Mike Yamamoto | May 23, 2008

The broad influence of the One Laptop Per Child initiative continues to expand its sphere. Not long ago it was unclear whether the PC--originally conceived as a US$100 laptop for
children in developing countries--would ever become a reality after a
long series of delays.
Now the XO laptop seems on the verge of becoming a hot item, and all the research that went
into it is leading down divergent paths.
Case in point: Walter Bender, who just left the OLPC initiative to start up
its open-source software spinoff, is reportedly in
informal discussions to get its Linux operating system on low-cost laptops made by
four manufacturers. The nonprofit spinoff,
Sugar Laboratories, is having discussions with Pixel Qi and is interesting in pursuing a
relationship with
Intel,
Bender told BetaNews. No other companies were named, though he mentioned Asus on
Sugar Labs' Web site
last week.
It's only the latest permutation in a long-running saga that has seen
infighting, resignations, and other controversy since the project's inception.
Last month OLPC founder Nicholas Negroponte said the XO might switch from Linux
to Windows XP, but that change remains to be seen. Stay tuned.
Via
Crave CNET
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