One Laptop Per Child on Wednesday said it wants to make its XO laptop free in developing countries to mobilize adoption, on the same day it laid off half its staff.
“OLPC will be dedicated to bringing the cost of the laptop down to Zero for the Least Developed Countries — the $0 Laptop,” OLPC founder Nicholas Negroponte wrote in a blog entry.
The bold goal-setting came on the same day OLPC announced it had laid off half of its staff to cope with tough economic times. OLPC cut 32 employees as part of its effort to streamline operations, while the remaining OLPC employees are taking salary cuts as part of the restructuring.
The group has been dogged by problems since it launched its effort to develop a US$100 XO laptop for children in developing countries. It sells the XO laptop through Amazon.com, where a consumer donates $400 for two laptops, with one of them delivered to a child in a developing nation. The organization has struggled to fulfill its vision, facing delays and rising costs. In addition, orders from developing countries have waned, and commercial vendors have introduced competitive products.
OLPC was hit by internal strife when three top executives resigned last year after the nonprofit started overhauling its operation to focus on distributing laptops more effectively. The executives protested OLPC changing its focus to laptop distribution from economic development.
However, Negroponte remains confident about his ability to continue delivering laptops to children in developing countries.
“The future brings with it some uncertainty, some difficulty, but also the excitement that comes with the rededication to a cause, and a new path that will allow us to realize the moral purpose of OLPC,” Negroponte wrote.
As part of the new effort, OLPC will focus on the creation of an XO-2 laptop and on handing off development of the Sugar user interface for XO laptops to the developer community, Negroponte wrote.