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[olpc-gr] OLPC invites laptop makers to copy their design

OLPC invites laptop makers to copy their design


Founder Nicholas Negroponte says the OLPC will open source its hardware
design and invite others to copy it, according to a report from the TED
conference

Speaking at the TED 2009 conference, One Laptop per Child founder Nicholas
Negroponte has said the future of the initiative - which set out to put
simple, durable, low-cost laptops in the hands of schoolchildren in
developing nations - is to become, in essence, more commonplace, to "build
something that everyone copies".

That copying has already begun, Negroponte said, pointing to the surging
popularity in recent months of netbooks - laptops built by a range of
commercial PC makers with a focus on low cost and simplicity of design.
"They didn't copy the right things from us, but they exist," Negroponte
said, according to Ethan Zuckerman, blogging from TED. "We had to build the
first laptop because no one else would do it."

In the early days of the OLPC, the group's design became famous as the "$100
laptop", after the target price set for the device, but over time the price
crept up to nearly double that level; the $100 price tag would have to wait
for economies of scale that proved elusive. Meanwhile, even before the
advent of netbooks, the price of higher-end laptops kept dropping.

Given the pressure from commercial markets, Negroponte said the OLPC would
release and open source its hardware design and invite others to copy it,
according to Zuckerman. Within three years, Negroponte expects companies
around the world to be cranking out some five million to six million such
machines every month, compared with about half-a-million OLPC machines now
in use.

In May 2008, as the OLPC sought broader acceptance, the group said it would
be working with Microsoft to make a Windows variety of its XO laptop, in
addition to the original Linux model.

In January, amid harsh economic conditions, the OLPC announced that it would
be cutting its workforce by 50 percent and cutting salaries for remaining
employees. It also said it would hand off development of its Sugar operating
system to the open-source community.
Story URL: http://news.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/0,1000000091,39613859,00.htm

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