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BioMed Central Blog

Friday May 23, 2008

Open access and the developing world - read the latest

Computer Aid recently celebrated its 10th birthday. To mark the occasion a party was held in the organisation’s honour. A wide variety of international guests attended the event, including Lindiwe Mabuza the South African High Commissioner, Shahid Malik MP from Department for International Development (DFID) Ambassador of Senegal, the Chair of CND, and the General Secretary of the TUC.

Speaking at the event, Her Excellency Lindiwe Mabuza said issues surrounding access to and skills in information technology are major contributors to economic and social inequality in South Africa.

Shahid Malik also announced on the evening that DFID would be donating around 1,000 used but functional laptops to Computer Aid. He said "DFID is updating its old laptops, which still have life in them but are not up to running the software we need to make DFID work efficiently … I'm delighted to be celebrating Computer Aid's 10th anniversary. Computer Aid does some great work in Africa which I'm pleased to support”

Computer Aid is currently working with several disability organisations to provide laptops to visually impaired students and teachers in Africa.

As part of the ELPub 2008 Open Scholarship, Michael Norris, Charles Oppenheim, and Fytton Rowland will present their findings from their research ‘Open Access Citation Rates and Developing Countries’. Norris et al. demonstrate that the impact of open access research is even greater for developing countries.

Meanwhile, One Laptop Per Child (OPLC) has gone Web 2.0. Founder of the OPLC program, Nicholas Negroponte, recently announced the next generation of the XO, the $188 pint-sized laptops designed for schoolchildren in developing countries. At an event at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Media Lab, Negroponte revealed design photos of a new version of his low-cost brainchild--what he described as the XO-2.


 

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