Pulse: Specs emerge for US$100 OLPC tablet

by edit@cnet.com.au (Donald Bell)

The OLPC XO-3 is a tablet computer designed for children in developing nations.
(Credit: OLPC)

After achieving success with the OLPC XO-1 laptop, the One Laptop per Child foundation is setting in motion plans to create a working US$100 tablet for CES 2011. Marvell Technologies announced on Thursday that it will partner with the OLPC foundation to create the hardware for the proposed tablet, currently named the XO-3.

Vague details and product renderings of the XO-3 tablet first surfaced last December. More-concrete specs are now taking shape, including an ambitiously low power rating of 1 Watt per hour (compared with the 5 Watts per hour required by the OLPC laptop). Other promised features include a multilingual, multi-touchscreen keyboard with haptic feedback, Wi-Fi, high-quality video (1080p full-HD encode and decode), integrated video and still cameras, high-performance 3D graphics, Flash 10 internet and two-way teleconferencing.


The backbone of the XO-3 will be an ARM processor (likely the Marvell Armada 610), with initial models running a version of Google’s Android OS. As with the OLPC laptop, these initial models will be sold within developed nations, subsidising the less-expensive US$75 version (running the open-source, educational Sugar OS) distributed to children and institutions supported by the foundation.

In the accompanying video, OLPC founder Nicholas Negroponte also boasts that the tablet will eventually include an adaptable screen that can be optimised for both indoor viewing and direct sunlight, though the earliest models will be designed around a glass screen. An iPad-besting thickness of 10.8mm is also claimed.

Time will tell how much tablet can be bought for US$100, but we look forward to seeing what Marvell and OLPC have to show in January for CES 2011.

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