$100 Laptop: Great for the world, great for Linux
Published: 02 Feb 2006 16:10 GMT
...hundreds of millions of schoolchildren growing up using the laptop technology with open source as a fundamental part of that. Some will never understand what the value of open source is, but others will and will be able to create their own models and create their own variations. If you extrapolate that out over five, ten, twenty years then you have an incredibly disruptive global force.
Is this project a way to inject some momentum into the concept of Linux on the desktop?
I
have been with Red Hat for about six years and have been involved with
some of the desktop technology. What we have always said is that Linux
and the open source desktop is an incremental game and there is no Big
Bang change waiting to happen. It's about turning the knob a little bit
every six months — we have never really overhyped the desktop. It has
been very good theatre for people to write about but we are pragmatic
about it — just like everybody in the open source community doesn't
wake up everyday thinking: "How can I kill Microsoft?" In the grand
scheme of things I think this will help invigorate the Linux desktop
technology dynamic, but again that is not the main motivation.
So do you see this device as being closer to a cut-down laptop or a large PDA?
That
depends on one's definition of both those categories, I guess. Laptops
and PDAs are constantly merging and getting closer together as time
goes on and we are talking almost another year before the first
shipment is manufactured. From what I have seen, and what I understand
from what we are doing on the software side, it will be closer to the
laptop functionality.
Could you tell us more about the operating system you are developing for this project?
Our
software team is driving the operating system efforts but other open
source educational applications are also being developed to ship with
the laptop. We are still determining what systems to use, but the
Fedora technologies will play a big part of it.
So it will be a scaled down version of Fedora or something akin to that?
Possibly. We are still working that out.
Rather than providing a new, untested technology, wouldn't it be
better to use the resources that OLPC has available to simply provide
one working PC with an Internet connection per village in the areas you
wish to help?
There are a lot of angles to look at with this
project, and alternatives to it. I know the MIT people have a lot of
experience with this kind of project — whether it is helping the State
of Maine in the US, or remote villages in developing countries. I think
there also other organisations that will step up and offer the other
pieces necessary to make this work. The OLPC effort had to choose one
major thing to focus on and see through. I truly believe that this
whole effort, even if it fails, will make a positive step forward by
making people aware of it and getting them engaged in the topic. Even
if after two years everyone says, "You know what, that wasn't the best
way to do it, the best way to do it is this..." that is still a big
win. There is so much need and so many people that you can't solve it
all with any one method anyway.
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