Help us win $50,000 from America’s Giving Challenge

We’re participating in America’s Giving Challenge, a virtual contest that rewards nonprofits who get the greatest number of people to donate to their Facebook Cause. They’re giving away $1,000 to the nonprofit who gets the most donations in a 24-hour period or a $50,000 donation to the nonprofit who get the most donations overall by November 6.

We want to win the daily challenge (and $1,000 to create more life-changing volunteer projects)! Past winners have only had a few hundred donors, so with our many volunteers and supporters, we know you can help us beat that.

Please visit our Cause and make a donation of any amount between 3:00 p.m. on Thursday, October 29, until Friday at 3:00 p.m. Remember, this contest is not about the amount of money we raise, but the number of people who donate. Tell your friends and help us win!

A festival of books: 1.6 Million beautiful works for the XO

We just got back from a showcase at an awesome book festival this evening, where the Internet Archive finished making its 1.6 million digitized books available for use on XOs.

Recently we announced a joint Bookserver project with the Archive to help all authors, libraries, and publishers share metadata in a way that can be more easily aggregated and searched. The Archive’s bookserver implementation for their extensive collection and the ‘Get IA Books’ activity by Jim Simmons and Sayamindu were the first large-scale test of the project.

And at today’s Boston Book Fest, the Archive announced that all of their works will be available in the lightweight EPUB format, which our tests suggest will make almost all of them render elegantly and cleanly on the XO. [you can help us test by trying out the activity and trying to open a few downloaded books with the latest version of Read!]

The Book Fest was awesome in other ways, too – we had a tent in an optimal location, just between the ice cream truck and the Legal Seafood truck, and a 50Mbps connection donated by Comcast which served the entire event.  More after the jump… Continue reading

Making Books Transparent

Sayamindu and I have been contributing over the course of the year to a Bookserver initiative to define how digital texts are indexed, discovered, and distributed.  The Open Content Alliance organized a conference yesterday and today in San Francisco to help us move forward with Bookserver development, improve the draft specification.  It was an inspiring event, with a lot of good working code and interfaces to share with one another.  Brewster throws a mean party, and when he announced he was hosting one last night to celebrate the launch of the Bookserver project and the Archive’s move into a beautiful new space in the Presidio, some 500 people turned up.  I was pleased to run into Mary Lou, with four laptops sporting new Pixel Qi screens – low power, and yet so very hot.

I spoke about what OLPC is doing with this new specification – Sayamindu’s modified “Get Internet Archive Books” activity was the first client application to use the developing spec and beta book servers – and we spent some time brainstorming ways to improve OPDS.  It’s an open group and process – all input is welcome. Continue reading

Uruguay completes ambitious 400,000-child XO deployment: first nation to fully implement olpc

Today Uruguayan President Tabaré Vázquez handed out the last XO in the initial project of Plan Ceibal, Uruguay’s national olpc project, providing an XO to each of the 395,000 children in primary school from 1st to 6th grade across the country’s 2332 public schools.  Of these, some 1900 are connected to the Internet; and those students and teachers generate a significant percentage of traffic to this and other OLPC websites (sending us hundreds of thousands of visitors a month).

The handout was of the last laptops was made in Montevideo at Escuela 28/80.  It is remarkable to see how quickly they reached this first milestone, and I can’t wait to see what the program does next.

When I visited Uruguay in August, I got to see one day-long handout at a school; the care with which the head teachers worked with every parent to introduce them to the laptop along with their child for a minute apiece as they were taking them home for the first time has stayed with me.  It was very much a social process, not technical training, making what might be foreign to parents seem fun and natural.

Plan Ceibal have already published the most comprehensive evaluations of a full-saturation olpc project to date, for both teachers and administrators, and a series of remarkable videos and books about the project for the lay public.

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School Server v0.6 released

The School Server is a key component of OLPC deployments — and one that was somewhat late to the stage. So I am pleased to report that there is a new and improved! version 0.6 available.

The main goal of this release is making installation and configuration easier and more reliable. It is an incremental update on the XS-0.5.x codebase, light on new features but strong on the “it just works” side. And very easy to upgrade for XS-0.5.x users.

What is a School Server, you ask? When you deploy XOs to a school, you want a server to connect them to the internet, serve content locally, provide backup  and upgrade services, and more. You can find out more in  our earlier story on it, or jump straight into the wikipage that explains it all.

This release brings:

  • Easier installation. Mysterious ejabberd commands are gone, rejoice!
  • Moodle and the XO authenticate transparently. Register, restart, click the ‘Local Schoolserver’ link in Browse. It just works.
  • Better network scalability. Moodle can directly control the neighbourhood view which is controlled by ejabberd. Now traffic no longer swamps the network and XOs.
  • Delegated security. You can use time-based security even with disconnected or partially connected School Servers.
  • An XO can run as a School Server. Suitable for small schools or groups.  This is still experimental, but is running pretty well.
  • Want to know more?  Read the release notes.

The work for our next release has already started, as people have been working ahead.  More after the jump.

Continue reading