Space Travel News  
Tiny nation of Niue gets laptop for every child

The laptops are designed for primary school children aged six to 12 but have also been given to high school students in Niue, where the inhabitants have free Internet access.
by Staff Writers
Niue (AFP) Aug 21, 2008
The tiny South Pacific nation of Niue Thursday became the first nation in the world to issue laptop computers to all its children, officials said.

Every primary and secondary school student was this week given a rugged "relatively waterproof and breakproof" little green laptop, which has wireless connection to the Internet as part of the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) initiative.

The computers have been specially designed by OLPC, a US-based charity, to help children's learning and to be cheap as well as difficult to break or damage.

The OLPC programme stems from research and development at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston in the US and has been supported by businesses including News Corporation's Rupert Murdoch and Google Corp.

The donation of 500 computers to Niue -- which has a total population of less than 1,500 -- is part of an initiative to distribute 5,000 laptops in the Pacific region, OLPC said in a statement.

Barry Vercoe of OLPC Boston said the initiative was to "create educational opportunities for the world's poorest children".

The laptops are designed for primary school children aged six to 12 but have also been given to high school students in Niue, where the inhabitants have free Internet access.

If schools install servers, pupils can access school study information and chat to each other in a radius of a kilometre (half a mile), without having to connect to the Internet.

Jimmie Rodgers, the director general of regional development agency, the Secretariat of the Pacific Community, said the laptops "have the potential to revolutionise education in ways that are difficult to imagine".

Related Links
Satellite-based Internet technologies



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Yahoo mixes old and new in Internet-age news service
San Francisco (AFP) Aug 21, 2008
Yahoo is building an Internet-age news service, leveraging its global audience of a half-billion people to win exclusive interviews with world leaders.







  • Test rocket destroyed by NASA after launch
  • NASA to use shock-absorbers to fix shaking in new Ares rocket
  • NASA And ATK To Launch Suborbital Hypersonic Experiments
  • Andrews Awarded Aerojet Contract To Build Hardware For Sundancer

  • Inmarsat Selects ILS Proton To Launch S-Band Satellite For Europe
  • Forecast International Projects 50 Billion Dollar ELV Market
  • Successful Launch For Third Inmarsat-4 Satellite
  • Russian Rocket To Launch US Commercial Satellite August 19

  • Kennedy Space Center reopening delayed
  • NASA Keeps Atlantis Target Launch Date
  • LockMart External Tank Is Pacing Item For Hubble Space Telescope Launch
  • LockMart Announces Workforce Reductions On Shuttle External Tank Program

  • US-Russia chill threatens NASA space program
  • ISS Orbit Adjustment Complete
  • ISS Crew Inspired By Vision And Dreams Of Jules Verne
  • Space Station A Test-Bed For Future Space Exploration

  • Going Looney In Space
  • Elegant Resorts And Virgin Galactic Make Space Travel A Reality
  • Oceaneering Will Resubmit Constellation Space Suit Proposal
  • Iran To Send First Astronaut Into Space Within 10 Years

  • China to launch Venezuela's first satellite: Chavez
  • China's Space Ambitions
  • Rocket For China's Manned Space Mission At Launch Center
  • China To Release 700 Hours Of Chang'e-1 Data

  • Robot-assisted surgery repairs fistulas
  • Japanese Researchers Eye e-Skin For Robots
  • Robots may enhance disabled people's lives
  • Robo-relationships are virtually assured: British experts

  • Mid-Depth Soil Collected For Lab Test On NASA's Mars Lander
  • Liquid Water in the Martian North
  • Phoenix Mars Lander Explores Site By Trenching
  • Dress Rehearsal For Mars

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement