Kenshin17 wrote:My point is, children are starving in third world countries, and people want to buy them laptops?
Get them an something they can use, food, clothes, water purification systems, education to work more efficiently, better medical care, BIBLES!, the list goes on.
One battery charge will power six hours of heavy activity, or 24 hours of reading
Kenshin17 wrote:Roy the laptops have a hand crank generator for power in lack of an outlet
I guess I am one of the few that sees the silliness in this. Lets get the rich people to fund laptops, but lets not get them to fund education, food, clothes....
Kenshin17 wrote:Why does it seem everybody says education is a must? i have said education is a good idea, but when does education necessitate a computer? For goodness sakes, I never used a computer for school, except to write papers and even then only sometimes, until I got to college.
Computers are not needed for education, and to think they are just proves how much our society has come to rely on computers.
I guess I am getting the answer to my question, and also the answer as to why a program like this got started *sigh*
Doubleshadow wrote:If I had more time, I would dig up proof, but education in Africa, is rarely free. Instead, families must pay tuition, buy uniforms, buy textbooks, and otherwise find ways to get what ends up being an unbelievable amount of money to the point that school is a wanted but unobtainable luxury. In South Africa, tuition for white schools can be $1,500, but for black schools its just $25 and it is still too much for people to afford.
A friend of mine who was a missionary in Mozambique last year said they had a little girl at the school, 4 years old, who walked three miles through the wilderness all alone in the dark every single day and night to get to school because it was all her parents could do for her and they desperately wanted her to have an education.
And then there is the problem with teachers. In Zambia, the number of teachers dieing from AIDS is nearly half the number trained. Its hard to go to school with no teacher.
In a documentary I saw on Cambodia, girls as young as eight were working in brothels, often snatched from home and shipped to Thailand by men who promised them jobs (yes, at eight), and its to the point that parents have to guard their children because now the traders are simply kidnapping. So you think these kids have money to go to school (again, they must pay and getting enough food is a challenge) or the security to walk there everyday?
Widows in Afghanistan still are little better than when the Taliban was in control. One women had two daughters she would send to school if she could, but she begs for money for food on the street (the men yell at her) and they live in a hovel with other widows and their children. They don't have enough money for housing. The girls (teenagers) want to go to school, but they can't afford school supplies.
Handing out laptops is an imperfect solution, but its a start. There is a lot more going on than money, absolutely, but a lot of these problems are chronic social ills resulting from our fallen state- somethings just won't change. In the mean time, providing laptops can be a way to put learning tools into the hands of children that can be all the books and paper they will ever need. They can even share them with siblings.
If one has nothing it all besides barely enough to live at all, and that won't change for years, if ever, a laptop can at least bring hope.
bakura_fan wrote:I dunno. I think that any chance to help is a good idea. I mean, I'm sure that it wasn't like "hey, let's give these guys laptops since everyone should have em!" I think it's probably been thought out for a bit. I mean, even if the laptop doesn't last too long, at least it's a starting point. I don't see the point of all the negativity towards it. We're in a technological era, so by teaching them technological while they are young may help them later on in the future.
Kenshin17 wrote:I agree that Christians should help when they can, but wisdom should be exercised in how. Godly creativity, why just give them a dollar when you can spend that dollar and teach them how to make hundreds?
thats kinda what I am saying, this is not a wise way to help people.
Kenshin17 wrote:I fail to see how buying them laptops is going to save those girls, or those children. What does this trade have to do with laptops? Will those laptops teach the children on their own? Will they protect those children from those men that kidnap? You will still need those to provide the software and training, you will still need developers to make new software to continue teaching, you will still need people.
And then we would be teaching them to rely on the computers. If it breaks, then what? And you know they will break down. Who pays for that? What if a child simply cannot learn to use one, are they then not going to be helped?
I see a bit of a point there, but I still think there are fare better ways to help those people then buying them laptops.
What good is a computer when there's lack of food, water, sanitation, durable shelter, and the like?
OLPC (I've seen a live demonstration at last year's linux.conf.au) is one of those really cut down laptops. They don't cost $1200, they cost more like $120. And they're not asking the children or their families to buy them, they're asking governments and other higher-earning people to get it for them, then distribute them freely. They're also designed to run completely electricity free, well, by mains anyway. You use this spinning charger thing, and it chages the laptop.
Pascal wrote:BOOKS!
But really, that's the solution, give them books and they will learn... give them computers and they'll... play solitare... and waste time online (currently on CAA when I should be READING chemistry... note without computer I would spend more time learning LOL)
From now through December 31, 2007, OLPC is offering a Give One Get One program in the United States and Canada. This is the first time the revolutionary XO laptop has been made available to the general public. For a donation of $399, one XO laptop will be sent to empower a child in a developing nation and one will be sent to the child in your life in recognition of your contribution. $200 of your donation is tax-deductible (your $399 donation minus the fair market value of the XO laptop you will be receiving).
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Please be aware that we will make every effort to deliver the XO laptops by the holidays, but quantities are limited. Early purchasers have the best chance of receiving their XO laptops in time for the holidays, but we cannot guarantee timing.
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