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Story URL: http://www.silicon.com/research/specialreports/opensource/0,3800004943,39156063,00.htm


Red Hat: '$100 laptop will drive desktop Linux'
Cranking open source up...

By Andrew Donoghue

Published: Tuesday 31 January 2006

Open source software company Red Hat believes that the $100 laptop initiative could inject momentum in interest and take-up of open source desktop operating systems.

Speaking on Monday, Mike Evans, vice-president of corporate development at Red Hat, said although this is not the primary aim of the project, a cheap ubiquitous open-sourced based laptop would potentially initiate an increased interest in open source desktop technology.

He said: "This will help invigorate the Linux desktop tech dynamic but it is not the main motivation."

Evans added that Red Hat has opted to take a pragmatic and evolutionary approach to the uptake of Linux on the desktop and that the adoption will happen gradually rather than in one "big bang" conversation.

The $100 laptop project - also known as the one laptop per child (OLPC) scheme - was announced at the World Economic Forum in January 2005. Originally a research project at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab, the project aims to put a cheap laptop in the hands of students around the world, particularly those in developing countries.

The final design was shown off for the first time last November.

Red Hat, which formally announced its participation in the scheme on Monday, has been tacitly involved in the project since April 2005 when Nicholas Negroponte, chairman and co-founder of MIT's Media Lab, claimed to be interested in basing the project around open source software.

Matthew Szulik, chairman, president and chief executive of Red Hat, said: "At Red Hat, we believe that open source technology can change the world, and is still in its infancy. It's a guiding principle that is embodied in everything we do. Beyond a founding corporate sponsorship, we've put engineering and other strategic resources behind the One Laptop per Child initiative to add our expertise, global reach and focus to the project."

According to Evans, the OLPC operating system could be based around a scaled-down version of Fedora - Red Hat's community distribution of Linux.

The issue of exactly how much each laptop will eventually cost has dogged the project since its inception. Although the figure of $100 (£56) was originally touted, Negroponte recently conceded that $115 may be more realistic.

The preliminary goal is to have initial units ready for shipment by the end of 2006 or early 2007 but manufacturing will not begin until between five million and 15 million devices have been ordered and paid for in advance.

Red Hat claims that using an open source software platform is critical to the success of the OLPC project, as it will encourage local participation and allow students to customise and expand their machines as required.

Although Red Hat said it is focused mainly on the development of the operating system for the OLPC machines, it also plans to engage the open source community in training, support, providing updates, certifications, and integrating additional technologies over time.

The backers of the OLPC project envisage each machine will have wireless broadband, enabling them to work as a mesh network - each laptop will be able to "talk" to its nearest neighbours, creating an ad hoc, local area network. The laptops will also be hand-cranked and should be able to do almost everything that "fat" clients can do, except store huge amounts of data.

Nicholas Negroponte will discuss the OLPC initiative and Red Hat's role at this year's Red Hat Summit on 2 June in Nashville, Tennessee.

Andrew Donoghue writes for ZDNet UK


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