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One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly LLC Palo Alto, California [email protected]

One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

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Page 1: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978

Basser Seminar 26 July 2009Basser School of Information Technology

University of Sydney

Lee FelsensteinFonly LLC

Palo Alto, [email protected]

Page 2: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

What do you mean “revolution?”

Event that:

Overthrows an existing order Involves efforts of large numbers of people Opens long-term possibilities in an unexpected

manner

Page 3: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

What Existing Order?

The Computer Priesthood IBM hegemonic Large machines – high cost Proprietary software, OS, hardware, support Software prepared by experts to lessor's

specifications “End User” always a business or government

agency

Page 4: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Opening shot - TV Typewriter (1973)

Build-it-yourself article Complex documentation

sent to interested correspondents ($2 fee)

Normal response – 20 10,000 paid responses! Large pent-up demand

– But for what?

Page 5: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Ideology - “Computer Lib”

Ted Nelson (1974)

• Modeled after Whole Earth Catalog

• “You Can and Must Understand Computers NOW”

• Started thousands off to learn about hardware and software

Page 6: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Breakthrough - Altair (1975)

• Incomplete kit offered for less than cost of CPU chip

• Runaway best seller

• Users embarked upon learning project of unknown duration and scope

• Nearly empty box

Page 7: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Clubs and Shared Software

• Necessary mutual teaching

• Software seen as means to end of having working computer

• Altair Basic widely shared – became the standard despite Gates' complaints

Page 8: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Interoperability - CP/M

• Gary Kildall, PhD (pictured)

• Allowed software to run on various computers

• Enabled the personal computer industry (Harold Evans)

• No computer company had previously seen the point

Page 9: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Interactivity• Shared Memory Display

(VDM-1 shown) enabled fast user interaction

– Computer games!

• Visi-Calc spreadsheet arguably an interactive computer accounting game

• No computer company had previously seen the point

Page 10: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Growth and Triumph – IBM opens up

• 1976 – Sol-20 (complete system)

• 1977 – Apple II (graphics)

• 1981 – Osborne (portability, bundled SW)

• 1981 – IBM-PC – adopts open architecture

Page 11: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

OLPC definition – basics 1

• Originated by Prof. Nick Negroponte

– Inspired by Cambodian kids using laptops in school sponsored by N. & E. Negroponte

• Premise – Education is only way out of poverty

• Premise – Only way to educate kids is to give them all laptops

• Premise – Laptops alone, if designed right, will be sufficient to effect education

– “Constructionist” (Papert & Kay) methodology

– Children will explore world, “learn learning”

Page 12: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

OLPC definition – basics 2

• Implementation

– Design superior laptop

– Secure agreements with heads of state for massive purchases

– Require all children be given a laptop

– Manufacture in million increments

› Drive price down to $100– Done!

Page 13: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

OLPC - Assumptions

• Mesh networking will compensate for lack of network access

• Software applications will appear from 3rd parties

• Crank- or pull-string-power generation will supply sufficient power

• Colorful motif will prevent theft and black-market sale of computers

• Teachers will “get out of the way”

• Parents will not interfere

Page 14: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

OLPC – hidden corrolaries

• No research

– “Enough is known already”

– Ethnographic research eschewed (IDEO)

– No existing body of data referenced

– No research report from Cambodian village exists

• No pilot projects

• Full-scale implementation or nothing

• No implementation plan

Page 15: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

OLPC – what could go wrong?

• Heads of state cannot dictate to education ministries

– Bureaucracy has mass and inertia

– India Ed. Min. declares OLPC “pedagogically suspect”

• Infrastructure not included

– Generator an afterthought

– Network backhaul left to chance

• Constructionism not shown to be effective

– Talented teachers required

Page 16: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

OLPC – the View From 1978

• There's been a revolution overthrowing the order:

– of system definition and implementation by priesthoods

› Operating under cover of hierarchies

› Surrounded by ramparts of propaganda

› Unquestioned and unexamined

– of institutions defined as end users...

› ...and individuals simply subject to the results

Page 17: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

OLPC – the View From 1978

• The age of the Magic Machine is over

• People know:

– where software comes from

– that submission is not required

– that the priesthood is composed of mortals

• People are as pragmatic as ever

– They want to know how the new machine will help them, their families, their communities

Page 18: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Kay's Hierarchy

1. Hardware

2. Software

3. User Interface

4. Courseware

5. Mentoring

• Each step harder than the one before

• “We should have started at the top and worked down” - Alan Kay, Tunis 2005

Page 19: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Negroponte on OLPC over time

• “This is an education project. It is not a laptop project.” - Sept. 2005

• “...we remain firmly committed to our mission of getting laptops to children in developing countries.” - Jan. 2009

Page 20: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

OLPC – out of the wreckage

Only projects running are pilots

– www.olpcnews.com OLPC has spun off software – Sugar Labs

– www.sugarlabs.org More than 100,000 XO-1 laptops sold in US and

Western countries (Give1, Get 1 – 2007 and 2008) Needed – connections between education geeks and

computer geeks with XO-1's to work on top levels of Kay's hierarchy.

Page 21: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Some Interesting Needs

• A device to permit learners to achieve basic literacy in their own language on a standalone basis (no network needed)

• A device to permit learners to achieve basic proficiency in arithmetic (no network needed)

• A basic electronic book

• A system for network availability supported by telecommunications revenues (village telecentre)

• A system for battery charging without mains power (Low-power village power utility)

Page 22: One Laptop Per Child – the View from 1978 Basser Seminar 26 July 2009 Basser School of Information Technology University of Sydney Lee Felsenstein Fonly

Pursue the Hands-On Imperative!