News & Analysis
Comment
Luis Sanchez
I think this is very good. I used to think that these kind of efforts were a ...
chanj
I haven't played with any of their devices although I am really interested in ...
Marvell and One Laptop per Child Unveil the XO 3.0 Tablet
Sylvie Barak
1/6/2012 10:19 PM EST
SAN FRANCISCO--Marvell Semiconductor Inc. and non-profit organization One Laptop per Child (OLPC) have finally unveiled the XO 3.0 tablet after years of speculation, saying it will show off the device at the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.
The low-cost, low-power, rugged tablet, designed by Yves Behar joins OLPC’s previous models, which have already seen distribution to over 2.4 million children in 42 countries.
Edward McNierney, Chief Technology Officer of the organization, called the XO 3.0 “a natural successor,” to OLPC’s XO lineup and lauded the new tablet for its design, durability and performance. The tablet will be on display at the Marvell CES booth next week.

Built on Marvell’s Armada PXA618 SOC processor and Avastar Wi-Fi SOC, with 512MB of RAM, the 8-inch XO 3.0 tablet is purported to be very thin and boasts some rather unique charging circuitry, being the only tablet able to draw charge directly from solar panels, hand cranks and other alternative power sources.
OLPC has said the two-watt system is even capable of 10 minutes of runtime from just one minute of hand cranking.
The tablet can be configured to sport either a standard LCD or Pixel Qi sunlight-readable display at 1024 x 768-resolution and can run either the Android or OLPC’s Sugar Linux operating system, built specifically for children.
Depending on the selected specs, the expected average price of the tablet is expected to come in at around $100, making it affordable for developing countries interested in investing in their education system.

McNierney said the tablet PC drew on the “technology breakthroughs” made with OLPC’s XO 1.75 laptop computer, which also runs on the Armada PXA618 processor. It, too, features a sunlight-readable screen, and will begin shipping to customers in March 2012, with more than 75,000 units already ordered by OLPC projects in Uruguay and Nicaragua.
The organization only sells its tablets in bulk to governments, and its devices are not sold individually to consumers.
Tom Hayes, vice president of corporate marketing at Marvell said the partnership with OLPC was one way the firm could “deliver a revolution where it matters most—to benefit children in some of the poorest places on the planet.”
Marvell has, indeed, been involved with OLPC from the beginning, and said it would continue to do “whatever it takes” to help the organization realize its mission of providing meaningful educational opportunities to the 500 million school-aged children around the world.
The low-cost, low-power, rugged tablet, designed by Yves Behar joins OLPC’s previous models, which have already seen distribution to over 2.4 million children in 42 countries.
Edward McNierney, Chief Technology Officer of the organization, called the XO 3.0 “a natural successor,” to OLPC’s XO lineup and lauded the new tablet for its design, durability and performance. The tablet will be on display at the Marvell CES booth next week.

Built on Marvell’s Armada PXA618 SOC processor and Avastar Wi-Fi SOC, with 512MB of RAM, the 8-inch XO 3.0 tablet is purported to be very thin and boasts some rather unique charging circuitry, being the only tablet able to draw charge directly from solar panels, hand cranks and other alternative power sources.
OLPC has said the two-watt system is even capable of 10 minutes of runtime from just one minute of hand cranking.
The tablet can be configured to sport either a standard LCD or Pixel Qi sunlight-readable display at 1024 x 768-resolution and can run either the Android or OLPC’s Sugar Linux operating system, built specifically for children.
Depending on the selected specs, the expected average price of the tablet is expected to come in at around $100, making it affordable for developing countries interested in investing in their education system.

McNierney said the tablet PC drew on the “technology breakthroughs” made with OLPC’s XO 1.75 laptop computer, which also runs on the Armada PXA618 processor. It, too, features a sunlight-readable screen, and will begin shipping to customers in March 2012, with more than 75,000 units already ordered by OLPC projects in Uruguay and Nicaragua.
The organization only sells its tablets in bulk to governments, and its devices are not sold individually to consumers.
Tom Hayes, vice president of corporate marketing at Marvell said the partnership with OLPC was one way the firm could “deliver a revolution where it matters most—to benefit children in some of the poorest places on the planet.”
Marvell has, indeed, been involved with OLPC from the beginning, and said it would continue to do “whatever it takes” to help the organization realize its mission of providing meaningful educational opportunities to the 500 million school-aged children around the world.
Navigate to related information


Neo1
1/7/2012 12:11 AM EST
The pictures make me feel they are not so rugged. I wonder if these are still being made to showcase as a prototype of course with some govts buying some quantities or really bring them for mass production for like below $50. What are the challenges for this kind of project?
Sign in to Reply
SylvieBarak
1/7/2012 1:16 AM EST
The picture is from the concept design they showed last year... who knows whether the real version looks anything like it! But I promise I will find out in a couple of days and post photos :)
Sign in to Reply
BicycleBill
1/7/2012 6:24 PM EST
I don't want to sound cynical, but reality is that OLPC has always been a journalist's delight as a story, while delivering very little excerpt self-congratulatory press stories; they are long on talk and short on delivery, even if you agree with their goals. I have followed it since it started and it's a combination of guilt-washing, "feel-good" karma, and smooth talk, delivering little of value except promises and concepts. Check out my two EETimes commentaries about OLPC at http://www.eetimes.com/design/analog-design/4170200/OLPC-Tech-salvation-or-ego-trip- and http://www.eetimes.com/electronics-news/4080876/Comment-One-Laptop-Per-Child-hit-by-competitive-reality.
Sign in to Reply
SylvieBarak
1/7/2012 9:44 PM EST
Bill, while I agree with many of the points you make in your piece, do you not think it's better to have lofty aims and fail to deliver as much as promised than not to try at all?
OLPC is a not-for profit, and they may not be great at execution, and they may love a good self-congratulatory pat on the back.... but even if just a handful of kids benefit from their work, I would be the first in line to shake their hand. Because at least they are making a point of the issue.
Since when is aiming to provide kids in poor countries with laptops a bad goal to aim for? Have you seen how happy kids are once they have those laptops? (I have... first hand... it's awesome!)
It's a great goal...and, sure, there are bumps on the road, but they're trying. And I applaud them for that. Tearing into not-for profits just seems a little harsh.
Sign in to Reply
hm
1/7/2012 7:11 PM EST
This is very good news. But I wonder who will provide infrastructure like wireless internet? Internet is very essential part for this tablet. I wish they have solution for it.
Sign in to Reply
t.alex
1/7/2012 7:34 PM EST
How much would this be?
Sign in to Reply
SylvieBarak
1/7/2012 9:38 PM EST
around $100
Sign in to Reply
chanj
1/9/2012 1:07 PM EST
I haven't played with any of their devices although I am really interested in getting one to gain some experience. However, in general, Laptop is a more generic device than a tablet. I wonder the benefit of having a tablet over a laptop. Would tablet be a better educational device than a laptop? It may be for a smaller kid, age under 6. Yet, would developing countries rather buy a generic device to share among more kids than to acquire a specific device which only suits a smaller group of kids?
Sign in to Reply
Luis Sanchez
1/9/2012 4:18 PM EST
I think this is very good. I used to think that these kind of efforts were a waste of money but giving these kind of toys to kids may become like putting a seed in the soil. If the soil is good one may trigger the flame in a future engineer, one may influence in a positive way the lives of kids in poor countries.
Carry on OLPC!
Sign in to Reply