be attached to the AC power adapter.

  • The system will use a 500MHz processor from Advanced Micro Devices with 128MB of memory. It will use 512MB of flash memory and no hard drive, Negroponte said. The biggest remaining cost is the display. \r\n\r\nThe $100 laptop will use a dual-mode display with a black-and-white, 1,110-by-830-pixel mode in sunlight and a 640-by-480-pixel color mode otherwise.

  • The One Laptop Per Child association hopes to distribute 5 million to 10 million of the systems to children in India, China, Brazil, Argentina, Thailand, Egypt and Nigeria in the first quarter of 2007. Negroponte hopes the project will help supply the world’s billion children with an education that undertrained teachers often can’t supply.

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Bill Detwiler is the Editor for Technical Content and Ecosystem at Celonis. He is the former Editor in Chief of TechRepublic and previous host of TechRepublic's Dynamic Developer podcast and Cracking Open, CNET and TechRepublic's popular online show. Previously, Bill was an IT manager in the social research and energy industries. He has bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Louisville, where he has also lectured on computer crime and crime prevention.