The XOs would certainly be anchored down, if only to make sure they
don't walk out the door. Plus, we usually have a volunteer on duty in
every gallery.
What stage testing would we be talking about here? It would be
important to make sure that most of the laptops were functional enough
at any given moment that kids could profitably play with them.
Hey, Luke, glad you enjoy visiting The Tech!
- Rob
On Jan 12, 2009, at 5:34 PM, Luke Faraone wrote:
The one thing you'd have to worry about: While the XOs are very
resilient to harsh conditions, they are _not_ "childproof", ie. if a
kid throws it off a desk or picks at the rubber mesh keyboard then
he _can_ break the XO.
It would be a highly useful tool, however, in testing and research.
Assuming we can have the teachers/whoever survey the children and
note where they have problems, it would provide a load of real-world
data easily accessible and tweakable.
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