Donate One Laptop per Child, Get One

Fri Nov 2, 2007 8:42AM EDT

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Starting Monday, Nov. 12, Americans and Canadians will have the chance to add charity and innovation to holiday shopping lists. The One Laptop Per Child organization is offering the chance to purchase two XO laptops—one to be given to a child in the developing world, the other to keep or donate locally.

It's called "Give 1 Get 1" and the $399 offer is good for two weeks. The XO laptops are durable laptops designed for education and connecting kids in developing nations who have never worked with computers.

The One Laptop Per Child Organization has had verbal agreements from many developing country governments to purchase the laptops in bulk, but concrete, signed orders have not been as forthcoming as project founder and chairman Nicholas Negroponte had hoped. So the group has opened up the sale of the laptops from Nov. 12 to Nov. 26 to Americans and Canadians in an effort to spark worldwide sales. They will be delivered by Christmas.

The energy-efficient computers have high-resolution screens, cameras, and peer-to-peer wireless communication capability built in. They run on free open-source software. There are no moving parts—no CD or DVD drive, and no hard drive—just 1GB flash memory and a low-power processor so it can be easily maintained. It can be powered by solar energy, a foot pump, or  pull-string powered chargers, and the screen is readable in full sunlight.

The New York Times reports that some members of the laptop project were understandably concerned that if American children were to use them, they would be highly critical when comparing them to Macs and PCs. But focus groups with kids ages 7 to 11 turned in high praise, so they moved ahead with the one-for-one program. For a good look at the XO laptop, check out David Pogue's review in the Times.

Affordable laptops for kids have been top of the news lately. Asus' $400 Eee PC is getting some good early reviews, while Intel announced its $400 flash-memory "Classmate PC" will be tested by the Brazilian government alongside OLPC's XO Laptop.  

Whether families keep the second OLPC computer for their kids, Give 1 Get 1 is about the giving. "The main thing is to get this thing started," Negroponte says in the Times piece.

Interested? What would you do with the second laptop if you decide to make the $400 donation?

LINKS:www.xogiving.org

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  • 1 Posted by dianepiniaris01 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:42PM EDT Report Abuse

    I've been fascinated with this project from the beginning and can't wait to see how it works out. Here's an idea: Wouldn't it be neat if those people responding to this offer donated one laptop overseas and one here in the US to needier areas. I'm thinking of the criticism Oprah received for opening her Leadership Academy in South Africa. If any of us have $400 to donate, why not spread the good deed equally abroad AND at home?

  • 2 Posted by wayan_vota on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    I think OLPC was smart to try and combine the two desires in this offer. Americans want to help OLPC, but they also want to help children here in America. http://www.olpcnews.com/sales_talk/donors/americans_help_olpc.html

  • 3 Posted by opus_125 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:46PM EDT Report Abuse

    I guess if your're a dirt poor child on the wrong side of the digital divide in Louisiana or Appalachia, you're just out of luck. MIT should lose all Federal funding and/or tax exemptions over this travesty. Charity, egg-heads, begins at home!

  • 4 Posted by humanchaos@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    Wow and this started out as $100 per laptop. Now $399? Give me a break. Might as well get a real one for a couple hundred more. The idea was great when it started out, now they keep asking for more money. Figures.

  • 5 Posted by ingramafi@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:24PM EDT Report Abuse

    I agree, Why is everything going abroad instead of right here at home. We have needy kids right here at home. If you have something to give away, why not start here and then abroad.

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