The new version of the XO laptop, which was designed for schoolchildren in developing countries, has been revealed.
The
new computer, which is called the XO2, looks just like an e-book. It
also has a significantly lower price of just $75 per device, which is at
least $25 cheaper than the first version.
Nicholas Negroponte,
who founded the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) project that created this
laptop, revealed the new version of the device at a special event at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It is thought that the first XO2
machines should be ready to deliver to children in developing countries
by 2010.
New XO Laptop Design Is Unveiled |
At the event, Professor Negroponte said that he hoped
other manufacturers would use the unusual design of the XO2, too. He
said: "This laptop comes from a different point of view." He also added,
"Over the last couple of years we've learned the book experience is
key... It is a totally new concept for learning devices."
The XO2
doesn't feature the distinctive green rubbery keyboard of the first XO
laptop, but it uses a single square display with a hinge instead. The
hinge allows the device to be split into two separate touch screens,
which can make the device look like a laptop with keyboard or the pages
of a book.
The XO2 machine will also be more energy efficient than
its predecessor, as well as being half the size of it and much lighter
to carry.
Professor Negroponte said the new Laptop "will be a bit
of a Trojan horse" and it will initially be promoted as an e-book reader
that is able to store more than 500 e-books. He said: "Currently
developing nations such as China and Brazil are spending $19 per student
per year on books."
Many countries were initially reluctant to
buy the original XO machines because they did not run on Microsoft's
Windows operating system. However, One Laptop Per Child announced a deal
with Microsoft to make Windows available on the XO machine in May.
Professor Negroponte said that this would add to the machine's
popularity, he said: "There is no question that demand goes up when you
offer dual boot."
New XO Laptop Design Is Unveiled |
Although the One Laptop Per Child project has
only sold about 600,000 XO laptops so far, Professor Negroponte said
that he expected a further 400,000 orders in the next "60 to 90 days."
Professor
Negroponte also announced that the project's Get-One-Give-One programme
would soon open to people in North America and Europe. The scheme,
which allows people in more affluent countries to buy two XO laptops and
donate one to a child in a developing country, has already enabled One
Laptop Per Child to distribute 30,000 laptops to children in Rwanda,
Mongolia and Haiti.
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