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View Full Version : Ethiopian Kids Hacked Their Donated Tablets In Just Five Months


C0ps
01-16-2013, 11:34 AM
After a box of Motorola Xoom tablets was dropped off in an Ethiopian village, kids who had never seen a computer before quickly taught themselves how to make modifications to Android.

What happens if you drop off a thousand Motorola Xoom tablet PCs in a village with kids who have never even seen a printed word? Within five months, they’ll have taught themselves to customize the software, reactivate disabled features and, perhaps, start down the path of learning to read.

That last, critical part is at the core of a grand experiment in the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) program. MIT is trying to crack the wicked problem of teaching literacy and other skills to 100 million or so first-grade-age kids in the developing world with no teachers or infrastructure. Since vast swaths of the world unable to provide even basic education, scalable solutions are needed to complement the long road to achieve universal schooling (something that took the West centuries).

http://www.fastcoexist.com/multisite_files/coexist/imagecache/inline-large/inline/2012/12/1681011-inline-20071221-00056.jpg

So Nicholas Negroponte, the founder of OLPC and MIT’s Media Lab, is doing what comes naturally to scientists: running experiments to see what works. OLPC’s latest trial in DIY education involved delivering Motorola Xoom tablets and solar chargers with custom software to two remote rural villages in Ethiopia where literacy rates are close to zero.

As Negroponte said at MIT Technology Review's EmTech conference this year, here’s how it went down:



While promising, it’s not yet science. To prove its effectiveness at scale (the trial involved only 20 first-grade-age children), MIT will need to see how well it performs in more villages and then monitor the outcomes. OLPC still has a long way to go. So far, the groups says it has distributed 3 million mini "XO" laptops to 40 countries.

The Holy Grail is a scalable solution that complements massive investments in universal public education. And it must be rolled out for cheap while impacting millions of people in remote, poorly served areas.

But the experiments are everywhere. In India, the academic whose work inspired Vikas Swarup’s novel, Q&A, and the movie Slumdog Millionaire, showed that simply giving kids access to a computer in the slums of Delhi could empower them to learn math and English. Here in the U.S., the online Khan Academy has delivered almost 250 million lessons through its YouTube videos on everything from computer science to European history.

No one’s cracked the code yet on how to turn formal education into something children do themselves--but the first attempts at such a world are already emerging. Ethiopian Kids Hacked Their Donated Tablets In Just Five Months | Co.Exist: World changing ideas and innovation
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I don't know about you, but I felt somehow amazed after reading this. Glad is the feeling, Such entusiasam for technology.

(‘“*JiĢäR*”’)
01-16-2013, 01:36 PM
Hmm Nicd Sharing

QUEEN OF HEARTS ...
01-16-2013, 10:38 PM
oh wowwww
amazin sharin

C0ps
01-18-2013, 09:59 PM
THnx both of u ! :D

Adeela
01-18-2013, 10:12 PM
niceeeeeeeeeee

Morash
01-19-2013, 12:23 PM
Amazing, Impressive Kidz =DD ..

C0ps
01-20-2013, 01:46 AM
Yeah l0llxx

» ßerükhï «
01-22-2013, 09:43 PM
Quite interesting =D But the kid shown in the pic is indian or sri-lankan and not Ethiopian Lol

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