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Walter Bender, One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) President of Content, discussed the design details of the so-called “hundred dollar laptop.” In his presentation, Walter described the three tenets of “being human” as: 1) We learn (and teach), 2) We express, and 3) We’re social. The design of the OLPC was created with his three human tenets in mind with its: 1) pedagogy, 2) digital expression capability, and 3) the mesh networking technology that makes it more of a “local” than a “global” machine.

Power consumption was a major design constraint for the OLPC given that it’s intended audience (the Third World) does not have the luxury of a constant and reliable power source. Thus the OLPC was designed to run at 2 Watts versus the 20 Watts of an average laptop through a variety of clever engineering feats. The third Key of power is relevant in this case, and it is clear that advances developed in the OLPC will point computer designs towards much more efficient power management schemes.

For as long as I’ve known Walter, he’s always claimed that the secret of the Web’s success was the way in which web browsers always had access to the source code of each web page through the “View Source” command. Because most of the Web was built in this open source manner, it became easy to replicate the knowledge of the Web with a simple cut and paste. He reasons that without this ease of playing with digital information in such an open manner, the Web would never have caught on. I think Walter’s right. At Ars Electronica, Walter showed off the new key on the keyboard of the OLPC “Src” which is the world’s first “View Source” key.

If Tim Berners-Lee is considered to be the “father” of the Web, I think it’s safe to think of Walter as the “uncle” of the Web for his early role in electronic media. The world is lucky to have Uncle Walter working on the OLPC project.

This entry was posted on Thursday, September 7th, 2006 at 9:08 pm and is filed under key 2: open, key 3: power, event. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

5 Responses to “Simplicity Symposium: Part 3”


  1. […] Hier ein paar bilder von der ars electronica. Filme zu den einzelnen projekten sind bei Tobias zusammengestellt, und ein paar abschließende gedanken bei Tim und Tobias zu finden. Schade, dass wir so manchen vortrag verpasst haben. […]


  2. Great idea! But why oh why do they have to use the pointless geek abbreviation “src”? Why not “Source” or even “View Source”? Even “caps lock” is 8 characters.


  3. I was wondering about that myself. Maybe it’s a way to save on the cost of ink? Although the keyboards will all print in different languages I understand so it’s probably just a placeholder.


  4. Will Children View Source Code?…

    How many times have you seen a cool layout on a web page and wondered to yourself, “How’d they do that?” Now, how often did you take the next step and viewed the HTML source code for that page? Or went further and copied that code for your own wor…


  5. […] The revised design for the $100 Laptop includes a src or view source key. Quick access to source code, Apple take note. From The Laws of Simplicity.048663e36824bae104a59c8f0c317944-> […]

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