The One Laptop per Child (OLPC) initiative for the developing world is gaining ground in Africa, with Nigeria announcing the
acquisition of one million laptops.
The brainchild of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab co-founder Nicholas Negroponte, the OLPC, however,
has a competitor: a consortium led by Microsoft and Intel.
The OLPC laptops were initially touted as being priced at $100, but OLPC participants now say the price may fluctuate. In
any case, they will be the cheapest ever sold in Africa, and several African countries are going for the idea.
Nigeria Communication Commission Executive Vice Chairman Ernest Ndukwe said Nigeria has already committed to ordering one
million machines. Egypt has said it is almost ready to commit itself to buying the laptops but has not said how many it is
prepared to order. Zambian officials say negotiations to buy the machines are progressing well and that the country may soon
announce the number of machines the country intends to order.
"This is the only opportunity for us in Zambia and all the African countries to equip schools with computers because the laptops
are reasonably priced," said Zambia's communication and transport minister, Abel Chambeshi.
The laptops will have a 500MHz processor and 128M bytes of DRAM, with 500M bytes of flash memory. The laptops will also have
wireless broadband that, among other things, allows them to work as a mesh network with each laptop being able to talk to
its nearest neighbors, creating an ad hoc local area network.
The laptops will only be sold to governments and issued to schools, according to Negroponte. Because many schools in Africa
don't have electricity, the laptops will use built-in hand cranks for energy.
The laptops are expected to be ready for shipment between the last quarter of this year and the first quarter of next year.
Chambeshi said he was not aware that recently OLPC participants have said that the machines may end up costing $135. But even
at $135, he said, "the machines [are] still reasonably cheap, for any African government to buy."
The companies that are participating in the OLPC project include Google Inc., Nortel Networks Corp., eBay Inc., Advanced Micro
Device Inc. and News Corp. with Quanta Computer Inc. of Taiwan having been chosen as the original design manufacturer for
the laptops.
However, there is a battle going on over the African market between the OLPC project and the consortium of Microsoft, Intel,
Hewlett-Packard Co., Oracle Corp. and Cisco Systems Inc. The Microsoft/Intel group is also involved in an e-school project
aimed at computerizing African schools.
A few months after the announcement of OLPC project, Intel announced it was manufacturing $400 machines, dubbed Eduwise, for
Africa and other developing nations. In order to effectively market the Eduwise computers, the Microsoft consortium entered
into a partnership with the eAfrica Commission, under the aegis of New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD). NEPAD
was founded by the Organization of African Unity. One of NEPAD's goals is to computerize schools in Africa.
The Microsoft consortium is pushing to supply as many computers as possible to schools across Africa but the consortium’s
marketing strategy is somewhat different from the one being used by OLPC. The consortium is marketing its computers through
the eAfrica commission while OLPC directly negotiates with governments who own the schools and want them computerized.
The Microsoft consortium has already supplied computers to Uganda and South Africa.