One laptop per child targets East Africa

The group behind the “$100 laptop” has signed a deal which it hopes will deliver low cost computers to every primary school child in East Africa. The partnership between One Laptop per Child (OLPC) and the East African Community (EAC) aims to deliver 30 million laptops in the region by 2015.

Friday, April 30, 2010
Various trials of the machines are running across Africa

The group behind the "$100 laptop” has signed a deal which it hopes will deliver low cost computers to every primary school child in East Africa.

The partnership between One Laptop per Child (OLPC) and the East African Community (EAC) aims to deliver 30 million laptops in the region by 2015.

The EAC does not currently have the money to pay for the machines and so is hoping to find other partners.
Eachl aptop sells for more than $200, despite aims to sell them for less.

"At the end of the day, it all comes down to money,” Matt Keller of OLPC told BBC news

"Ideally, we would live in a world where governments can equip every kid to be educated, but that’s not the case.”

Tech trials

He said the EAC was currently drafting a letter to US President Barack Obama to ask if the US could provide assistance to pay for the project. The countries were also exploring links with the aid community, he said.
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"This is a very ambitious project for which we will have to partner with various people and institutions to mobilise and fund the resources required to meet our objectives by 2015,” said Ambassador Juma Mwapachu, secretary general of the EAC.

The organisation represents the governments of Tanzania, Rwanda, Kenya, Uganda and Burundi.

Some of the countries have already run small trials with the machines, including Rwanda which has more than 20,000 pupils using them.

Mr Keller said the country already had an order for 70,000 more and had shown the other countries in the area the benefit of technology in schools.

OLPC has had difficulty selling its computers and its alternative vision of education around the world.

The organisation - a spin out from US university MIT - originally aimed to sell the low-cost laptops in lots of one million to governments in developing countries for $100 each.

However, it had difficulty getting governments to commit to bulk orders.

The rugged machines - which are designed specifically for children in the developing world and run both Linux and Microsoft Windows - are now offered in single units for around $200 each.

Mr Keller said that there were currently around 1.6 million machines distributed around the world, with commitments for another 400,000.

He admitted the project had still not reached its "tipping point”, but said if the EAC was successful it may prove to be the decisive moment for the project. "We want [these computers] to be as a fundamental as electricity,” he said.

Agencies