Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Low-cost laptop could transform learning

Distribution of $150 XO computers to begin later this year

Negroponte, Professor and Chairman Emeritus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, shows model of laptop computer he developed in New York
Chip East / Reuters file
Nicholas Negroponte shows a model of the $150 laptop computer he developed for the One Laptop per Child.
  Tech Holiday Gift Guide  
  More
Holiday Retail
10 best Nintendo DS games of the year
  Whether the gamer on your list loves puzzle, role-playing, adventure, or music games, you’re sure to find a few “must-have” DS titles that are guaranteed to make them happy.

  Real Women’s Guide to Technology

An MSN special that focuses on consumer technologies that can benefit women.

Tech and gadgets videos
5,000 computers hijacked to search for UFOs
Dec. 2: An Arizona school district computer administrator is accused of wasting resources, totaling more than $1 million, to search for UFOs. KPNX-TV's Brandon Kline reports.

Video
Tech Watch
The latest in technology and entertainment news.
  Auto Tech

A better economy may lure buyers, but these trends could seal the deal.

Go to Auto Tech

updated 2:50 p.m. ET Jan. 2, 2007

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Forget windows, folders and boxes that pop up with text. When students in Thailand, Libya and other developing countries get their $150 computers from the One Laptop Per Child project in 2007, their experience will be unlike anything on standard PCs.

For most of these children the XO machine, as it's called, likely will be the first computer they've ever used. Because the students have no expectations for what PCs should be like, the laptop's creators started from scratch in designing a user interface they figured would be intuitive for children.

The result is as unusual as — but possibly even riskier than — other much-debated aspects of the machine, such as its economics and distinctive hand-pulled mechanism for charging its battery. (XO has been known as the $100 laptop because of the ultra-low cost its creators eventually hope to achieve through mass production.)

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

For example, students who turn on the small green-and-white computers will be greeted by a basic home screen with a stick-figure icon at the center, surrounded by a white ring. The entire desktop has a black frame with more icons.

FREE VIDEO
Project kicks off
Jan. 2: MSNBC.com's Dara Brown reports on the One Laptop Per Child initative.

MSNBC Tech Watch

This runic setup signifies the student at the middle. The ring contains programs the student is running, which can be launched by clicking the appropriate icon in the black frame.

When the student opts to view the entire "neighborhood" — the XO's preferred term instead of "desktop" — other stick figures in different colors might appear on the screen. Those indicate schoolmates who are nearby, as detected by the computers' built-in wireless networking capability.

Moving the PC's cursor over the classmates' icons will pull up their names or photos. With further clicks the students can chat with each other or collaborate on things — an art project, say, or a music program on the computer, which has built-in speakers.


Resource guide