The One Laptop Per Child project is going modular. The non-profit's
Australian partner, One Education, is gearing up to launch a new hybrid
laptop in a few weeks that will let you swap out components similar to Google's Project Ara. There aren't any official details yet, but Ink, Bits, and Pixels
has managed to dig up several images that give us a basic sense of
what's going on. Dubbed the XO-Infinity, it can be used as both a laptop
and tablet; it shares the colorful aesthetic from current OLPC devices (XO-4 tablet and laptop);
and it looks like even kids will be able to easily change its different
modules. And, if it works as we expect, it could end up serving as a
platform for an infinitely upgradeable machine that will last
you for years, making it ideal for schools and international markets.
One Education has confirmed that the XO-Infinity will be officially
announced soon, but for now it's not revealing much else.
From the looks of it, there will be separate modules for the
XO-Infinity's battery, camera, networking, and core processing (which
likely includes the CPU, memory, and storage). Making its devices easy
to repair was one of the core ideas behind OLPC, which initially began
as a project meant to bring cheap laptops to schools all over the world.
By going modular, it'll be even easier for kids to replace specific
parts when something goes wrong. And you might even be able to make your
XO-Infinity more powerful as new hardware gets released.
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