John Von Essen on 26 Sep 2007 15:47:53 -0000


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Re: [PLUG] One Laptop per Child project - Worldwide Linux


I'm not sure how useful this laptop will be to an adult out-of-the-box. I recall it having its own unique OS specifically designed for children, I dont even know if it will have a full featured web browser, etc.,. Will have alot of kiddie games and learning apps though, but at my age, I think I am past that.

However, with that being said, I am sure you can wipe its brain and install Linux somehow. If only it came in black....

-John

On Sep 26, 2007, at 11:17 AM, Greg Lopp wrote:

No disc. Moving parts bad. 1G NAND flash  (hmmm, I wonder how many writes that's good for, or is that just a NOR flash problem?)

From http://laptop.org/en/laptop/hardware/specs.shtml :
802.11 b/g/s
3 USB 2.0 ports
MMC/SD slot

On 9/26/07, schwepes@netaxs.com < schwepes@netaxs.com> wrote:
What are the IO ports on this baby?
Does it have any internal disk reader?
bs


On Tue, 25 Sep 2007, JP Vossen wrote:

>  > Date: Tue, 25 Sep 2007 11:12:07 -0400
>  > From: "Joshua Karstendick" <joshdick@gmail.com >
>  > Subject: Re: [PLUG] One Laptop per Child project - Worldwide Linux
>  >
>  > I'm looking forward to buying one of these laptops in November. For
>  > $400, you get one and so does a needy child.
>
> Yeah, some details at:
> http://hardware.slashdot.org/hardware/07/09/24/0217254.shtml
>
> I'm thinking about this, and unlike some of the whiners on /. I think
> that pricing and scheme is a good idea.  But...
>
> While it will work stand-alone, from what I understand, these things
> will work best a) in a clump (mesh net, proximity display, video
> conferencing <g>, etc.) and b) with the back-end server somewhere around
> (for updates, backups, etc.).  So what about that?  I'm not an
> accredited school, so that I could get my hands on the server part.  And
> I'm not sure I can get other people in my neighborhood to buy these.
> Since my kids are a arguably bit on the young side for them anyway (1.5,
> 3.5), and OTOH since the 3.5yo is already using Child's Play, Tux Paint
> and other stuff on the Ubuntu laptop in the kitchen, should I even bother?
>
> Later,
> JP
> ----------------------------|:::======|-------------------------------
> JP Vossen, CISSP            |:::======|        jp{at}jpsdomain{dot}org
> My Account, My Opinions     |=========|       http://www.jpsdomain.org/
> ----------------------------|=========|-------------------------------
> Microsoft has single-handedly nullified Moore's Law.
> Innate design flaws of Windows make a personal firewall, anti-virus
> and anti-malware software mandatory. The resulting software arms race
> has effectively flattened Moore's Law on hardware running Windows.
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Philadelphia Linux Users Group         --        http://www.phillylinux.org

John Von Essen (john@essenz.com)

President, Essenz Consulting www.essenz.com





___________________________________________________________________________
Philadelphia Linux Users Group         --        http://www.phillylinux.org
Announcements - http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-announce
General Discussion  --   http://lists.phillylinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug