Quanta Selected to Build $100 Laptop

By Ed Oswald | Published December 14, 2005, 10:17 AM

Taiwan's Quanta has been selected as original design manufacturer, or ODM, for MIT's $100 laptop, the One Laptop per Child organization said late Tuesday. While the company may not be familiar to many, it has manufactured computers for Hewlett-Packard and Dell among other companies.

MIT has worked with Quanta before, signing a $20 million five-year research pact in April. The company has agreed to devote research resources to the project in the first and second quarter of next year, with the goal to release the first laptops in the fourth quarter.

The initial launch of the product will involve five to 15 million units, the OLPC said. Projects will launch in seven countries, including China, India, Brazil, Argentina, Egypt, Nigeria and Thailand with each receiving one million laptops. Smaller numbers of the devices will be shipped to various projects in other countries as well.

Although no final launch date was set Tuesday, the feasibility of a commercial version would be investigated.

"Any previous doubt that a very-low-cost laptop could be made for education in the developing world has just gone away," said the program's chairman Nicholas Negroponte.

Negroponte's comment was probably directed at Intel, after chairman Craig Barrett last week derided the project as a likely failure due to its not being a "full-featured device."

The $100 laptop will ship with the Linux operating system, supplied by Red Hat. But the machine will also be able to run any OS that supports AMD processors, designers say.

Hardware used for the laptop will include an eight-inch color LCD screen, wireless connectivity, and it can be powered by either an adapter or through a wind-up mechanism. There has also been talk of giving the device the capability to access the Internet through cellular networks.

On the software side, the laptop will have word processing, a Web browser, e-mail client, and programming software.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

i wonder how much is the real cost of this laptops

Score: 0

|

i want one of these, would be so cool, when traveling.

"wireless connectivity, and it can be powered by either an adapter or through a wind-up mechanism."

i wonder when theyl appear on ebay.

Score: 0

|

I'll buy one, and perhaps afterwards start looking into porting a project like opie gpe or familiar to it.

Score: 0

|

Microsoft's Bob Muglia and Ray Ozzie on Silverlight vs. standards

Bob Muglia: "We're trying to provide people with an environment that has capabilities that you just simply can't do today in the standards-based world."

Uh-oh, netbooks -- not Windows 7 -- will lift 2009 PC sales

Santa may bring a lump of coal to the Windows PC industry this holiday season. Netbook sales will sap PC margins, while weak Windows 7 PC sales could further drive down average selling prices.

Google's value proposition for Chrome OS: Should we feel insulted?

For a search engine that has direct access to all the world's online history, it appears to have taught Google nothing about selling a machine.

PDC 2009: What have we learned this week?

There was the freebie that no one will forget, the heebie-jeebies courtesy of Scott Guthrie, and a teensy bit clearer picture of how this cloud thingie should work.

Where there's smoke: Apple warranty stance raises troubling questions

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: Smoking can be dangerous not only for your lungs, it appears, but for your Apple hardware warranty.

Microsoft's .NET Micro Framework is now free and open source

The latest version of Microsoft's .NET Micro framework is now in the hands of the FOSS community.

E-book readers will be in short supply this holiday season

E-readers are hot this year, and a lot of compelling new products have been released, but are there enough electrophoretic displays to go around?

Sony looks to finally open a single storefront for downloads

Sony has had many different download portals for movies, music, e-books, and games, and now it's looking to make a single shop for all of it.

Tuning out the tablet: Time to give the endless speculation a rest

Wide Angle Zoom: Wishing and hoping and thinking and praying....won't put an iTablet on the market.

Five improvements for IT managers in 2010

If businesses are to improve their efficiency for next year, they need to stop and reassess the basic tenets of their job.

Live report: Will Google Chrome OS change Linux?

The mysteries of just what Chrome OS is, and how much of an operating system it truly is, may be resolved today.