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Lynn Dee

HRD hopes to make $10 laptops a reality-India Business-Business-The Times of India - 0 views

  • HRD ministry’s idea to make laptops at $10 is firmly taking shape
  • $47 but the ministry feels the price will come down dramatically
    • Lynn Dee
       
      Why can this one be so cheap in comaparison to the USA. What can we do differntly to drop the cost and get India on board?
Justin Heldenbrand

India rejects One Laptop Per Child | The Register - 0 views

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    India not taking advantage of olpc
Lynn Dee

XO-1 (laptop) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • OLPC is funded by a number of sponsor organizations, including AMD, Brightstar Corporation, eBay, Google, Marvell, News Corporation, SES Global, Nortel Networks, and Red Hat. Each company has donated two million dollars.[6]
    • Lynn Dee
       
      If more companies were generous like this, think of what we could accomplish without the restraint of money.
  • The laptops will be sold to governments, to be distributed through the ministries of education willing to adopt the policy of “one laptop per child”
  • ndia has rejected the initiative
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Human power is planned, allowing operation far from commercial sources of power.
  • All of the software on the laptop will be free and open source.[30]
Kendall

Child Labour Inquiry - 0 views

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    I know that before this class whenever I thought of child labor the only thing that came to mind was India, and sweat shops!  I like many others never took into consideration any other kind of labor.  So felt compeeled to do a little bit of reading on child labor in India, so that I could personally relate it to other places in the world!
bmoran

Global Warming and Population - Global Issues - 0 views

  • Population and Climate ChangeA “Malthusian” theory about the relationship between population growth and the environment suggests that as populations grow, they will strip their resources leading to famine, hunger and environmental degradation.As detailed further in this site’s section on population, that is an oversimplification and has largely shown not to be true. Instead, it has been factors such as politics and economics (i.e. how we use our resources and for what purpose) that has determined environmental degradation or sustainability.For example, the world’s wealthiest 20% (i.e. the rich countries) consume approximately 80% of the world’s resources, while the rest of humanity shares the other 20% of resource consumed, as noted in the consumption section of this web site.In regards to climate change, countries with large populations such as China and India have not been the countries contributing greenhouse gases for the decades that has been required to trigger climate change, as noted further above.While in total amounts their emissions might be high (China is second largest emitter after the United States, for example), per person, their emissions are significantly smaller as noted earlier.
  • as countries such as China, India and Brazil grow in prosperity, there will be large populations with purchasing power, consuming more goods and services, thus making more demands on the planet.Indeed, many environmentalists have constantly noted that if such countries were to follow the style of development that the rich countries used and emulate them, then our planet may not be able to cope much longer.
  • researchers have found that depending on what variables you factor in, the planet can support an extremely large population, or an extremely small one. These ranges are ridiculously wide: from 2 billion to 147 billion people! Why such variance? It depends on how efficiently resources are used and for what purpose (i.e. economics).
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    This article shows that overpopulation isn't really a problem IF we learn to use our resources effectively.
Brandon Fox

India says no thanks to the $100 laptop - 0 views

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    India declines and critisizes the 100 dollar laptop
sleavitt

Dow Chemical Company - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    Second largest chemical manufacturer in the world, and largest producer of plastics. Responsible for 20,000 deaths in the Bhopal disaster in India, was the sole supplier of napalm to the US in  the Vietnam War, and manufactured Agent Orange. The Human Element indeed.
Aaron Scott

YouTube - Muhammad Yunus: Banker to the Poor (preview) - 0 views

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    Video about Dr. Muhammad Yunus who started the Grameen Bank in India. Video talks about the methods used by Yunus and his bank in Bangledesh, and in other parts of the world.  It also looks at how he started this idea and the struggles he had when he originally talked with other banks to get them to provide loans to the poor.
Seiji Ikeda

India's renaissance: The $100 computer | CNET News.com - 0 views

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    Antoehr article on novatium versus olpc.
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