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ecoIron on OLPCs  E-mail
Written by Hank Green   
Friday, 24 November 2006

olpcThe One Laptop Per Child project is generally considered to be a humanitarian mission, not an environmental one. EcoGeek has never ever mentioned the OLPC project and that, frankly is wrong. Mark at ecoIron has put together a list of reasons why the OLPC project is good for the environment. First, the project isn't about the cycle of obsolescence and upgrades. These computers will work well for a long time, and they won't end up in landfills any time soon.

Second, there are lots of them and they're all the same. That's good news because it makes them simpler to repair and it makes repair parts more abundant. Finally, the OLPC runs on 2-3 watts of power, setting a standard far below anything seen in the consumer electronics industry.

Comments (1)add
In developing countries...
written by GTW , November 25, 2006
... such as some found in Asia, most of malfunctioning/broken mechanical and electronic devices are repaired to usable states, many times before they're discarded. Most of the time they manage to restore the repaired items to their original working conditions. They manage to do this for everything ranging from cars to computers.

The more repair-friendly computers are the unbranded ones that are assembled from scratch. Fixing their standard components allow technicians to gain the re-applicable repairing skills useful when fixing similar components from different manufacturers.

Laptops aren't the most repair-friendly devices since they're all tightly packed in a small casing and their internal designs tend to be manufacturer dependent. I haven't yet seen a OLPC but I hope they're built to be repair-friendly without too much soldering on the printed circuitboards etc.

One more important thing is the lifespan of the system. Sure, it's $100 or something but people probably could buy a repairable/upgradable desktop in these countries for not much more. It won't mean that poor hopeful families will end up with short-lived laptops after investing one month's salary on each but, it will probably take like a while and one more generation of OLPC notebooks to gain the trust of these private individual buyers in the intended market.
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Hank Green
About the author:

Hank Green is the founder and chief geek at EcoGeek.org. Aside from being obsessed with saving the planet with technology, he loves to write and make videos. If you want to find out more about him, visit hankgreen.com

 
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