Language Lab, Science Faculty, University of Nice - Sophia Antipolis

Design of $100 Laptop for Kids Unveiled - Part I

The $100 laptop is a project of the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The project aims to deliver computers to children throughout the world. Before you start reading the article, do this activity to practice some of the vocabulary used in the text.

Now start reading the article.

The $100 laptop computers that Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers want to get into the hands of the world's children would be durable, flexible and self-reliant.

 

The machines' AC adapter would double as a carrying strap, and a hand crank would power them when there's no electricity. They'd be foldable into more positions than traditional notebook PCs, and carried like slim lunchboxes. For outdoor reading, their display would be able to shift from full color to glare-resistant black and white. And surrounding it all, the laptops would have a rubber casing that closes tightly, because "they have to be absolutely indestructible," said Nicholas Negroponte, the MIT Media Lab leader who offered an update on the project Wednesday.

 

Negroponte hatched the $100 laptop idea after seeing children in a Cambodian village benefit from having notebook computers at school that they could also tote home to use on their own. Those computers had been donated by a foundation run by Negroponte and his wife. He decided that for kids everywhere to benefit from the educational and communications powers of the Internet, someone would have to make laptops inexpensive enough for officials in developing countries to purchase en masse. At least that's Negroponte's plan.

 

1. What will make the computer self-reliant?
the rubber casing
the glare-resistant screen
the AC adaptor
the hand crank

 

2. What will the screen look like when the computer is used outdoors?
always color
always black and white
black and white if there is too much light; otherwise, probably color
color if there is too much light; otherwise, probably black and white

 

3. What part of the computer will help keep dust out?
the rubber casing
the AC adaptor
the hand crank
the glare-resistant screen

 

4. Why will the AC adaptor have to be very strong?
Because the hand crank will produce electricity that will flow through it
Because they will often be used in villages in developing countries where they cannot be repaired.
Because they can be folded into so many positions.
Because it is used to carry the computer.

 

5. Who will probably be actually buying the computers?
Most likely parents for their children.
Most likely schools for the students attending them.
No one, MIT will be giving the computers away for free.
Governments will buy large numbers of them for children in the country.

 

When you're finished answering these questions, go to the next part of the exercise here.

 

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