Creative Synthesis

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This thing was constructed on July 9, 2007, and it was categorized as Hardware, design, education, laptop, olpc, student, usability.
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The XO-1 (nee OLPC, nee $100 laptop), for those who don’t know, is a computing platform developed specifically for young children in developing nations. It has been designed from scratch to address the needs of this unique audience.

Recently I have become interested in designing devices that empower childen (the “Children’s TV” is my first design in this regard). As part of my research I bought a Texas Instruments “Speak & Spell” which is a computer designed to help the children of the 80’s learn the alphabet and how to spell.

After playing with the Speak & Spell for a bit I realized that the keyboard is a kid-friendly ABCDEF layout rather than the typical QWERTY found on most keyboards.

Perhaps there should be the option for XO-1 users to physically change their keyboards. Youngsters can start with ABCDEF and advance to the less intuitive (but standard) QWERTY layout when they enter grade-school.

~ As you can see this is my first post to Creative Synthesis. Yes, this is a cross-post from c0nn0r.info/blog, but I swear that my future posts here will be entirely new ;-)

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This thing was constructed by .


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  1. Posted July 14, 2007 at 4:06 pm | Permalink

    […] ~ This post also appears at creativesynthesis.net […]

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