RE: [DDN] More info on the MIT/Quanta laptop partnership

2005-12-15 Thread Terry King

At 10:07 PM 12/14/2005 +, Cindy wrote:
WSIS announcement of the One Computer per child was on November 18 (am  I 
right?). Today is 14 December. And with less than 30 days ... the 
Cambridge, Massachusetts-The One Laptop per Child NGO  is able to send out 
invitations, accept bids, evaluates, and completed  selection of the 
vendor.  All done in less than 30 days!!


  How astonishingly SPEEDY!!



Right. That's impossible, and it did not happen...

The MIT guys told me they were already in major negotiations with 
manufacturers, back at WSIS.



Regards, Terry King  ...On The Mediterranean in Carthage, Tunisia
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 


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Re: [DDN] More info on the MIT/Quanta laptop partnership

2005-12-15 Thread Andy Carvin
Quanta was discussed as a vendor for months; people were talking about 
it when Negroponte spoke at the MIT emerging technology conference in 
September.


I think it's more than time to move this discussion off-list; for those 
of you wishing to discuss this further, I'd suggest you create a 
discussion thread on the DDN website.


thanks,
andy

Cindy Lemcke-Hoong wrote:
  

With dedication to technological innovation and education, Chairman 
Barry Lam launched a new US $200 million R&D center, Quanta R&D Complex 
(QRDC), in Taiwan. The facility, which opened in Q3 of 2005, has 2.2 million 
square feet of floor space, and the capacity to house up to 7,000 engineers.


  So employment goes to WHAT world? Developed, developing or to be developed? 
  
  WSIS announcement of the One Computer per child was on November 18 (am  I right?). Today is 14 December. And with less than 30 days ... the Cambridge, Massachusetts-The One Laptop per Child NGO  is able to send out invitations, accept bids, evaluates, and completed  selection of the vendor.  All done in less than 30 days!! 
  
  How astonishingly SPEEDY!! 
  
  Would anyone spend 200 million USD on a R&D facility without  knowing before hand he is going to win a contract to manufacture  millions of lap-top that cost 100 USD each? 
  
  What a great way of job creations for the rich developed worlds. IF the  intention of UN and others is to help developing world, why not India? 
  
  Cindy

  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  


--
---
Andy Carvin
Program Director
EDC Center for Media & Community
acarvin @ edc . org
http://www.digitaldivide.net
http://katrina05.blogspot.com
Blog: http://www.andycarvin.com
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Re: [DDN] More info on the MIT/Quanta laptop partnership

2005-12-15 Thread Paul Mondesire
"...design, manufacture, and distribute laptops that are sufficiently 
inexpensive to provide every child in the world access to knowledge and modern 
forms of education. The laptops will be sold to governments and issued to 
children by schools on a basis of one laptop per child.
   
  So now that there has been an official annoncement, How do we contribute to 
the the effort to make sure that this is not a colossal waste of time, $$, and 
other resources?  Can this be used to help jump start education in the place 
the laptop lands?  People adapt to technology and technology is adopted by 
people who value what it can do for them.  I hope this works for every single 
teacher. child, parent combination.
   
  Paul Mondesire
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]   

Andy Carvin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  Here's the official press release from Negroponte's One Laptop Per Child 
initiative regarding the manufacturing partnership with Taiwan's Quanta. 
-andy

Quanta Computer Inc. to Manufacture $100 Laptop

December 13, 2005—Cambridge, Massachusetts—The One Laptop per Child 
(OLPC) board of directors today announced that Quanta Computer Inc. of 
Taiwan was chosen as the original design manufacturer (ODM) for the $100 
laptop project. The decision was made after the board reviewed bids from 
several possible manufacturing companies.

In announcing the selection of Quanta, OLPC Chairman Nicholas Negroponte 
said, "Any previous doubt that a very-low-cost laptop could be made for 
education in the developing world has just gone away." Quanta has agreed 
to devote significant engineering resources from the Quanta Research 
Institute (QRI) in Q1 and Q2, 2006, with a target of bringing the 
product to market in Q4. The launch of 5-15 million units will be both 
in large-scale pilot projects in seven culturally diverse countries 
(China, India, Brazil, Argentina, Egypt, Nigeria, and Thailand), with 
one million units in each of these countries, and an additional modest 
allocation of machines to seed developer communities in a number of 
other selected countries. A commercial version of the machine will be 
explored in parallel.

"Quanta would like to contribute its industry-leading laptop 
technologies to the future success of the project, in hope of affording 
children worldwide with opportunities not only to close the 'digital 
divide,' but also to bridge the 'knowledge divide.' This project 
signifies a new stage and scale for the laptop industry by including 
those children never before considered to be laptop users," said Quanta 
founder and chairman, Barry Lam.

One Laptop per Child (OLPC) is a Delaware-based, non-profit organization 
created by Nicholas Negroponte and other faculty members from the MIT 
Media Lab to design, manufacture, and distribute laptops that are 
sufficiently inexpensive to provide every child in the world access to 
knowledge and modern forms of education. The laptops will be sold to 
governments and issued to children by schools on a basis of one laptop 
per child. These machines will be rugged, Linux-based, and so energy 
efficient that hand-cranking alone can generate sufficient power for 
operation. Mesh networking will give many machines Internet access from 
one connection. The pricing goal will start near $100 and then steadily 
decrease. The corporate members are Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), 
Brightstar, Google, News Corporation, Nortel, and Red Hat.

Quanta Computer Inc. was founded in 1988 in Taiwan. With over US $10 
billion in sales, the company is a leading provider of technology 
products and solutions to Fortune 500 companies, including Dell, HP, and 
IBM. Quanta has the distinction of being the world's largest 
manufacturer of laptop PCs. The company also provides a full array of 
mobile phones, LCD TVs, and servers and storage products.

With dedication to technological innovation and education, Chairman 
Barry Lam launched a new US $200 million R&D center, Quanta R&D Complex 
(QRDC), in Taiwan. The facility, which opened in Q3 of 2005, has 2.2 
million square feet of floor space, and the capacity to house up to 
7,000 engineers.

For more information about Quanta, visit http://www.quantatw.com

To learn about the $100 Laptop, visit http://laptop.media.mit.edu

-- 
---
Andy Carvin
Program Director
EDC Center for Media & Community
acarvin @ edc . org
http://www.digitaldivide.net
http://katrina05.blogspot.com
Blog: http://www.andycarvin.com
---
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RE: [DDN] More info on the MIT/Quanta laptop partnership

2005-12-15 Thread Cindy Lemcke-Hoong
  
> With dedication to technological innovation and education, Chairman 
> Barry Lam launched a new US $200 million R&D center, Quanta R&D Complex 
> (QRDC), in Taiwan. The facility, which opened in Q3 of 2005, has 2.2 million 
> square feet of floor space, and the capacity to house up to 7,000 engineers.
  So employment goes to WHAT world? Developed, developing or to be developed? 
  
  WSIS announcement of the One Computer per child was on November 18 (am  I 
right?). Today is 14 December. And with less than 30 days ... the Cambridge, 
Massachusetts-The One Laptop per Child NGO  is able to send out invitations, 
accept bids, evaluates, and completed  selection of the vendor.  All done in 
less than 30 days!! 
  
  How astonishingly SPEEDY!! 
  
  Would anyone spend 200 million USD on a R&D facility without  knowing before 
hand he is going to win a contract to manufacture  millions of lap-top that 
cost 100 USD each? 
  
  What a great way of job creations for the rich developed worlds. IF the  
intention of UN and others is to help developing world, why not India? 
  
  Cindy
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
  
Executive Director <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:  Quanta has a good name in white 
book and OEM notebooks and I am sending this
from one I built myself.

Mike

Michael F. Pitsch
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Andy Carvin
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2005 1:54 PM
To: The Digital Divide Network discussion group
Subject: [DDN] More info on the MIT/Quanta laptop partnership

Here's the official press release from Negroponte's One Laptop Per Child
initiative regarding the manufacturing partnership with Taiwan's Quanta. 
-andy

Quanta Computer Inc. to Manufacture $100 Laptop

December 13, 2005-Cambridge, Massachusetts-The One Laptop per Child
(OLPC) board of directors today announced that Quanta Computer Inc. of
Taiwan was chosen as the original design manufacturer (ODM) for the $100
laptop project. The decision was made after the board reviewed bids from
several possible manufacturing companies.

In announcing the selection of Quanta, OLPC Chairman Nicholas Negroponte
said, "Any previous doubt that a very-low-cost laptop could be made for
education in the developing world has just gone away." Quanta has agreed to
devote significant engineering resources from the Quanta Research Institute
(QRI) in Q1 and Q2, 2006, with a target of bringing the product to market in
Q4. The launch of 5-15 million units will be both in large-scale pilot
projects in seven culturally diverse countries (China, India, Brazil,
Argentina, Egypt, Nigeria, and Thailand), with one million units in each of
these countries, and an additional modest allocation of machines to seed
developer communities in a number of other selected countries. A commercial
version of the machine will be explored in parallel.

"Quanta would like to contribute its industry-leading laptop technologies to
the future success of the project, in hope of affording children worldwide
with opportunities not only to close the 'digital divide,' but also to
bridge the 'knowledge divide.' This project signifies a new stage and scale
for the laptop industry by including those children never before considered
to be laptop users," said Quanta founder and chairman, Barry Lam.

One Laptop per Child (OLPC) is a Delaware-based, non-profit organization
created by Nicholas Negroponte and other faculty members from the MIT Media
Lab to design, manufacture, and distribute laptops that are sufficiently
inexpensive to provide every child in the world access to knowledge and
modern forms of education. The laptops will be sold to governments and
issued to children by schools on a basis of one laptop per child. These
machines will be rugged, Linux-based, and so energy efficient that
hand-cranking alone can generate sufficient power for operation. Mesh
networking will give many machines Internet access from one connection. The
pricing goal will start near $100 and then steadily decrease. The corporate
members are Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Brightstar, Google, News
Corporation, Nortel, and Red Hat.

Quanta Computer Inc. was founded in 1988 in Taiwan. With over US $10 billion
in sales, the company is a leading provider of technology products and
solutions to Fortune 500 companies, including Dell, HP, and IBM. Quanta has
the distinction of being the world's largest manufacturer of laptop PCs. The
company also provides a full array of mobile phones, LCD TVs, and servers
and storage products.

With dedication to technological innovation and education, Chairman Barry
Lam launched a new US $200 million R&D center, Quanta R&D Complex (QRDC), in
Taiwan. The facility, which opened in Q3 of 2005, has 2.2 million square
feet of floor space, and the capacity to house up to 7,000 engineers.

For more information about Quanta

RE: [DDN] More info on the MIT/Quanta laptop partnership

2005-12-14 Thread Executive Director
Quanta has a good name in white book and OEM notebooks and I am sending this
from one I built myself.

Mike

Michael F. Pitsch
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Andy Carvin
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2005 1:54 PM
To: The Digital Divide Network discussion group
Subject: [DDN] More info on the MIT/Quanta laptop partnership

Here's the official press release from Negroponte's One Laptop Per Child
initiative regarding the manufacturing partnership with Taiwan's Quanta. 
-andy

Quanta Computer Inc. to Manufacture $100 Laptop

December 13, 2005-Cambridge, Massachusetts-The One Laptop per Child
(OLPC) board of directors today announced that Quanta Computer Inc. of
Taiwan was chosen as the original design manufacturer (ODM) for the $100
laptop project. The decision was made after the board reviewed bids from
several possible manufacturing companies.

In announcing the selection of Quanta, OLPC Chairman Nicholas Negroponte
said, "Any previous doubt that a very-low-cost laptop could be made for
education in the developing world has just gone away." Quanta has agreed to
devote significant engineering resources from the Quanta Research Institute
(QRI) in Q1 and Q2, 2006, with a target of bringing the product to market in
Q4. The launch of 5-15 million units will be both in large-scale pilot
projects in seven culturally diverse countries (China, India, Brazil,
Argentina, Egypt, Nigeria, and Thailand), with one million units in each of
these countries, and an additional modest allocation of machines to seed
developer communities in a number of other selected countries. A commercial
version of the machine will be explored in parallel.

"Quanta would like to contribute its industry-leading laptop technologies to
the future success of the project, in hope of affording children worldwide
with opportunities not only to close the 'digital divide,' but also to
bridge the 'knowledge divide.' This project signifies a new stage and scale
for the laptop industry by including those children never before considered
to be laptop users," said Quanta founder and chairman, Barry Lam.

One Laptop per Child (OLPC) is a Delaware-based, non-profit organization
created by Nicholas Negroponte and other faculty members from the MIT Media
Lab to design, manufacture, and distribute laptops that are sufficiently
inexpensive to provide every child in the world access to knowledge and
modern forms of education. The laptops will be sold to governments and
issued to children by schools on a basis of one laptop per child. These
machines will be rugged, Linux-based, and so energy efficient that
hand-cranking alone can generate sufficient power for operation. Mesh
networking will give many machines Internet access from one connection. The
pricing goal will start near $100 and then steadily decrease. The corporate
members are Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Brightstar, Google, News
Corporation, Nortel, and Red Hat.

Quanta Computer Inc. was founded in 1988 in Taiwan. With over US $10 billion
in sales, the company is a leading provider of technology products and
solutions to Fortune 500 companies, including Dell, HP, and IBM. Quanta has
the distinction of being the world's largest manufacturer of laptop PCs. The
company also provides a full array of mobile phones, LCD TVs, and servers
and storage products.

With dedication to technological innovation and education, Chairman Barry
Lam launched a new US $200 million R&D center, Quanta R&D Complex (QRDC), in
Taiwan. The facility, which opened in Q3 of 2005, has 2.2 million square
feet of floor space, and the capacity to house up to 7,000 engineers.

For more information about Quanta, visit http://www.quantatw.com

To learn about the $100 Laptop, visit http://laptop.media.mit.edu

--
---
Andy Carvin
Program Director
EDC Center for Media & Community
acarvin @ edc . org
http://www.digitaldivide.net
http://katrina05.blogspot.com
Blog: http://www.andycarvin.com
---
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[DDN] More info on the MIT/Quanta laptop partnership

2005-12-14 Thread Andy Carvin
Here's the official press release from Negroponte's One Laptop Per Child 
initiative regarding the manufacturing partnership with Taiwan's Quanta. 
-andy


Quanta Computer Inc. to Manufacture $100 Laptop

December 13, 2005—Cambridge, Massachusetts—The One Laptop per Child 
(OLPC) board of directors today announced that Quanta Computer Inc. of 
Taiwan was chosen as the original design manufacturer (ODM) for the $100 
laptop project. The decision was made after the board reviewed bids from 
several possible manufacturing companies.


In announcing the selection of Quanta, OLPC Chairman Nicholas Negroponte 
said, "Any previous doubt that a very-low-cost laptop could be made for 
education in the developing world has just gone away." Quanta has agreed 
to devote significant engineering resources from the Quanta Research 
Institute (QRI) in Q1 and Q2, 2006, with a target of bringing the 
product to market in Q4. The launch of 5-15 million units will be both 
in large-scale pilot projects in seven culturally diverse countries 
(China, India, Brazil, Argentina, Egypt, Nigeria, and Thailand), with 
one million units in each of these countries, and an additional modest 
allocation of machines to seed developer communities in a number of 
other selected countries. A commercial version of the machine will be 
explored in parallel.


"Quanta would like to contribute its industry-leading laptop 
technologies to the future success of the project, in hope of affording 
children worldwide with opportunities not only to close the 'digital 
divide,' but also to bridge the 'knowledge divide.' This project 
signifies a new stage and scale for the laptop industry by including 
those children never before considered to be laptop users," said Quanta 
founder and chairman, Barry Lam.


One Laptop per Child (OLPC) is a Delaware-based, non-profit organization 
created by Nicholas Negroponte and other faculty members from the MIT 
Media Lab to design, manufacture, and distribute laptops that are 
sufficiently inexpensive to provide every child in the world access to 
knowledge and modern forms of education. The laptops will be sold to 
governments and issued to children by schools on a basis of one laptop 
per child. These machines will be rugged, Linux-based, and so energy 
efficient that hand-cranking alone can generate sufficient power for 
operation. Mesh networking will give many machines Internet access from 
one connection. The pricing goal will start near $100 and then steadily 
decrease. The corporate members are Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), 
Brightstar, Google, News Corporation, Nortel, and Red Hat.


Quanta Computer Inc. was founded in 1988 in Taiwan. With over US $10 
billion in sales, the company is a leading provider of technology 
products and solutions to Fortune 500 companies, including Dell, HP, and 
IBM. Quanta has the distinction of being the world's largest 
manufacturer of laptop PCs. The company also provides a full array of 
mobile phones, LCD TVs, and servers and storage products.


With dedication to technological innovation and education, Chairman 
Barry Lam launched a new US $200 million R&D center, Quanta R&D Complex 
(QRDC), in Taiwan. The facility, which opened in Q3 of 2005, has 2.2 
million square feet of floor space, and the capacity to house up to 
7,000 engineers.


For more information about Quanta, visit http://www.quantatw.com

To learn about the $100 Laptop, visit http://laptop.media.mit.edu

--
---
Andy Carvin
Program Director
EDC Center for Media & Community
acarvin @ edc . org
http://www.digitaldivide.net
http://katrina05.blogspot.com
Blog: http://www.andycarvin.com
---
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