Updated 24/11/2007; 26/11/2007.
Interesting and complex piece by Steve Stecklow and James Bandler, who assert in the 24/11/2007 Wall Street Journal that demand for the One Laptop Per Child laptop has been far lower than originally hoped, with, so far, only Uruguay solidly committed to it, and Libya apparently switching from OLPC to Intel's Windows-based Classmate. Stecklow and Bandler imply that Intel, which normally makes chips not devices, is actively seeking to stifle the OLPC laptop with the Classmate partly because the OLPC processor is supplied by AMD, its only competitor in the chip market. Meanwhile, the give one get one programme has been extended to 31/12/2007, "thanks to a growing interest in the program", which is reported to have taken 45,000 orders in its first 9 days of operation.
[24/11/2007 addendum prompted by Wayan's comment below.] For a detailed discussion of the WSJ article, with plenty of comments, see Wayan's piece in OLPC News. [26/11/2007] Further details of the scale of demand under Give One Get One, see ZDNET's How do we guage success: will 490,000 units do?.
Yahoo! for Teachers goes more public
Yahoo! has begun to send out authorization codes to people who have signed up to try out Yahoo! for Teachers, "a place for educators to find, create, and share standards-based classroom materials". YFT makes use of a tool, called "Gobbler", that you download and install locally, and which you can use to "gather images, text clippings, and web pages from the Web into projects in your portfolio", from which "you can create documents to use in your classroom", and which you can (or have to?) make publicly available for others to use. The term "standards-based" caught my eye, but when I searched within YFT for it, I could find no references to it.
At the moment i) the content available is overwhelmingly focused on the US school curriculum and ii) you need a Yahoo!-issued username and password to access the service. You can sign up for an invitation on the Yahoo! site. This Google blog-search will give you an insight (of sorts) into current reactions to YFT.
Posted on 30/11/2007 in News and comment | Permalink | Comments (0)
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