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Web-Surfing Indian Slum Kids Ask: "What's a Computer"

chaoticset writes "An experiment in minimally directed self-learning has been going fairly well, from the article: To test his ideas, Sugata Mitra launched something 13 months ago he calls "the hole in the wall experiment." He took a PC connected to a high-speed data connection and imbedded it in a concrete wall next to NIIT's headquarters in the south end of New Delhi. The wall separates the company's grounds from a garbage-strewn empty lot used by the poor as a public bathroom. Mitra simply left the computer on, connected to the Internet, and allowed any passerby to play with it...he discovered was that the most avid users of the machine were ghetto kids aged 6 to 12, most of whom have only the most rudimentary education and little knowledge of English. Yet within days, the kids had taught themselves to draw on the computer and to browse the Net." Update: 04/17 22:23 GMT by M : Mitra has a website about his experiments.

248 of 419 comments (clear)

  1. Forcing the issue? by KT4313 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Reminds me oddly of the book version of 2001... Forcing a bit of odd westernization-evolution on the kids...

    1. Re:Forcing the issue? by dillon_rinker · · Score: 2

      What an intriguing analogy...will we remove our obelisk when they begin to eat meat and kill one another? In other words, does the internet act as a homogenizing influence and does the internet act as a corrupting influence?

      What a great topic for an essay. Too bad I'm not in college anymore. This sounds like a great way to waste 7-10 pages.

    2. Re:Forcing the issue? by KT4313 · · Score: 1

      I'm more considering how people change socially and intellectually when you introduce a new tool to them... But again, like the book, this is an artificial stimulus, placed by a culture somewhat removed from the slums that it is placed in. Was just an offhanded observation.

    3. Re:Forcing the issue? by maharg · · Score: 1

      It's hardly bring *forced* on them

      --

      $ strings FTP.EXE | grep Copyright
      @(#) Copyright (c) 1983 The Regents of the University of California.
    4. Re:Forcing the issue? by Xaoswolf · · Score: 1

      I agree, I just wish they had some better stats as to what the kids were looking at(they only listed three things that the kids did; MP3's, Disney, and paint.), or what kind of damages the pc recieved while in the wall(either from natural causes or vandalism) and what the kids did until it could be repaired.

    5. Re:Forcing the issue? by maxpublic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Forcing a bit of odd westernization-evolution on the kids...

      Funny, I didn't see any mention of kids being held at gunpoint and commanded to use the computer.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  2. draw on it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Like with photoshop? Or with a can of spray paint?

    1. Re:draw on it? by cscx · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well, considering they are from a slum, I'd assume they'd use The PIMP. Kinda like The GIMP, but, unlike Wilber, he isn't furry, he just wears a furry hat...

    2. Re:draw on it? by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2
      Not that I like being Politically Correct (especially with a joke), but here goes:

      That kind of joke is rather insulting to those people who live in the slums. Just because people are born to a situation where they are forced to work damned hard to achieve what we would consider a starvation diet, doesn't mean that they're lacking either intelligence or dignity.
      Feel free to enjoy the joke, but when you're done laughing, please remember that what it takes to survive in the slums of Deli is probably beyond the level of stamina and wits that most of us have become used to using.

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  3. License by QuodEratDemonstratum · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's running Windows. I hope that slum has a license.

    1. Re:License by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      How right you are. he should have used a Linux distro. That way, they'd be developing their very first computer skills on a system whose UI is so tedious, they'd go back to eating rotten garbage and end their existence, and their burden on this fragile world, all the much quicker. I applaud your foresight, sir.

    2. Re:License by peter · · Score: 2

      Linux is not hard to learn if you don't already have preconceived notions about things from using Windows. Obviously there are bad GUIs for Linux, since there are hundreds of different window managers. Not all of them can be good...

      The main reason Windows is so popular is that it is popular. People in developed countries who have been exposed to computers before usually have some experience with Windows, so it is easier for them to continue using windows than to switch to something else. Thus, people get Windows at home, and the cycle continues.

      People who don't already have a head start on knowing Windows probably won't find it much easier than straight-forward Linux systems.

      --
      #define X(x,y) x##y
      Peter Cordes ; e-mail: X(peter@cordes , .ca)
  4. That's pretty interesting... by iONiUM · · Score: 3, Informative

    That people are learning so quickly on computers. Perhaps it's the missing link in quick education, we could probably educate the "ghetto" areas very quickly then.
    I'd be interested in seeing a learning curve for teachers vs. computers, and in self-learning vs. independant.
    Perhaps practical education is MUCH better than being taught, which would show that our education system is very unefficient...

    1. Re:That's pretty interesting... by asland · · Score: 1

      I think we all know the real reason is the intuitive nature of Microsoft Windows. Or something...

    2. Re:That's pretty interesting... by TechnoVooDooDaddy · · Score: 4, Funny

      which would show that our education system is very unefficient...

      heh, no kidding...

    3. Re:That's pretty interesting... by sisukapalli1 · · Score: 1

      IMHO the conclusion that just computers/internet and self education can be a good solution is flawed. Being able to draw on a computer using a mouse is not a good indicator of education -- most likely after one person learns how to use the mouse, and is in a position to show other friends how to use it.

      Kinda like little kids that learn "Wazzup" and "Howya doing" without basic knowledge of how to read or write. It is cute. A means of education, it isn't.

      There are so many places a person can get stuck at. (video games, news, porn, slashdot, inflammatory literature :)), it is definitely not a stable education environment.

      Sastry

    4. Re:That's pretty interesting... by powerbarr · · Score: 1

      I'd really feel better about them learning the three R's before they do anything more complex. I could see the benefit in the physics class example. But you need reading, writing, and arithmetic skills before you can truly start learning things for yourself.

  5. whoa by AnimeFreak · · Score: 2, Funny

    Shouldn't you call them "Natives" instead of "Indians?"

    Political correctness. :)

    1. Re:whoa by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2

      Hmmm... Well, where we would call Indians "Native Americans", does that make the denizens of the country south of Everest "Native Asians"?
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    2. Re:whoa by aliebrah · · Score: 1, Redundant

      What an idiot. They're natives of India. You know, the country in Asia.

  6. WTF by wo1verin3 · · Score: 2, Funny

    now i have to move to new delhi for a high speed uncapped connection...grrr

  7. This is incredible by qslack · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know, I felt discouraged with all of the dot-com bombs. It seemed as if the promise of the Internet was over.

    It's these things that remind me what the Internet is all about: learning and communication. It's not about making money (although that might work for some people). It's just about making the world a better place, one page at a time. :)

    This is seriously cool. Nobel Internet Peace Prize anyone? :)

    1. Re:This is incredible by ender81b · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I totally agree. This is remarkable and quite fascinating - the kids just invent words/metaphors for what the computer does and learn it. It is like in the old days when I learned DOS. I had no idea what stuff was called or how anything worked i just figured it out (to get games to work). This is the same type of thing only waayyyy cooler. Man is it just.. I dunno - neat. I say we give these kids an "honorary geek award" from slashdot =). THe only thing that troubled me about the article (and I mean only thing.. man is this cool) is this:

      A: There is one experiment that scares me. These children don't know what e-mail is. If I gave them e-mail, I don't know what would happen. I'll probably try it anyway. But remember the stories one used to hear about people finding lost tribes and introducing them to Coca-Cola? I'm really seriously scared about what would happen if suddenly the whole wide world had access to these kids. I don't know who would talk to them for what purpose.

      It is kindof sad in todays world that he would be afraid of what somebody would do to these kids but I understand. With all the perverts in the world... well. It just seems sad though that they are missing on a fundamental aspect of the internet because of the (literal) danger it poses to them. Plus, they would probably get spammed to death.

      The only other thing I wanted to add is just how interesting it was that they could use the web (Disney's site even!) without really knowing English. I mean, think about it. Go to some Chinese/Japanese/French/Whatever site and try using it. Almost impossible (without the fish) but here these kids have figured out how. And to think we bitch when sites use flash...

      He has my vote for some sort of award.

    2. Re:This is incredible by irony+nazi · · Score: 3, Informative
      As you might imagine, deploying Internet kiosks in economically backward parts of India is not quite simple. Besides the lack of infrastructure, the other challenges include providing a low-cost solution that can withstand harsh conditions like dust and extreme temperatures, and a kiosk that can be remotely administered. These and other similar requirements have led to the design for a Cognitive Kiosk for Rural, Outdoor, Tropical Environment (patent pending).
      I didn't add that last part. Please allow the irony nazi to point out that, by filing for a patent, NIIT has made deploying kiosks in third world countries even less simple.
      </irony nazi sighs>
      --

      Bringing irony to the Slash-masses
    3. Re:This is incredible by rgmoore · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Please allow the irony nazi to point out that, by filing for a patent, NIIT has made deploying kiosks in third world countries even less simple.

      Not necessarily. It will only cause problems if they adopt an obnoxious licensing policy. OTOH, if they pass out royalty free licenses to anyone who asks, they make things much simpler because then nobody else can patent the things and start charging outrageous fees. Defensive patents (i.e. ones used to prevent others from attacking you with their patents) are not a bad thing.

      --

      There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

    4. Re:This is incredible by shogun · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm really seriously scared about what would happen if suddenly the whole wide world had access to these kids.

      I imagine they would just suddenly have a lot of people trying to sell them printer toner, university diplomas or penis enlargers.

    5. Re:This is incredible by Gibbys+Box+of+Trix · · Score: 2, Informative

      Go to some Chinese/Japanese/French/Whatever site and try using it. Almost impossible (without the fish)

      Do you really find that? Occasionally google will point me to a page in French, or German, or even Chinese (esp. if looking for GBA roms) and it's not hard to find your way around. If you're looking for a file, it's even easier. I regularly used to pick up Voodoo drivers from German sites (who seemed to be right on the ball for some reason) and, like I said, GBA Roms from Chinese and Japanese sites where I can't even understand the symbols.

      I admit I have a smattering of French and Spanish, but no other languages ('cept for English, natch), but I can usually make an educated guess as to what a web page is getting at.

      The fact that these kids are generally totally illiterate makes their achievement a lot more interesting. Also they had no (initial) idea how to navigate from page to page, why the arrow changed to a finger sometimes, what underlined phrases meant. I can't read the site right now (/.ed) but I'd expect they prefer sites with high graphic content (like stileproject perhaps?), and those that were low on text. Like most kids, probably.

    6. Re:This is incredible by markmoss · · Score: 2

      No, if you can prove you had the idea first, no one else should be able to patent it. If the idea is published before anyone files a patent application, in most countries it becomes public domain right then. That is, if you call up your local newspaper and persuade them to run a news article about your invention including enough technical detail, it's probably public domain now. (So if you want to keep rights to your invention, you don't hold the press conference until you have filed for the patent. This might mean that you'd better come up with the filing fee on your own, before you go looking for venture capitalists.)

      The US might be a bit different. In most of the world, disputes between inventors are resolved by who filed the patent application first, so the "no prior publication" rule is natural -- otherwise you'd have people copying Popular Mechanics articles onto patent forms and rushing to the patent office. In the US, disputes are resolved according to who "invented" it first, so it's possible for you to publish the idea intending to give it away, and someone else to claim that he thought of it first and therefore can patent it. But there's a time limit to apply for a patent after the idea is published or it is irrevocably public domain -- it used to be two years, and IIRC it has been reduced as the US tries to get more into step with the rest of the world.

      The one thing filing a patent does do in terms of blocking others is to put the idea into the patent office's database. The examiners are supposed to also check other obvious sources, but some of them must have slacked off when Australia approved a patent on the wheel and the US approved a patent on swinging sideways... So getting it into the patent office database improves the chance that the patent will be disapproved in the first place, rather than having to go to court and show the evidence of prior art to get the patent thrown out. In the US at least, there is a patent category for just this purpose -- the application goes in their database so their searches should find it, but the invention becomes public domain. I don't know if India has the same thing.

      "Defensive patents" means something else than covering stuff you might make but don't mind others making too. Defensive patents are neither to discourage competitors nor to collect royalties, but you might collect them so if someone demands royalties from you for something that shouldn't have been patentable, you can retaliate with your own collection of trite and obvious patents. (Typically these disputes are resolved by cross-licensing the patents: no money changes hands (except producers to lawyers!), no product lines change, but now you can claim your baseless patents and the baseless patents you swapped them for are each worth $XX million and inflate your company's apparent worth by that much.)

      If that's all NIIT ever does with their kiosk patent, no problem. However, there is quite a history of different management coming into possession of a defensive patent portfolio and thinking they can actually make some money off of it, so it would be a whole lot better if weak patents didn't exist in the first place...

    7. Re:This is incredible by rgmoore · · Score: 1

      Prior art is a nice theory, but unfortunately it seems to be dying in practice. Look at how many patents are discussed on Slashdot where there's clearly prior art but the patent examiners granted the patent anyway. Having a previously granted patent seems like about the only way that you can fight against that.

      --

      There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

    8. Re:This is incredible by Im2kul · · Score: 1

      >It is kindof sad in todays world that he would be afraid of what somebody would do to these kids but I understand.

      another reason would be that those (slum) kids won't know a thing about reading/writing emails! know why? coz there aint no hindi (india's national language and spoken by almost everybody in new delhi) OS and/or a hindi plugin out there yet that would let them read/write emails in their own language. they (most probably) dont know a word of english other than saying "hello, sorry, or f*@%"
      why do I say that? coz I _live_ in New Delhi.

  8. I can see it now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm picturing a ghetto kid, shoeless, standing in front of this magical screen embedded in a dingy concrete wall, and saying:
    Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these...

    1. Re:I can see it now by kubrick · · Score: 2

      What's the Hindu for 'F1RST p0sT, LoZerZ!'

      :)

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    2. Re:I can see it now by kubrick · · Score: 1

      Mod me down, please -- Hindi language, Hindu people.

      Tired. Working too hard.

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    3. Re:I can see it now by OpenSourcerer · · Score: 2, Funny

      Considering it is india,
      it will be a Beowulf cluster of KIDS imagining a Beowulf cluster of these!

    4. Re:I can see it now by slasher69 · · Score: 1

      Actually, in Hindi the word Indians call themselves is Hindustani, which means the land of Hindus. Both words Hindi and Hindu come from the same root. So you were basically right at first. :-)

    5. Re:I can see it now by kubrick · · Score: 1

      The odd thing is that I remembered the (English) distinction when I wrote it, but was tired enough to think that I was writing the right thing. :)

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    6. Re:I can see it now by dracken · · Score: 1

      The root is Indus. The river Indus which is called as Sindhu in sanskrit. Hence Hindu (the religion), Hindi (the language), Hindustan (the country). Hindustani or Hindu means people who live near the river Indus.

      -Dracken

  9. Sigh. by flacco · · Score: 5, Funny
    he discovered was that the most avid users of the machine were ghetto kids aged 6 to 12, most of whom have only the most rudimentary education and little knowledge of English. Yet within days, the kids had taught themselves to draw on the computer and to browse the Net.

    Yet our organization still has full-grown, western-educated employees who hold the fucking mouse upside-down.

    --
    pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    1. Re:Sigh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Dude, it's called a trackball.

    2. Re:Sigh. by 56ker · · Score: 2

      brings a whole new meaning to that advertising slogan:

      "so easy a child could do it"... and the adult couldn't

    3. Re:Sigh. by flacco · · Score: 3, Funny
      Dude, it's called a trackball.

      (ha ha haaa...!)

      It took me three reads to get this; maybe I shouldn't be so critical of our users :-)

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    4. Re:Sigh. by Paul+Komarek · · Score: 2

      Whichever post wrote the "trackball" comment should be +5. After I finally finished laughing, I tried it. Of course it doesn't work, because the mouse ball rests on plastic instead of rollers.

      -Paul Komarek

    5. Re:Sigh. by G27+Radio · · Score: 1

      Dude, it's called a trackball.

      The first time I ever saw a mouse that was the first thought that crossed my mind. I was somewhat computer literate for the time--I knew Applesoft BASIC and 6502 assembly. I picked it up to look at it and the first thing I thought was "Oh, it must be like Missle Command or Centipede." (We're talking early-mid 80's here.)

    6. Re:Sigh. by Cplus · · Score: 1

      Cool thing is that it works with an optical mouse, although you don't get to roll a ball.

      --
      "Share your knowledge. It's a way to achieve immortality." -- Dalai Lama
    7. Re:Sigh. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2

      Mouse ball? Funny, it works for me...but does that red light cause cancer?

    8. Re:Sigh. by radish · · Score: 2

      Reminds me of the manual for the Atari ST. In the back there was a glossary, under "Mouse" it said something like "A device for controlling the pointer on the screen. Works like an upside-down trackball".

      I just loved the fact that they assumed someone who didn't know what a mouse was _would_ know what a trackball was.

      That's up there with the original IBM PC bios error ("Keyboard not present - hit F1 to continue").

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    9. Re:Sigh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Maybe this experiment isn't showing how well children can learn on their own, but how far we are progressing in the Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) field. We have been forced to design hardware and software so that idiot "western-educated employees" can intuitively check their mail when the eery AOL voice tells them to without calling helpdesk.

      I mean really, just because these kids are poor and uneducated, doesn't mean they are less intelligent than us. I think flacco is more +5 insightful than funny...

    10. Re:Sigh. by GlassUser · · Score: 2

      Actually, they used to have mice that had springed rollers or something, so you could hold them upside down and use it like a trackball (it was engineered and marketed specifically for this). A friend had one around 1995. I haven't seen one since.

    11. Re:Sigh. by gowen · · Score: 1
      I just loved the fact that they assumed someone who didn't know what a mouse was _would_ know what a trackball was.
      Two words: Missile Command
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    12. Re:Sigh. by meatpopcicle · · Score: 1

      Yes, its called a trackball.

      --
      "You're on my side and the dark side, like Lando Calrissian?" --Gimpy, Undergrads
    13. Re:Sigh. by Paul+Komarek · · Score: 2

      Wow. Days gone by... Speaking of old, disappeared (but superior) hardware, anyone else remember those keyboards we used to have, which had the ctrl and alt keys right next to each other! ;-) Now you have to work pretty hard to find one.

      -Paul Komarek

    14. Re:Sigh. by markmoss · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The mouse was invented in the 60's, IIRC, but it pretty much stayed in the lab until the 80's. Partly this was because machines with enough graphical capability for a mouse to be really useful cost around $50,000 -- maybe you'd find one in an engineering workstation, but not anything 99% of people could ever get their hands on. But arcade video games started in the 70's; these could cost over $50,000, and some did need a good pointing device. Put a mouse on them, and frustrated customers would have torn the thin, flexible cord right off. So they turned the mouse upside down (and expanded it to bowling-ball size, IIRC) and mounted it in the console so only the ball was exposed.

    15. Re:Sigh. by peter · · Score: 2

      My windows keys are my Alt keys, and my alt keys are my Meta keys, so my left ctrl key is next to an alt key. However, I like to use my capslock key as Ctrl instead, because it's much better placed for a commonly used function like ctrl.

      --
      #define X(x,y) x##y
      Peter Cordes ; e-mail: X(peter@cordes , .ca)
    16. Re:Sigh. by Paul+Komarek · · Score: 1

      Oh, you're one of *THOSE* people. ;-) I learned typing on an IBM selectric, not a Sun, so I like capslock on the left. But remapping the windows keys is a good idea. However, I'm now using an expensive ergo keyboard (the Classic from Kinesis) which, thank my lucky stars, has no windows keys.

      -Paul Komarek

  10. not anymore.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    --
    Mitra has a website about his experiments.
    --

    Not anymore he doesn't...

    ------

    The computers used for the kiosks are all Pentium PCs with color monitors and multimedia support. The operating system is Windows(TM) (9x/NT) and the Internet browser is MS Internet Explorer(TM).

    As you might imagine, deploying Internet kiosks in economically backward parts of India is not quite simple. Besides the lack of infrastructure, the other challenges include providing a low-cost solution that can withstand harsh conditions like dust and extreme temperatures, and a kiosk that can be remotely administered. These and other similar requirements have led to the design for a Cognitive Kiosk for Rural, Outdoor, Tropical Environment (patent pending).

    An early prototype of the Hole-In-The-Wall kiosk

    Listed below are some of the typical problems encountered while deploying the Hole-In-the-Wall kiosk:
    Internet Connectivity
    Input Device
    Administration
    Heat and Dust
    Security

    Internet Connectivity

    Internet connectivity to the kiosks has been provided using various methods including leased lines, ISDN lines and Dial-up connections. Internet access in India is at a nascent stage due to inadequate telecommunications infrastructure. Some kiosk installations have been at places that don't even have phone lines. In such cases, the computers use cached web content to simulate web access. Besides this, a host of edutainment software is installed that has actually proved to be quite popular. Future design includes experimenting with remote connectivity with Wireless LAN and Wireless Telephone Line Extender.

    Back

    Input Device

    Keyboard
    There is no keyboard available to the users. This is due to the concern of vandalism. Also, it is anticipated that there would be high level of wear and tear of keys as the device is susceptible to dust, especially as the dust particles have an abrasive quality here. All this meant that the cost of maintenance of a keyboard were unacceptably high. Trials are on to see if virtual keyboards can be used.

    Pointing Device
    Touch pads were used as the pointing device during the early experiments. The touch pads were found to be wearing out quite fast or being accidentally broken by the kids. On an average the life of a touch pad was approximately 1 month. To avoid this frequent replacement of touch pads, a JoyStick Mouse was devised at CRCS. This device has a joystick control for the movement of the cursor, and a button each for left and right click. This JoyStick Mouse is quite a sturdy pointing device that is low-cost. Moreover, it requires little maintenance as compared to the touch pads.

    Back

    Administration

    Though remote administration software tools have been used in some cases, by and large, the task of administering the kiosk is accomplished manually at this point in time. But work has already begun on a Central Control Website through which it will be possible remotely administer all the kiosks that are online. The plan envisages kiosks that have embedded controllers connected to the computer giving details of the ambient variants such as temperature and humidity. The kiosks will also record the status of UPS/batteries. These records will be put on the Central Control Website, where the central observer can take actions according to the requirements. The idea of a kiosk reporting it's own "health problems", is what drives this effort.

    Back

    Heat and Dust

    To cope with the high summer temperatures, the computers are housed in a brick enclosure with thicker-than-normal walls. The enclosure that has dust filters, also minimises the dust from the dry winds. Initial experiments tried air-conditioning for tackling the heat but that turned out to be too expensive an option. It has been observed that the computers' performance is affected only marginally by the high temperatures. Therefore, for the moment, only ventillating fans have been used to maintain ambient temperature. The ventillating fans also serve to maintain positive air pressure inside the kiosk. Blowing air with high pressure checks the entry of dust particles in case of minor cracks or holes in the kiosk.

    Back

    Security

    The kiosks are unmanned and, therefore, require means for the safe-keeping of all the expensive hardware. The Hole-In-The-Wall kiosks have in-built security system the details of which cannot be divulged for obvious reasons.

    Back

    1. Re:not anymore.... by fordgj · · Score: 1

      My aunt runs her own small NGO in Nigeria and they have a computer. One of the biggest problems she runs into is the surge protector getting fried from electricity surges. They have horribly regulated electricity, this is something we take for granted and only think of in storms,.

  11. Sociology by Kargan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seems to me like more of a sociology experiment than anything...

    I wonder if any prominent sociological societies or groups are aware of this project and its collected data?

    --
    Palaces, barricades, threats, meet promises
    1. Re:Sociology by mixbsd · · Score: 1

      ... just as long as the hole-in-the-wall PC periodically plays a spoken privacy policy (a text-based one wouldn't be much use to illiterate kids, d'uh) ;)

  12. institutional review board by tcyun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While the experiment sounds interesting, I have this weird feeling that the IRBs might have a few issues with this type of experiment if they were run in the United States (and by experiment, I mean controlled study run through a university). Now, the weird feeling stems from the fact that one would potentially have to answer a few questions about using human beings as unaware subjects.

    I am not saying that there are a not great deal of potential positives form this type of "experiment" as well. I just want to point out that there might be some ethical issues. I am sure there are some simple arguements that can point out the cost to implement the hole in the wall system vs. the cost to feed/educate/clothe a number of children. (The counter arguement states that if a single child is able to rise out of poverty due to the exposure to technology, the purely economic analysis states that the experiment was a win...)

    The groaning aside, it is again amazing that kids will figure out how to use stuff. It does not seem to matter who the kids are or what the stuff is, they seem to figure out how to use it.

    1. Re:institutional review board by Some+Dumbass... · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I just want to point out that there might be some ethical issues. I am sure there are some simple arguements that can point out the cost to implement the hole in the wall system vs. the cost to feed/educate/clothe a number of children.

      You realize that by those standards, hardly any research should be done at all in the world? And on a related note, by those standards we should all sell our computers and donate the money to charity. I mean, it's amazing how much money is spent on luxuries when some people don't even have food.

      Getting back to the topic at hand, I don't think most IRBs actually care about those standards (they don't care how little we pay starving undergrads, for example...) I belive that they are more concerned about preventing physical harm or mental stress to human subjects. As long as no harm is done, and no personal information is reported (e.g. only aggregate statistical data and anonymous examples are used in papers and talks about the study), then this sort of thing should be fine.

    2. Re:institutional review board by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2

      It is a strange time in which we are living. A creepy feeling ensued from considering your question about unaware human subjects. Participating here somehow felt recursive. I find myself asking, "Consider the children... then, consider Senator Disney's SSSCA and our nation of sheep.

    3. Re:institutional review board by rnd() · · Score: 2
      one would potentially have to answer a few questions about using human beings as unaware subjects.

      Such as "why have these kids from the slum suddenly developed carpal tunnel syndrome?"

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

    4. Re:institutional review board by Voxol · · Score: 1

      And on a related note, by those standards we should all sell our computers and donate the money to charity.

      ummmm.... If everyone is selling; who buys?

    5. Re:institutional review board by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      they don't care how little we pay starving undergrads, for example...

      ...in an article talking about ghetto kids in India. The irony is thick enough to cut with a knife.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    6. Re:institutional review board by Some+Dumbass... · · Score: 2

      ummmm.... If everyone is selling; who buys?

      Well, maybe with such a glut of sellers, prices will drop so low that those ghetto kids in India can afford their own computers! :)

  13. Before anyone gets too excited... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    This company (NIIT) is well known as one of the farms for H1-Bs - (e.g. Learn HTML in 21 days and go to America). No joke - if you visit India, you see advertisements like this. They're obviously trying to get an aura of semi-legitimacy by publishing this pseudo-scientific study. Their marketing is well known, their courses - dubious at best. For example, my cousing was offered one of their courses as part of their SWIFT Start program (check out http://www.rediff.com/computer/1999/sep/04niit.htm ) a few years ago. Would go because he thought it was a useless bunch of crap.

    Would be like IIT here coming out with a "study" based on putting a computer kiosk in South Central. Wait a minute, I'd like to see that....

    1. Re:Before anyone gets too excited... by viking099 · · Score: 2

      One thought that occurred to me as I was reading the article is this:
      The company may be spending too much time teaching the very basic things to their many students, and perhaps spending too much money on teachers who could be teaching mroe advanced stuff.
      So what do you do? Get the Gov't to fund a $2bn project that gives this company (and others like it) a population of young, eager, kids who are desperate to get out of their poverty, and who are already 1/2 way to becoming a "web programmer".
      Saves the company money on the front end (lower basic education costs), and saves the company on the back end, too, because the basic skills aren't so unique any more, so they don't have to pay as much to get the same level of quality.

  14. Can you imagine? by Dancin_Santa · · Score: 5, Funny

    Imagine a Bhagavad-Gita cluster of these!

    1. Re:Can you imagine? by Inthewire · · Score: 1

      I checked out the SCSI page. Very interesting. Thank you.

      --


      Writers imply. Readers infer.
  15. Good idea by Highlordexecutioner · · Score: 1

    I wonder if there is any hope for the clueless nimrods I have to support? Nah, since no one that calls me has any desire to learn.

    --
    Where am I going and why am I in this handbasket?
  16. MIE = Unschooling by Telent · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From the article:

    Minimally Invasive Education (MIE) is a pedagogic method and derives its name partly from the medical term minimally invasive surgery. MIE believes that in the absence of any directed input, any learning environment that provides adequate level of curiosity can cause learning.

    This is not a new theory, ./'ers. People have been teaching themselves all along - indeed, our school system is the newcomer to the scene. Read, oh, "A People's History of the United States"... but I'm drifting off my topic...

    An education system such as this already exists in the States. It's called "unschooling". Give the child materials to learn with, help learning when they need it, and said child will actually teach themselves.

    Children are supposedly "lazy" and "not wanting to learn" because they've been forced into it by repetitive cookie-cutter education. This study just gives an old technique a new and more politically-correct name - "unschooling" pisses off the NEA.

    1. Re:MIE = Unschooling by drDugan · · Score: 2

      In my opinion, schooling in its current form .. (at least in the US) does almost as much harm as it does good.

      The MOST profound effect of our school system is to very effectivly prevent almost all people under the age of 18 from being a part of the force force. Imagine what would happen if tomorrow we said "OK, after age 13, school is optional. Take it now, or come back and get it later."

      Our economy would be crushed by a 300% jump in unemployment.

    2. Re:MIE = Unschooling by dillon_rinker · · Score: 2

      In my opinion, schooling in its current form .. (at least in the US) does almost as much harm as it does good.

      So why are we communicating in the native language of the US over a medium invented, developed, and funded by the US on a website that resides in the US?

    3. Re:MIE = Unschooling by Pfhor · · Score: 4, Informative

      Exactly

      As a graduate of an Unschooling highschool (and now a freshman in college) I can say I felt much more prepared coming into college than my peers.

      There were kids on my hall with 3.8+ GPAs who had never read a book completely in 2 years. Product of a public school education.

      I wish I spent more time at mine (Only two years). Luckily, my parents were helping me be unschooled before I started there, even if they didn't realize it themselves.

      Cause I feel strongly enough about my school, I got to plug it: www.shackleton.org

    4. Re:MIE = Unschooling by drDugan · · Score: 2

      I didn't say the US system was unable to produce technological advances. In fact, it's quite good at that. The US has whole lots of very well trained workers for the continued metastasis of economic growth.

    5. Re:MIE = Unschooling by dattaway · · Score: 2, Troll

      Why is the National Endowment for the Arts pissed off about MIE or Unschooling?

      The National Educational Association, a teacher's UNION, has these few words about unschooling. It seems unschooling is not in their business strategy. Yes, its about money, while unschooling is about education.

    6. Re:MIE = Unschooling by Pfhor · · Score: 2

      And don't let my poor writing skills dissuade you, I believe my horrible writing ability is genetic.

      Now something for the lameness filter.

    7. Re:MIE = Unschooling by Da+Schmiz · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Right on!

      I went through sixth grade in the traditional school system, and then tried several educational alternatives after that, including homeschooling, independent study, and self-directed correspondence schooling. I find I learn far more quickly and much more thoroughly on my own than in a classroom environment.

      To give you an idea: in my seventh grade year, my teacher/counselor who determined my assignments didn't believe I was a year ahead in math, so he made me repeat seventh-grade pre-algebra. I completed that, plus all the other seventh grade requirements, plus all of the eighth grade requirements, and at the end of the year I crammed enough of high school Algebra 1 to challenge the course and pass. But when I think back to that year (I was 12 at the time), I remember spending most of my time just hanging out with friends.

      Don't get me wrong -- classrooms can be great. But I have only taken one programming class so far, in my freshman year in high school. (I was actually an independent study student, so I did the majority of my schoolwork on my own, but since I was technically a student of the H.S. I could take regular classes if I wanted.) When I walked in the door, I knew more than practically every other student in the class (and nearly as much as the instructor, about some things). The only thing I really learned in that class was some basic knowledge of Pascal (which I have never used since). Everything else I know about programming (and computers in general) I learned by fiddling around.

      Sorry if that sounds excessively boastful. I'm only trying to say that most people learn better when they're learning about things that interest them, and/or when they're learning in a way that fits their intellectual aptitude and background. Obviously, self-directed learners tend to have one or both of these, and so they tend to learn more and learn it better.

      True story: a hacker friend I had in high school (if you're reading this, BaudBarf, please email me) is a very intelligent guy who could pick technical stuff up in his sleep, but he consistently flunked all his classes. It wasn't that he couldn't learn, it was that he didn't want to learn in the school environment.

      The only reason I got good grades in school was that I'm good at working the system: I remember stuff well, I comprehend almost everything I read, and I'm good at taking tests. I'm sure my success in school had nothing to do with the school environment I was subjected to.

      Now my only problem is that 90% of the things I know I have no credentials for... and testing out of college classes and passing certification tests is tedious and annoying. Oh well...

      --

      "Anything is better than IE, and you can quote me on that." -- Wil Wheaton.

    8. Re:MIE = Unschooling by Drakantus · · Score: 2

      I was the same type of person in school as your friend. The most depressing thing isn't how worthless schooling is, but the fact that such a large chunk of our taxes are thrown away on it.

      --
      I love going down to the elementary school, watching all the kids jump and shout, but they dont know I'm using blanks.
    9. Re:MIE = Unschooling by Jordan+Block · · Score: 1

      I think you just described 90% of the /. community.

    10. Re:MIE = Unschooling by CrazyDuke · · Score: 1
      I used to learn so much that I was into middle school academic levels in some subjects before I even started going to school. Then it all went downhill. After 16 years in the public education system (including college), I've progressed maybe 9 years. Could have progressed faster, but school has a way of wanting to suck up every free second of your life.

      My grades dropped like a rock because I was neglecting homework and projects to look up the information they would (sometimes outright) refuse to teach. Don't let school interfere with your education. IMHO The public educational system is more of a way to break in kids than an institution for learning.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
    11. Re:MIE = Unschooling by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2

      Give the child materials to learn with, help learning when they need it, and said child will actually teach themselves.

      Which expresses just oh so exactly what I do truely love about GNU/Linux!

      ...absence of any directed input...
      ...learning environment that provides (an) adequate level of curiosity...


      :-)

    12. Re:MIE = Unschooling by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2

      Because we are incredibly *rich*, and have been on the winning side of wars?

    13. Re:MIE = Unschooling by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2

      Going to school in the midwest "bible-belt" (we grow corn and bibles here,) I've seen some home-schooling that makes me think the National Educational Assoication's webpage has some good ideas. What passes for schooling in some familys here is really extended sunday school.

      students enrolled must meet all state requirements

      Instruction should be by persons who are licensed by the appropriate state education licensure agency, and a curriculum approved by the state department of education should be used.

      local public school systems should have the authority to determine grade placement and/or credits earned toward graduation for students entering or re-entering the public school


      Sounds to me like they are concerned with the quality of the educational experience the children recieve at home. I know I sure am!

    14. Re:MIE = Unschooling by Tyreth · · Score: 1

      I have been for a few years teaching a similar principle - that people have a potential to learn a lot better outside of school.

      Unfortunately we have come to believe that education=school=learning.

      Learning can be done entirely seperate from schooling /education - education means systematic instruction, schooling. Education/schooling is just one method for helping people learn. For me, this system was a hindrance.

      Something that makes me really sad, is when I see people come out of school and say they hate learning. Learning is one of my greatest joys, and I'm sure many in the opensource community also share the joys of learning with me.

      This story affirms what I already felt - that we don't need formal institutes with structured learning, recognised exams, etc, for people to learn. Instead, like Telent said, give them the material (or let them choose their own path of learning), and help when they need help.

      I taught myself C/C++, Linux, PHP, server software, I'm teaching myself another language, etc.
      While I was in school I was angry. I already knew what I wanted to learn and do, but the system in place wouldn't allow me this choice. Not just that, but it taught me in methods alien to my natural way of learning.

      I think school has a place for some, but definately not as compulsory, and definately not advertised as something for the superior, but just one option. I actually have doubts that school is best for anyone - they claim that they wouldn't learn if there was no school. I reply that they don't learn even with school, and that attitude of not wanting to learn is also something taught as a result of school.

      This story is a great affirmation, and I was pleased by your post Telent.

    15. Re:MIE = Unschooling by mpe · · Score: 2, Troll

      So why are we communicating in the native language of the US over a medium invented, developed, and funded by the US on a website that resides in the US?

      Except that "the web" was invented by a Brit, at an international organisation, based in Switzerland.
      Also IIRC the US dosn't even pay half the cost of its international connectivity either.

    16. Re:MIE = Unschooling by battjt · · Score: 1

      Public school attempts to bring the masses to a basic level. Brain surgeons don't graduate from public school high school into the OR. You benefit from public schools, because everyone else is educated. Everyone needs to be able to read a newspaper to participate in our society (not that everyone needs to read the paper, just have the ability).

      [Neither my wife nor I were challenged through our public education, so we are considering alternatives for our children. We are concerned about the odd social skills that some of our aquaintences picked up in private schools (not DaveA).]

      Joe

      --
      Joe Batt Solid Design
    17. Re:MIE = Unschooling by Mapultoid · · Score: 1

      Nothing wrong with anarchism.

      --
      Ben Garrison, a mindless idiot who will be the first against the wall when the revolution comes.
    18. Re:MIE = Unschooling by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      The MOST profound effect of our school system is to very effectivly prevent almost all people under the age of 18 from being a part of the force

      No doubt a plot by the Dark Side!

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    19. Re:MIE = Unschooling by maxpublic · · Score: 2

      Sounds to me like they are concerned with the quality of the educational experience the children recieve at home. I know I sure am!

      Then tend to your own children and don't presume you know what's best for ours.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    20. Re:MIE = Unschooling by Captain+Gingersnaps · · Score: 1

      I think you just described 90% of the /. community.

      Excessively boastful?

    21. Re:MIE = Unschooling by juliao · · Score: 2

      Right On.
      One of the most impressive texts on the matter, albeit more than 30 years old, is Deschooling Society, by Ivan Illich, which I read when I was about 9.
      Believe it or not, a lot of people learn better this way. How did you learn Perl? College?

    22. Re:MIE = Unschooling by Drakantus · · Score: 2

      That is a good point, that everyone needs some basics, such as knowing how to read a newspaper. However, the basics can be learned in 2-4 years. Everyone does not need to know history, accounting, anything more than basic math, chemistry, biology etc. The few things that people *DO* need to know aren't even taught in school- how to pay your taxes, write a good resume, get a job, understanding credit, write your congressperson, etc.

      --
      I love going down to the elementary school, watching all the kids jump and shout, but they dont know I'm using blanks.
    23. Re:MIE = Unschooling by blisspix · · Score: 1

      I think that if you give a child the basic building blocks for learning, they can learn things for themselves. However, there must be some direction in learning to ensure that they learn important things like math, science, history etc. What is the point of a creative learner who only knows how to build computer boxes, for example.

      Children are often lazy because their parents take no interest in their child's education and so kids don't get the reinforcement that they need at home. Kids need repetition.

      If for no other reason, you need to attend regular schooling in order to get into university. I have a friend who was not considered eligible for admission to university because she went to a montessori school, and then was homeschooled.

    24. Re:MIE = Unschooling by cthulhubob · · Score: 1

      What school was this? Most universities are more than happy to take on a homeschooled undergrad, because they know it makes them look better to have smarter people in the school :)

      My homeschooled girlfriend got a 1440 on her SAT I; no college that she's talked to (VCU, Virginia Tech, MIT) seems to think that homeschooling put her at a disadvantage - in fact, quite the contrary!

      Your argument that people need direction to learn things like higher math is also false, by the way - I have taught myself linear algebra and methods of using quaternions (four-dimensional vectors) to represent an orientation in space. I am also going back and relearning much of what I was taught in high school about history and politics from the ground up because much of it appears to be patently untrue or misconstrued. Original sources are your friends!

      Nobody needs to be *forced* to learn - they only need to be coerced if you are attempting to brainwash them to follow orders without question (something the public school system is quite good at doing). My kids will *definitely* be homeschooled.

      Read "The Underground History of Education" by John Taylor Gatto (New York State Teacher of the Year), and also "A People's History of the United States" (don't know the authors). Broaden your horizons. :)

      --

      In post-9/11 America, the CIA interrogates YOU!
  17. Blindness is a handicap, but being a weeble isn't by yerricde · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The children were sorely disappointed when the machine wouldn't acknowledge their parent-induced handicaps such as missing limbs and blindness.

    When it comes to the Internet, blindness is a handicap (now that much of the web is moving to Flash and that Flash MX's accessibility features have not come into wide use), but not having legs isn't nearly as much of a handicap, especially when you can prop yourself up and use the computer that way.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  18. Funny... by KingJawa · · Score: 5, Funny

    We're amazed that a bunch of kids in India can use the web, but have no trouble believing that a survivor of war-torn Afghanistan can (a) get a Commodore on the 'net and (b) emails Jon Katz when he does.

    1. Re:Funny... by jgerman · · Score: 2

      Not me, I'm amazed that Katz can use a computer. OR that he's even allowed to. ;)

      --
      I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
  19. messed up title by cosyne · · Score: 5, Funny

    Did anyone else read the title on this and think they'd accidentally gone to The Onion instead of slashdot?

  20. What a fantastic idea by bigWebb · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What amused me the most was the comment about the kids doing things that adults couldn't understand. Children learn at a faster rate than adults, especially it seems where technology is concerned. This can be seen by looking at the case of programming a video. In most households it is the children who are most able to use technology to its fullest.

    I would be interested to know whether a childs ability to learn how to use computers (or other technology) is to do with their natural inquisitiveness and readiness to try new things(as opposed to the technophobia that many older people show), or whether there is some sort of 'critical period' (such as for syntax) after which it becomes more difficult to learn such things. This study would seem to suggest that it is not only the increasing contact with computers that makes children more skilled in their use, since these are kids who have never seen (or heard of) computers before.

    1. Re:What a fantastic idea by Kintanon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The key seperating characteristic of Adults and Children is simple, Fear of Breaking Shit. Children do not have this crippling learning disability, they do not Fear to Break Shit. Adults do. So Adults will not try anything that they aren't sure will not Break Shit. Since an Adult who has never used a computer does not know what will Break Shit and what won't, they prefer to do nothing with the computer. A child doesn't care whether what he does to the computer Breaks Shit or not, he just wants to know what it will do. So every time a child does something and it doesn't Break Shit, he or she adds that act to the list of actions that Don't Break Shit and moves on. The same if the action Does Break Shit. Hopefully the child will try to fix it after he Breaks Shit, and thereby learn how to UnBreak Shit. I have formulated this theory after MANY MANY hours watching customer service reps who use the computer on a daily basis panic when they click on a different icon accidentally and a new window comes up. They call support (me) to 'Fix' their computer because it's 'Broke' by which they mean they aren't sure what actions Won't Break Shit in this situation. Amazing isn't it?

      Kintanon

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    2. Re:What a fantastic idea by rgmoore · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I would be interested to know whether a childs ability to learn how to use computers (or other technology) is to do with their natural inquisitiveness and readiness to try new things(as opposed to the technophobia that many older people show), or whether there is some sort of 'critical period' (such as for syntax) after which it becomes more difficult to learn such things.

      I'm pretty sure that it's the inquisitiveness, rather than something structural. I find that I learn a hell of a lot more than my coworkers about just about everything that we do at my work, and it's because I learn differently. Like those kids, I spend time poking around at things trying to figure out what they can do, while most other people only try to learn something new when they need it to accomplish some goal or other. Then it winds up that when they need to learn, they usually come to me because either I'll know it already or I'll be willing to poke around a bit and figure out how to do it. If you maintain that childlike love of new things and willingness to spend time exploring them, you can keep learning that way well into your adulthood.

      --

      There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

    3. Re:What a fantastic idea by foniksonik · · Score: 1

      Beautiful... I just want to add my support to this theory.

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    4. Re:What a fantastic idea by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2

      Sounds like you are refering to the plasticity model, which has to do with processing visual and auditory patterns into sight and language. The brain is plastic up to (is it 3 years? 4?) certain periods, specific to input stimulie (obviously sight comes before language.) Whether the higher cognitive skills have a similar "plastic" time frame before they "set" is intriguing...

    5. Re:What a fantastic idea by BoBaBrain · · Score: 1

      Couldn't agree more. If you're afraid to make mistakes you'll stick with what you know. If you stick with what you know, you'll never learn anything new.

      Unfortunately our personality is shaped more by the bad experiences than the good. We fear more than we crave and so we soon learn that it's better to do nothing than take a risk.

      I rue the day I forgot how much fun it can be to accidently break shit.

      --
      I am a Karma Library.
    6. Re:What a fantastic idea by hey! · · Score: 2

      I've come to more or less the same conclusions.

      I'd generalize it this way though: as you get older, you value comfort more. This manifests many ways; self-indulgent baby-boomers hit middle age and suddenly they're buying SUVs so they can get in and out without having to bend their trunk. People get set in their ways because they don't have to think about whether there is a better way.

      I think addiction to comfort underlies the difference between the prodigious learning capabilities of children and the typical adult. I often wonder whether the difference in the ability to learn languages between children and adults is not at least equally due to this as much as loss of brain plasticity.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    7. Re:What a fantastic idea by rnd() · · Score: 2

      you are dead on. It's the same as how kids aren't afraid to use bad grammar when learning to talk. They just keep on doing it wrong until one day they are certified experts (fluent speakers).

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

    8. Re:What a fantastic idea by treat · · Score: 2
      Children learn at a faster rate than adults, especially it seems where technology is concerned.

      Do children learn at a faster rate than adults because of some biological difference in their brain, or because of the conditioning in the education system that ultimately harms the ability to learn? I think more the latter than the former.

    9. Re:What a fantastic idea by WhyDoubt · · Score: 1

      (Articulation) + No Fear of Breaking S. = Perfect Beta Tester.

    10. Re:What a fantastic idea by sphealey · · Score: 4, Interesting
      The key seperating characteristic of Adults and Children is simple, Fear of Breaking Shit. Children do not have this crippling learning disability, they do not Fear to Break Shit. Adults do. So Adults will not try anything that they aren't sure will not Break Shit.
      Yes and no. Your theory is good and can often be observed in operation.

      Yet, having worked for almost 20 years in IT and software implementation, I have to say it is more complex than that. First, adults have to deal with something kids do not: consequences. Kid accidently deletes Paint drawing, cries a bit, sits down and does new one. Adult accidently deletes the Accounts Receivable database and remembers that he forgot to change the tape yesterday. He loses his job, and he can't borrow money from his friends because the company went out of business the next day [exaggerated for effect but more realistic scenarios are easy to construct]. When adults do things with computers, there are real effects that have real, and sometimes devastating, consequences. That can understandably create fear, keeping in mind that fear is designed to keep us alive.

      Yet even that is too simple, because some adults manage to figure out where they can safely push the barriers, and where they must call for help first. These people manage to teach themselves what they need to know, and often move up to the next level. Yet the person sitting next to an "explorer", with the same job, same educational background, same starting level of knowledge, either (a) sits paralyzed with fear (b) does random stuff until he causes real damage.

      What is the difference between these two types of people? How can they be identified in advance? Could the second type be taught to act like the first type?

      sPh

    11. Re:What a fantastic idea by Nameles · · Score: 1

      I beg to disagree. I could still be considered a "kid" (16), and I "know my shit" about computers. Hell, I even work in a computer repair/sales shop! (not that it means much) But I still hate to "break shit" as that means I need to go "fix shit" to make it "unbroken shit" which "sucks shit" to do.

      OT: After that last post, I really had to take a shit.

    12. Re:What a fantastic idea by sphealey · · Score: 2
      I think addiction to comfort underlies the difference between the prodigious learning capabilities of children and the typical adult. I often wonder whether the difference in the ability to learn languages between children and adults is not at least equally due to this as much as loss of brain plasticity.
      Not to disagree necessarily, but the same set of observations also supports the opposite conclusion: kids live in a constant state of discomfort due to lack of knowledge, understanding, and ability to control their environment. Once they hit the point where they can control their environment, they become comfortable. After this point, they resist additional change since that would have the potential to cause discomfort, and that is what they just finished getting away from.

      A lot of it has to do with your point of view about life. There is a small percentage of very energetic, aggressive people who think that constant variety and change are not only Good but "inevitable" ("learn to deal with change" he said as he fired 40% of the workforce). Most humans don't agree with that point of view.

      sPh

    13. Re:What a fantastic idea by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Children do indeed learn faster. This is a function of brain development. It's interesting to note that this advantage tends to taper off during the late teen years, precisely at the same time that mandated, forced public education ends.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    14. Re:What a fantastic idea by Kintanon · · Score: 2

      You don't like it, but you aren't afraid of it, right? It know it certainly does suck with I Break Shit at work, but I'm not afraid of breaking it.

      Kintanon

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    15. Re:What a fantastic idea by Broccolist · · Score: 2
      I disagree. What "real damage" are you talking about exactly? How could you possibly delete a database by mistake? Deleting anything, under any sane user interface, requires you to press or type "del" or some other obviously dangerous action, and usually pops up some kind of alert. The only way you could lose important data is if you ran around purposely deleting things without knowing what they are, which is just stupid (if anyone actually does that, I would say the problem has more to do with basic intelligence than tech-savviness).

      No, in my experience, it's virtually impossible to cause "real damage" through tinkering. I became proficient at Windows and Unix through tinkering, I have changed settings in my bios at random, I have deleted entries in my Windows registry, and I have never lost data as a result. Those actions are far more dangerous than anything the vast majority of computer users would do, and yet I still didn't lose data. The worst that can happen is that my computer refuses to boot, which happens all the time in any case with Win9x.

      No, tinkering is 99% safe. Adults' fear of it is irrational. It's understandable, though, since they don't know that computers are not cars or dangerous chemicals. Unlike those things, computers were designed to be randomly tinkered with: it is not dangerous. We should teach adults that there is nothing that can go wrong, and that they shouldn't be afraid to try out new things.

    16. Re:What a fantastic idea by Maserati · · Score: 1
      Tinkering is how I learned computers too. But you never tinker with a production system. Ever. Or you lose important data. Data that will cost real money (quantity) to replace, if it even can be. Did you have your data backed up by the way ? It's hard to lose an entire drive permanently just by tinkering, but it is possible. Maybe you were lucky. Maybe you never tinkered with anything that might require, or impose, a reformat. But again, you didn't do that on a production system did you ?


      One also has to consider the implications of giving an untrained or incompetent person access to mission-critical production systems. That's a management issue, but if you got stock from the company, you might consider making noise at stockholder's meeting about poor personnel policies that cost the company quantifiable dollars.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
  21. Unanswered questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    The computers used for the kiosks are all Pentium PCs with color monitors and multimedia support. The operating system is Windows(TM) (9x/NT) and the Internet browser is MS Internet Explorer(TM).

    "...he discovered was that the most avid users of the machine were ghetto kids aged 6 to 12, most of whom have only the most rudimentary education and little knowledge of English. Yet within days, the kids had taught themselves to draw on the computer and to browse the Net."

    How long did it take them to learn how to install the Critical Update of the Day?

    How long to learn how to h4x0r an unpatched IIS server they came across while surfing?

    How long to discover and start trolling on /.?

    How long to discover Usenet and make their first "Me too!" post?

    1. Re:Unanswered questions... by phillymjs · · Score: 2

      He should have put Office on those PCs too, to see how long it took the little urchins to begin hating Clippy!

    2. Re:Unanswered questions... by s20451 · · Score: 1

      How long will it take them to 0wnz the machine?

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    3. Re:Unanswered questions... by cscx · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      He should have put Office on those PCs too, to see how long it took the little urchins to begin hating Clippy!

      Clippy? Nah, I'd figure they'd be using the new MS Agent character persona... "Larry the Leper"

    4. Re:Unanswered questions... by Tackhead · · Score: 4, Interesting
      > How long to learn how to h4x0r an unpatched IIS server they came across while surfing?

      I owe my career - my life - to this sort of experiment, except that at the time, nobody knew it was an experiment.

      My first encounter with a computer was on a "professional activity day" - the teachers take the day off to eat donuts (the professional activity), and the kids get the day off school.

      My folks, unable to find a babysitter that day, took me to work. Mom worked in a place with an Apple ][ that was used to do data entry and run rudimentary statistical analyses.

      I was left alone in an office at age 10ish with a computer and two complete strangers.

      Stranger: "How 'bout playing with the computer?"

      Me: "What do you do with it?"

      Stranger: [wanting the kid to stop bugging her so she could get some work done] "Well, we use it to enter our test data. You might want to try those books in the bottom shelf."

      Me: [Picks up an Applesoft BASIC guide, concludes that "programming them" is what one does with "computers", and doesn't say a word for the rest of the day]. I was hooked by that afternoon. Went through the book that day, then hit the campus bookstore, bought a magazine with some programs you could type in, came back and "played with it" on the rare occasions I could.

      A year (only about 6 "professional activity days", and maybe a couple of hours a week during the summer holiday) later, and I'd found the monitor ROM and was experimenting with 6502 assembly.

      So in answer to your question - probably about 6 months, tops.

  22. With Microsoft Paint by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Like with photoshop? Or with a can of spray paint?

    Closer to the former. Read the article: "And they would use [Microsoft] Paint. It's very, very popular with all of them."

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:With Microsoft Paint by cygnusx · · Score: 2

      Considering that these computers don't use a real keyboard (because of concerns of vandalism/theft and maintenance), it's not surprising that the kids use paintbrush. It's one of the things that can be effectively used without a keyboard.

  23. is it that hard to believe? by papasui · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Children have the most curiosity, and the littlest fear. They will try things that people who have experienced negative results previously may not. For example: my 2 year old son can play Halo better than I can, not because I'm bad at video games but because I cannot adapt to the controls and controller the way he can. I'm still stuck in the quake mouse + keyboard point of mind.

    1. Re:is it that hard to believe? by Peyna · · Score: 2

      How the hell does a 2 year old hold that friggin controller? I'm 20, have big hands, and it's awkward for me.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:is it that hard to believe? by Swix · · Score: 1

      What no fear?

      I'm afriad of sneezzing because I might snap in half! (Damn motabolism, no matter how many hours I don't move, it just doesn't work!)

  24. Re:Camera behind the screen... by rob-fu · · Score: 2, Funny

    they're all lined up waiting to write some java.

  25. Dial-up and ISDN by yerricde · · Score: 3, Informative

    So what's their connection at? I bet its the good old fashiond 65 baud tin can and string.

    Hardly an acoustic coupler. From the article:

    Internet connectivity to the kiosks has been provided using various methods including leased lines, ISDN lines and Dial-up connections. Internet access in India is at a nascent stage due to inadequate telecommunications infrastructure.

    The following was more interesting:

    Some kiosk installations have been at places that don't even have phone lines. In such cases, the computers use cached web content to simulate web access.

    That must be a pretty d*ng big cache. How many clicks is it from the average US site to WinMX.com or Kazaa.com? (WinMX and Kazaa are two popular P2P file-sharing apps for Windows.)

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Dial-up and ISDN by QuaZar666 · · Score: 1

      Doesn't have to be too Large. Maybe 500 megs at best. Without a keyboard you might only have a select amount of web sites you can view such as CNN, MSNBC, theregister, etc. Every few days you might come around and upload the new cache and to some people they wont notice that they are viewing cache only.

      Qua

  26. My favourite part of this experiment by ntk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Perhaps the greatest feat came from the group at one kiosk who discovered and disabled the piece of software that Dr Mitra had installed on the machine so as to monitor their activity and relay it back to him. They sent him a message (in Hindi) that read: 'We have found and closed the thing you watch us with.'"


    That was my .sig for a while.
    1. Re:My favourite part of this experiment by drDugan · · Score: 5, Funny

      I wish there was an easy way to send that message to companies every time I delete my cookies.

    2. Re:My favourite part of this experiment by mlk · · Score: 2

      Don't delete them, but change the value part to read "We have found the thing you watch us with".
      Or even better grab the src of and replace the bit that sends cookie responces. However don't expect many sites to work quite as well.

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
    3. Re:My favourite part of this experiment by Animats · · Score: 2
      Where did you see that?

      They did that without a keyboard? That's impressive.

    4. Re:My favourite part of this experiment by mlk · · Score: 1

      /src of and/src of /

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
  27. Yeah... by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    That did seem kind of strange.

  28. If non-english speaking slum kids can do it.... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    On one hand there is the tech industry making jokes about how stupid users are and on the other hand you have this, proving that the tech industry is often full of themselves.

    Computers don't need to be made difficult to make use of, but the tech industry needs them to be more complicated than what is needed to get the job done.

    How else can those in the tech industry make themselves feel.....impotent...

    Before moding this down, consider your gandmother usings Windows.....for the first time.

    1. Re:If non-english speaking slum kids can do it.... by sphealey · · Score: 2
      On one hand there is the tech industry making jokes about how stupid users are and on the other hand you have this, proving that the tech industry is often full of themselves.

      Computers don't need to be made difficult to make use of, but the tech industry needs them to be more complicated than what is needed to get the job done.
      Two minor problems. First, anything that humans do is easy to learn if you start learning at age 2. Navajo children learn to speak Navajo with no problem. Essentially no one who doesn't know Navajo by age 10 will ever learn it.

      Second, there is the annoying problem of the installed base. Of anything, not just computer software. Sure, we could get rid of film cameras tomorrow. If we (a) wanted to retrain the 1 billion or so people who already know how to use a film camera (b) we didn't care about being able to print those pictures of Great-Grandma taken in 1889. But generally we can't afford (a) and do care about (b).

      sPH

  29. Mysterious skills of httpd administration by Shiny+Metal+S. · · Score: 2

    Web-Surfing Indian Slum Kids Ask: "What's a Computer"

    I heard that they are great in ASF HTTP Server administration. I wonder why.

    (Or are they Indians from Indies? Damn you Cristoforo Colombo!)

    --

    ~shiny
    WILL HACK FOR $$$

  30. Don't believe a word they say. by SmoothOperator · · Score: 1

    It is not an experiment. It is only Micro$oft running a successful ad campaign in a market that has 1.3 billion potential customers. And we're all impressed.

    --

    Veni, vidi, vici.

  31. Wonderful Effects! The Medium is truly the Message by McLuhanesque · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are some wonderful observations for educators and those providing government funding for educational infrastructure from the Hole-In-the-Wall experiment.

    Perhaps one of the most important observations made by Dr. Mitra was, "The terminology is not as important as the metaphor."

    Metaphors, by their nature are transformational. As Marshall McLuhan wrote in Understanding Media, "All media are active metaphors in their power to translate experience into new forms."

    (By "medium," McLuhan means anything that we conceive or create - tangible or intangible, everything from tables to televisions to televangelists. The "message" of a medium is the set of effects or changes that the medium will induce in us, our society or culture.)

    In this case, the Indian children used metaphors to which they could relate to effect changes in, and transform, the way they experienced common-place life: Indian music, letters, Shiva's drum and so forth. In doing so, they will tend to view the rest of the world through changed eyes, and will undoubtedly "demand" (even tacitly through imagination) these new experiences. They will likely be dissatisfied with the conventional approach to instruction, perhaps preferring more self-guided, exploration and discovery-based education. What effects might this have on the educational system in India? What effects will this have on educators in North America and Europe who will be forced to confront massive investments in seemingly unnecessary "computer literacy" programs. How can approaches to adult education take advantage of child-like curiosity and discovery?

    In the graduate-level course I teach, the majority of the course is discovery and exploration. Where we end up at the end of each seminar is largely irrelevant. If we reach a point of being able to ask a profound question as a "conclusion," the seminar is a resounding success. As seen with these Indian children and Dr. Mitra's brilliant experiment, "The teacher's job is very simple. It's to help the children ask the right questions." To which I would add, adult learners, too.

  32. human subjects by drDugan · · Score: 3, Interesting

    its interesting...

    One could never do this experiement (as
    presented) in the United States (and
    probably other. more controlled societies
    as well) because you couldn't get Human
    Subjects Approval with out informed
    consent.

    It would be interesting to get some sort of
    grip the real long term effects on the
    kids will be.

    1. Re:human subjects by ProfMoriarty · · Score: 1
      My wife is currently going to college (graduating in about a month) for Speech Comm ...

      Now, in the many conversations that we've had about expermentation with human subjects, there are several ways to get data.

      The largest problem with Informed Consent, is that it inherently alters the subjects behavior. Regardless if they are told "just forget about it".

      Imagine doing a study on Satanism or Scientology. If you attempted to get informed consent from either of these groups, they would deny access. Also, who should give the consent? Everybody? Just a select few?

      In the above case of the Satanic cult, the researchers did NOT get informed consent. Once the study was over, they told the head guy (no not Satan) of the group. He was actually pleased that they were able to fool him, since I guess he was pretty good at reading people.

      Unfortunately, my SO has gone to bed, or she would be able to make many more points on the study of group interactions.

      --
      Karma? Karma? I don't need no stinkin' karma.
    2. Re:human subjects by Jeremi · · Score: 2
      I'm not sure why one would need Human Subjects Approval (tm) just to let kids use a web browser. Does not every bookstore and Internet cafe already let anyone use a web browser? Or if it is the collection of data about usage patterns that is requires Approval.... does not every commercial web site already collect usage data about its users?


      So what's the problem? I would think at most you could just put a little disclaimer notice next to the terminal: "this terminal is part of a usage research study. Feel free to use it, but know that you are being monitored while doing so."

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    3. Re:human subjects by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2

      Thats completely different because it occurs in a context where the subjects are going to have an understanding of the system and use implies consent. Ethicly, this study (in its worse interpretation) is more like statuatory rape. Consent to the unknown? Is that possible?

    4. Re:human subjects by vidarh · · Score: 2
      To stretch your analogy, is it "statutory rape" to give kids access to the public library? Noone is asking them consent at their way in. Noone is asking them for consent before they are given access to browse the books.

      The only thing that might be dubious about this experiment was the surveillance he used to get feedback.

    5. Re:human subjects by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      This experiment meets the 'no harm' standard, and I doubt anyone could make a case against participation with knowledge (i.e., the kids would play with the thing whether they knew they were being watched or not).

      You could do this experiment in the U.S. There is no need for approval beforehand, although it's certain that some small minority (probably those that disapprove of any child access to the internet) would throw a hissy fit after the fact. It would even be easier to do it if you *weren't* a psychologist because you wouldn't have to worry about professional censure.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  33. I imbedded a computer... by not_cub · · Score: 1
    ... in a porcelain wall in the local pub, used by the drunk as a public bathroom.

    And it got peed on.

    not_cub

    --
    q='echo "q=$s$q$s;s=$b$s;b=$b$b;$q"';s=\';b=\\;echo "q=$s$q$s;s=$b$s;b=$b$b;$q"
  34. So, what's wrong with that? by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    It reverses the direction of the x and y axes. It's like moving the cursor around on a lever.

    1. Re:So, what's wrong with that? by Hadlock · · Score: 2

      yeah. i can't play worth shit on counterstrike on my friend's rig w/a trackball. i had to use it anyways, and ended up turning the trackball upside down, and "invert mouse", and just remember that left was right, and vice versa. frags, sadly, went up :)

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
  35. something simliar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    in that "Hackers" book by Stephen Levy .. but i dont remember the exact idea ... something in San Francisco and a terminal in the wall -- maybe someone else could elaborate

    1. Re:something simliar by glwillia · · Score: 1

      in that "Hackers" book by Stephen Levy .. but i dont remember the exact idea ... something in San Francisco and a terminal in the wall -- maybe someone else could elaborate

      Lee Felsenstein and his "Community Memory" project in the late '60s and early '70s. He wanted to start a non-profit to install a public-access computer with terminals, so that everybody could have access to a computer. His idea was rendered obsolete by Steven Wozniak and Ed Roberts, and their personal computers.

  36. All extremists should be shot by cliveholloway · · Score: 1
    "All extremists should be shot."

    I agree, but feel your viewpoint is a little extreme :)

    cLive ;-)

    --
    -- Trinity in high heels carrying a whip: The donimatrix - there is no spoonerism
    1. Re:All extremists should be shot by flacco · · Score: 2
      I agree, but feel your viewpoint is a little extreme :)

      And therein lies the humor(?) :-)

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    2. Re:All extremists should be shot by cliveholloway · · Score: 1
      apologies - in future I'll add the line "this is a joke" so the slower people amongst you have a fair chance...

      cLive ;-)

      --
      -- Trinity in high heels carrying a whip: The donimatrix - there is no spoonerism
  37. Here we go again... by metalhed77 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    actually its about keeping government agencies and universities connected (DARPA Net).

    it's nice to bring your ideas to the table, but the net is all about 3 things.

    1. Commerce - self explanatory
    2. Self Glorification - Personal web page? yeah like you weren't trying to show off (unless its just a resume which is practical) (btw, i don't mind showing off).
    3. Communication - Communicating between different groups for BAD OR GOOD, whether world peace ensues is not the net's concern

    --
    Photos.
  38. this has been done before by Essron · · Score: 1

    Maybe it was the same guy, but i read about this experiment years ago. I think it happened in St. Louis, by accident. It was mentioned in a book by Jonothan Kozol, "Savage Inequalities". The point the author stressed is that they kept asking Yahoo about Disney. Creepy. But children with no exposure to technology figured out how to use a computer, even if they were just looking for disney info.....it was only their beginning.

  39. Re:Hmm.... by Macrobat · · Score: 3, Funny
    Well, how do you say slashdotted in Christian? or Jew?
    I'm not sure how you say it in Hebrew, but I believe the KJV has a passage about "my bandwidth floweth over."
    --
    "Hardly used" will not fetch you a better price for your brain.
  40. In the internet age, information itself... by gnovos · · Score: 2

    ...is irrelevant. *What* information is what is important. I can find anything and everything I need to on the net, what I can't find is WHAT to look for. Don't teach kinds facts and figures, teach kinds how to know what facts and figures they should be looking for!

    --
    "Your superior intellect is no match for our puny weapons!"
  41. Public School = Culture Indoctrination by sweatyboatman · · Score: 2

    I wonder if public school ever was supposed to be actually educational. But from my experience, at the time I thought of it like day camp. A place to put the kids while the parents worked.

    Now I see it as a camp for the indoctrination of culture. The public education system is pretty much the same from here to Alaska (skipping Canada). They have similar course structures, similar standards, etc...

    The point is to make the students all have a commonality. More than just living in the same town, state, or country, because those types of bonds aren't strong. Instead, because we share the same educational structure, we learn the same history, take the same tests, and generally learn to approach life the same way. Public School itself is another bond. No matter what state you go to, you can always find people to b*tch about the crappy public school system with.

    But looking outside the mandated structures, the school itself is a tool to be accessed by the students (like the terminal from the article). There is a wealth of possibility, not from the courses, but from the things that are ancillary to your report card. The opportunity to contribute to a newspaper, to perform in a play, sing in a chorus, or compete in a sporting event. All these things are available through the school system. The kids who benefit the most from Public School are those that approach it with curiosity.

    Sweat

    --
    It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
    1. Re:Public School = Culture Indoctrination by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2

      The problem with this idea is that, in order to have access to these "extraneous" things, you have to do well enough at the stupid things which they think are the purpose of a government school education. So much so that homeschoolers are not allowed to participate in extra-curricular activities in our school district.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    2. Re:Public School = Culture Indoctrination by maxpublic · · Score: 2

      I wonder if public school ever was supposed to be actually educational.

      No, the original mandated public school system in the U.S. was intended to provide interchangeable workers who could be hired and fired at will. This wasn't at all secret; the folks who pushed for the system used this as an argument in favor of public school, claiming this would benefit business and therefore society as well by preventing the rise of 'guild' systems with monopolies on certain areas of knowledge.

      Of course, this may explain why the government actually had to *use the army* to force parents to send their children to public school in some communities. Objections to a mandated public school system were widespread and resistance was high.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  42. Happens elsewhere by raymondlowe · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I happen to live in a small town where a lot of the population are what we call "fisher people"; meaning that one (or less) generations ago they lived on fishing boats, which are their livelyhood, and had little education.

    Today the kids do go to school, and have TV and everything but life is still pretty simple for them and your typical fisher family would not have access to a PC. (though dad probably has some fancy sonar and radar on the boat)

    Well our public post offices now have free Internet Kiosks as part of a "internet for all" program; which is great.

    The other day I saw a fisher girl of about 6 in front of the terminal. I was rather surprised and had a sneaking peek over her shoulder to see what was going on.

    She had just gone to some web site which for some reason had crashed the browser. So not hesitating she brought up the task manager, killed the hung task, and loaded the browser again to continue.

    I have desktop support people who work for me in the office who are not as comfortable doing things like that!

    R.

  43. Katz by smoondog · · Score: 2, Flamebait

    I hear that Junis has offered some Commodore 64's to help out.

    -Sean

  44. Re:Hmm.... by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2

    Actually, you probably say "slashdotted" in Hindi. "rackmount" in Hindi is "rackmount", so why wouldn't "slashdotted" be "slashdotted"?
    -russ

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  45. minimally invasive education... by Schemer · · Score: 1

    ...reminds me of how I learned to use a computer. When i was third grade we got a bunch of C64s installed, one per classroom. I was drawn to it and started learning how to use it without really understanding what I was doing, I had a manual, so I had terminology, but I don't think I really understood how the computer worked until later. very rapidly I knew more about the computers than anyone in the school (teachers included) and was actually given time to play with the computer when the rest of the class was working on subjects where I was way ahead (like reading).

    Soon I was on call to fix problems in other classrooms with the computers, and in fourth grade I set up a lab of apple II clones by myself.

    My parents bought me a c128 and before long i was programming in basic and a little assembler. I was online with qlink too.

    Fast foward a few years and now I'm a year out of college with a comp. sci. degree and earning more than at leat 95% of my peers, and I enjoy my job!

    These kids are like me in third grade. They don't understand how it works, but they will explore and learn, they may not all grow up to be coders, but they will be better off from the experience.

    I think the researcher is underestimating the adults in this experiment. My mom learned how to use a computer like these kids and I did. I set up a computer for her and cut her loose with the advice that she should explore and not be afraid of breaking the computer. About a year later, she bought me a domain for my birthday! and she has one of her own which she uses for her real estate buisiness.

    I think if the adults had some motivation and encouragement, atleast some of them would learn to use the computer like the kids do.

    Finally, does this remind anyone else of the screen from the Rama series of books by Clarke?

    --
    A buddhist walks up to a hot dog stand and says ``Make me one with everything.''
  46. You forgot something by 1234567890zxcvbnm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    4. Porn

    --


    I like petting kittens.
    1. Re:You forgot something by Aceticon · · Score: 2

      Pr0n is always there whenever a new way of feeding your senses is invented:
      - Painting -> Paintings of naked women frolicking with elves or something
      - Telephone -> Phone-sex
      - Cinema -> Porno movies
      - Television -> Porno movies
      - Internet -> Pr0n sites
      ...

      Need i say more???

  47. Re:Hmm.... by doorbot.com · · Score: 2

    Well, how do you say slashdotted in Christian? or Jew?

    Probably the same place you learn what's a language and what's a religion.

  48. How'd they do it. Not that they did it! by mjjareo · · Score: 1

    I didn't read anything about analysis of how the kids made the interface do what they wanted. How did their brains interpret seeing a monitor? What happened when they discovered that by touching it the picutre would change? How did they correlate this to tasks?

    I'd love to see some analsyes of the very early input queues. Before the click metaphor was learned.

  49. Finally... by finity · · Score: 1

    these kids will be able to get an education. Just hope they don't come to slashdot for it ;-)

  50. This guy must be crazy by ArcSecond · · Score: 2
    A good business is one which provides more and more for less and less. The cost of your goods and services should spiral downwards.

    Woah! You can tell this guy isn't working for an American software company. Must be some sort of radical socialist or something...

    --

    I've got a bad attitude and karma to burn. Go ahead. Mod me down.

    1. Re:This guy must be crazy by vidarh · · Score: 2
      Or someone actually believing in the free market and competition.

      In a perfect market, competition will continuously push prices down as your competitors will keep undercutting you, and that is what his statement reflects. If you want to stay in business in a free market, you must indeed provide more and more for less and less. In addition you must actually manage to get a reasonable profit margin out of it.

      Of course a certain American software company is a good demonstration of how a free market without proper oversight can easily create monopolies which screw up that model...

  51. Re:Hmm.... by sinserve · · Score: 2

    slashdot karti he

    --

  52. This is stupid. by SaDan · · Score: 1

    Sell the computer, feed the kids. Sheesh.

    1. Re:This is stupid. by Alsee · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sell the computer, feed the kids. Sheesh.

      Hungry children is a horrible tradgey, but perhaps education - even minimal nontraditional education - can help them break out of the cycle of poverty.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    2. Re:This is stupid. by foniksonik · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Didn't someone once say "It is better to teach a poor man how to fish than to give him fish for a day" or something like that....

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    3. Re:This is stupid. by Hast · · Score: 1

      Actually I think it was. "Give a man a fire and he will be warm for a night; set him on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life." (With apologies to PTerry for mangling the quote.)

    4. Re:This is stupid. by markmoss · · Score: 2

      The original quotation is, "Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach him to fish, and you feed him for the rest of his life."

      There are lots of cynical derivatives with this -- almost as many as the places where eating the fish will ensure you don't have to worry about a long life...

    5. Re:This is stupid. by CheeseburgerBlue · · Score: 1

      I heard the kids rendered their food with Maya.

  53. Intuition... by _bobs.pizza_ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just another reminder that it's not the degree you have that counts (though degrees are a good thing), it's what you can figure out / how fast you can learn & adjust to an environment that determines how productive you'll be.

    Q: Of all the things the children did and learned, what did you find the most surprising?

    A: One day there was a document file on the desktop of the computer. It was called "untitled.doc" and it said in big colorful letters, "I Love India." I couldn't believe it for the simple reason that there was no keyboard on the computer [only a touch screen]. I asked my main assistant -- a young boy, eight years old, the son of a local betel-nut seller -- and I asked him, "How on earth did you do this?" He showed me the character map inside [Microsoft] Word. So he had gotten into the character map inside Word, and dragged and dropped the letters onto the screen, then increased the point size and painted the letters. I was stunned because I didn't know that the character map existed -- and I have a PhD.

    1. Re:Intuition... by bungo · · Score: 1

      my main assistant -- a young boy, eight years old, the son of a local betel-nut seller
      ...
      was stunned because I didn't know that the character map existed -- and I have a PhD


      Which just goes to show what I've seen many times over, outside their area of expertise, the average PhD knows less than an 8 year old.

      --
      "The best part? I became an ordained minister while not wearing pants." -- CleverNickName
    2. Re:Intuition... by tomlouie · · Score: 1

      > "I was stunned because I didn't know that the character map existed -- and I have a PhD."

      Sheesh. Someone goes through graduate school, accumulates enough schooling to collect a PhD, and suddenly they think they know "EVERYTHING about EVERYTHING".

      Seems like his PhD program missed out on teaching him humility.

      Tom

    3. Re:Intuition... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      And his father a drug dealer even!

      Betel Nuts are chewed for stimulant properties. The DEA here in the US is trying to stop some sellers, but there isn't much they can about a natural product that has active ingrediants that aren't illegal (yet).

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    4. Re:Intuition... by ejaw5 · · Score: 1

      If an 8 year old with LITTLe computer experience can (first FIND) the character map and use it in MS WORD, Why is so hard for me to tell other people how to do the exact samething?? and they OWN a computer.

      --

      $cat /dev/random > Sig
  54. Imagine what they could learn... by LaserBeams · · Score: 1

    ...if the Doctor made Slashdot IE's homepage :)

    --
    Karma: \Kar"ma\, n. [Skr.] (Buddhism) One's acts considered as fixing one's lot in the future existence.
  55. Sick by Eminor · · Score: 1

    It is completly sick that they had money to through away on this experiment when there are so many people starving. What's even more sick is that fact that no-one can see this, despite the obvious confrontation of frivolity and innocent poor children.

    Isn't western civilization great?

    1. Re:Sick by PerryMason · · Score: 1

      Geez dude, the only thing you forgot to say was "Won't somebody please think of the children..."

      --
      "I'm tired of all this 'Aren't humanity great' bullshit. We're a virus with shoes" - Bill Hicks
    2. Re:Sick by vidarh · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I'm completely disgusted that you don't give all your belongings away to the less fortunate. How come you have time and money to throw away on computers and access to the internet to read slashdot, while people are starving.

      Ok. Enough of the sarcasm. I agree with you that more should be done to fight poverty. But instead of complaining about an experiment that included one PC being made available to poor kids, and the person doing the experiment pushing ahead to get funding for more access to technology for underprivileged illiterate kids, you might instead try to direct your complaints against people who do nothing.

      Yes, he isn't giving them food or shelter, but he isn't solely responsible for stopping poverty in the world. However giving these kids knowledge is as important as a long term strategy to help people out of poverty as food and shelter is as a short term strategy. Both is needed. Without better education most of these kids will never get out of poverty.

      Do you seriously prefer to make people stay dependent on charity?

      Of course your complaint about "Western civilization" is quite amusing when the article is about an experiment being done in India, by an employee of an Indian company.

    3. Re:Sick by bgue · · Score: 1

      I think part of his point is that this is the kind of thing /.ers dig as the way out of poverty, while ignoring our own complicity in the structures that perpetuate it.

  56. Re:Wonderful Effects! The Medium is truly the Mess by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 2

    Mr. Allen: I happen to have Marshal McLuhan right here, and he has something he'd like to say to you.

    Mr. McLuhan: You've completely misunderstood the meaning of my work. How you could have possibly been made a professor is something that I will never understand.

    Hehe. I wish I could have quoted that accurately, but it's been a while since I've seen Annie Hall. I don't actually think you misunderstood anything.

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  57. Nah---Just put in a click-thru agreement by jellybear · · Score: 2, Funny

    Never mind the review board. I say: Just put in a clickthru agreement. This is cyberspace, after all.

  58. [OT]Re:Hmm.... by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

    Amanb, I feel your moderated pain. The two comments that know the difference between hindi and a hindu *both* got moderated down. Time to start up the metamod again...

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  59. Re:time to learn by TheMaccLads · · Score: 1

    AC says: Govt. study some 10 years agoa showed that it takes 17 hours to learn Windows and 5 hours to learn the Mac OS

    Fortunately, Windows is a lot easier to use ten years on. I reckon that the money and research that MS have done into usability is probably their most important work in makeing computers more accessible.

    --
    Money implies poverty (Ian M. Banks)
  60. Standardization? by bogusbrainbonus · · Score: 1

    So if I plug my "clicky-mover" into the "whirring-clanky-thing" and watch videos on the "colorful-eyesquare" I'm computer literate? What happened to standardization of language? Imagine how many variants kids could come up with? We need some sort of standardizytion to be able to exchange data across worldwide mediums. Or?

    1. Re:Standardization? by vidarh · · Score: 2
      As was mentioned in the article, the kids did reach a plateau where they seemed to require some help to get further, and teaching them the proper words would certainly be an important part of that.

      What the article pointed out was primarily that you can get a solid foundation without the help of a teacher, and that it is a waste of resources to spend a teachers time on teaching the kids things they can learn on their own in an environment where they don't have nearly enough teachers to cover the need.

      In other words, giving kids gentle guidance by giving them access to a computer, and possibly give them some help or access to someone to ask questions of every now and then might be a lot more cost effective (and thus enable them to reach more kids) than having a teacher guide them through every little step.

      I especially liked the example with MP3. All the guy had to do was show them the possibility - then the kids explored further on their own, finding sources of MP3s, downloading and installing players etc..

      Keep in mind that kids also love showing each other "cool stuff" - this is learning where the kids themselves participate in the teaching process as well.

      It would be interesting to see what somewhat more intervention would cause - if the kids got a chance to get some more "nudges" like the MP3 one, and access to more tools (like installing educational games etc.).

  61. Message for the Indian Kiosk kids by suds · · Score: 1

    Hello my little fella,

    If you are reading this message from one of those kiosks in India, here is an advice for you from an elder:

    GET A LIFE!! Leave this computer shit.

    1. Re:Message for the Indian Kiosk kids by gakguk · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hello.

      But what is a computer?

      Regards.

      Little fella.

  62. Truly great... by fi-greenie · · Score: 1

    I think this is a great idea. And the way they implemented it - beautiful. Real DIY -attitude!

    I'm not a "hippie" myself. I don't like most of the people (I love them though, enough not to kill them) in this world, but...

    If somebody would like to start a project with me, which would produce a easy-to-install/easy-to-configure/lo-fi (just think about all those 386/486/Pentiums) Linux (or?) distribution which would be made for people in 3rd world countries and poor people in general - I would be very very in to it :)

    Way to go!,

    -- Mikko

  63. Now let's compare Brookyln... by saihung · · Score: 2, Funny

    where a couple of years ago, my next door neighbor decided to throw away his entire old Mac setup, including the monitor, modem, keyboard, mouse, and all of the cables. Everything worked - I grabbed it when I got home. The local kids' response? To spraypaint black graffitti on the monitor. No one thought to take it and play with it, and I'm pretty sure that it this neighborhood computer ownership was pretty low.

  64. that's the cynical response by koekepeer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    one could also reason that these technologies need to be protected from some company that wants to make money with it.

    as far as i understand, patents are meant to protect the inventors, and this is IMHO a clear cut case of a good use for a patent. the people that conduct this research appear trustworthy to me. i'd rather have them hold the patent to this setup than let some big company steal it away.

    1. Re:that's the cynical response by Hast · · Score: 1

      "The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it."
      - George Bernard Shaw

      Seriously though, making a computer "withstand harsh conditions like dust and extreme temperatures, and a kiosk that can be remotely administered" sounds like a industrial computer with SSH installed.

      Embedding it in a concrete wall is certainly pretty smart, but I don't think it a very "non-obvious" idea.

  65. Am I the only one who found this hilarious? by boglebud · · Score: 1

    I was stunned because I didn't know that the character map existed -- and I have a PhD.

    "and I have a PhD"....hahaha.
    That is truly funny.

  66. Misplaced Priorities and Questionable Ethics by securitas · · Score: 2, Flamebait

    The image of a huge wall that separates a handful of elite technologists from people who live in such abject poverty and squalor that they use this vacant lot as an open-air toilet is incredibly disturbing.

    From a typical techno-geek perspective, yes this is an interesting experiment. But take a step back. Psychosocial experiments, especially those involving children, have strict ethical protocols that must be followed -- at least in North America and Europe they do. Was this a relatively benign experiment? It sounds like it was (the site is down so I can't say one way or the other) but that is not the issue. One of the key principles in experimentation is informed participation, and minors cannot give consent to participate. The purpose is to prevent exploitation.

    Food, shelter and decent living conditions come far higher on my list of priorities than learning how to surf the Web. I wonder if the experimenter thought about what the potential health consequences might be for children spending more time hanging around such unsanitary conditions as a result of his kiosk.

    Technology does not exist for technology's sake. At it's best, technology exists to improve people's lives.

    Perhaps NIIT should see what it can do to improve lives and alleviate the misery in the slums that surround its campus instead of sticking Web terminals into walls to see how the local troglodyte children react to it while standing ankle-deep in human waste.

    1. Re:Misplaced Priorities and Questionable Ethics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful


      How exactly do you think schoolyard bullying is
      studied in North America?

    2. Re:Misplaced Priorities and Questionable Ethics by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2

      I think the hope is access to information (and improvements in teaching) will give the country the intellectual capital needed to raise out of that.

      The real ethical issue, as I see is, is the introduction of an appealing forigen culture into the native population. I don't know how that will turn out in the end.

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    3. Re:Misplaced Priorities and Questionable Ethics by NegativeK · · Score: 1

      Food, shelter and decent living conditions come far higher on my list of priorities than learning how to surf the Web.

      How does that old saying go? "Give a man a fish, and he'll eat for a day. Teach a man to fish, and he'll eat for a lifetime," or something like that. Dumping money into a problematic society isn't the way to do things. Educating the members of that society, teaching them how to make money on their own, helps not only the members of that society, but everyone else too. Giving away money will make people dependent. Teaching people is a practice that will pay for itself quickly.

      --
      This statement is false.
    4. Re:Misplaced Priorities and Questionable Ethics by sisukapalli1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Familiarity with computers without the background education in reading, writing, composition, and comprehension, not to mention basic math and science will take a person only so far.

      Most westerers are appalled when they see a eight year old kid repairing motor vehicles in the streets in India, but would not think it is as bad helping the people to be "skilled" in just using computers.

      Many experienced "programmers" these days with fancy "java/c++/oracle" education are finding it hard to get a job. What use would computers be to these kids other than trianing them to become a "consumer"?

      Sastry

  67. Cheap computing: how? by Andreas+Rueckert · · Score: 1

    Where are the Linux distros, that work with 4MB? I was looking for one (for my old notebook), but it seems they're hardly available. They would be great to recycle old 386s und 486s...

    1. Re:Cheap computing: how? by RFC959 · · Score: 1

      Google for "tiny linux distributions". (Although most of them are rather limited in functionality, too.) There's also ELKS, for systems even more limited than a 4MB 386!

    2. Re:Cheap computing: how? by Andreas+Rueckert · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the links. I know about the ELKS project, but it's still experimental and doesn't support 386 hardware properly, whit limits it's features a lot.
      I'm also aware about many mini distros, but since they are usually targeted at some special purpose, you can hardly use them for development or educational purposes (hey, I code on my 386sx!).

      Thanks anyway!

  68. GUI must-have by Beliskner · · Score: 1
    Illiterate people cannot use a CLI or lynx.

    ANYONE that says linux doesn't really need to pay much attention to cut and paste uniformity in the GUI is alienating all these people, as you cannot explain the intricacies of Gnome/KDE peculiarities with cut and paste to illiterate people that don't know their own language, not to mention English. This experiment is a vindication of the usability supremacy of GUI for internationalised systems, The same way even an illiterate kid in Delhi can appreciate the finest van Gogh painting.

    I'm not dissin' KDE or Gnome, just saying that what you're doing is important, and that you need to understand that there are a lot of people that when the GUI crashes, or the core dumps or a buffer overflow's exploited they WILL hit the reboot switch. Stability stability stability.

    S'il vous plait mountee /dev/hda1
    Vous etes certainment? Oui ou Non
    Il y a un dump de la core, vous pouvez debuggez?

    --
    A caveman dreams of being us, the incalculable power and riches. We dream of being Q, then what?
    1. Re:GUI must-have by vidarh · · Score: 2
      I don't agree at all. The article points out for instance, that while these children doesn't know what the word "File" means, they know what the File menu does, which is what matters to them.

      Sure, the threshold might be higher for CLIs, but it's by no means certain that children would be stopped by it.

      As anecdotal evidence of that, I learned to program on the VIC 20 and C64 largely without assistance.

      At the time I started showing an interest in the Vic 20 we had at home I was 5. I started writing "programs" on paper emulating what I saw my father writing.

      When he noticed that, he let me use the computer instead, and gave me the manual to look at.

      Even though the manual was in English, and I didn't know a word of English at the time, and only knew the basics of reading, I was soon writing small Basic programs that actually did stuff.

      All it took was examples, even though I had no idea what they would do.

      I'm not claiming everyone would do what I did, but I don't have any illusions that I'm so special that I'd figure out stuff at the age of 5 that not a substantial amount of other kids would figure out as well in the same situation.

  69. Re:Unschooling v Schooling by burts_here · · Score: 1

    I have spent the last 4 years in college (thats not Univercity in the UK) doing various diffrent courseses, have i learnt anything usefull? er not really, well not during classes anyway, all my real knoledge has come from breeaking, fixing, tinkering with computers, the thing that i have learnt from college are all social skills, its been a time to find out about my self, and make some really good freinds, and thats what education systems have been about for me, not the gaining of knoledge but learing live with other people.

    --
    Burt "Out of my mind back in 5 minutes"
  70. UI by osolemirnix · · Score: 2
    Actually it would be an interesting project in itself to put up more machines: a Mac, a Windows box, and the various Unix/Linux GUIs (maybe one KDE and one Gnome for starters, everyone knows CDE suxs ;-) ).
    Then wait and see which one gets the most attention and watch how they are used by kids who have no prior exposure to any computer GUI.

    That should tell us something about intuitive GUIs.

    --

    Idempotent operation: Like MS software, wether you run it once or often, that doesn't make it any better.
  71. Quite remarkable.. by skilef · · Score: 1

    He's convinced that 500 million children could achieve basic computer literacy over the next five years, if the Indian government put 100,000 Net-connected PCs..

    This equals 1000 kids per computer per year, right? Do these kids have a good learning curve or are the learning goals set too low?

    --

    You do not exist. Go away.
  72. Open Source by hempguy · · Score: 1
    I think this project is great. Only the author is talking about $2 billion to implement these 'thingies'. Does that cover the M$ licenses? Why aren't we helping these people, using Open Source to achieve whatever it is they want. Isn't this something great for GeekCorps? I believe they are into connecting the developing countries to the internet?

    So I suggest we all start donating one of our old 486's together with a NIC with BootROM. Since fast internet access is obviously not a problem, you can set up one giant LTSP terminal server and use cheap workstations as 'things'. All in favor?

  73. Aha by WowTIP · · Score: 1

    So this is what those embedded devices are, that everybody is talking about.

    --

    --

    "I'm surfin the dead zone
    In the twilight, unknown"
  74. Careful not to treat children as Guinea-pigs by FLT · · Score: 1

    We should be careful not to treat children/humans as test-subjects. I get the feeling the children in India could have been replaced by monkeys, dolphins (change the user interface). FLT

    --
    FLT, not just any theorem.
  75. Having lived in the third world... by mks113 · · Score: 1

    I find this wonderful. One thing you learn very quickly in a society like that is that you can not change the entire society and alleviate poverty.

    You have three choices. You can:
    a) pretend the poverty doesn't exist, and get caloused,
    b) try to make changes from the top, usually to be met with distain and feel like you are hitting your head on a brick wall,
    c) help people one at a time, or a few at a time.

    by providing these kids with a little insight into computers and the internet, they discovered that there was opportunity out there. It would be a big step for a street-kid in India to manage to get an education enough to get into the anything computer related, but without the knowledge that such things existed, there would be no motivation either.

    I see the analogy similar to giving the kids a soccer ball. They have fun, they exercise, and they learn a little of what the game is like. They may have goals of becoming a professional player which they wouldn't have without the ball.

    Michael

  76. Re:OT: Security by jweatherley · · Score: 2, Insightful

    i doubt the people who literally wrote the book on sex and porn would spend a lot of effert punishing people who looked for it.

    Very true, go into any internet cafe in India and take a look at the browser history and there will be as much pr0n in there as your machine at home ;)

    --

    --
    Reverse outsourcing: it's the future
  77. Somewhere in the near future.. by pamri · · Score: 1
    ..I can visualise these kids lined up near the wall And singing: (with sincere apologies to Pink Floyd)

    We don't need no BSOD.
    We dont need no Microsoft.
    Microsoft leave them kids alone,
    Hey! Microsoft! Leave them kids alone!
    All in all it's just another brick in the wall.
    All in all you're just another brick in the wall.

  78. Re:This is wonderful news the For TAXI Industry! by phunhippy · · Score: 2

    flamebait?!?!? how was that flamebait!!!!!!! you guys ever here of humor?!??!!? i got 2 flambaits for that!!!! sheeeeesh

  79. give the children a chance by Vspirit · · Score: 1

    Knowledge is the only way out of poverty.
    Ignorance is the barrier.
    Casper

  80. Expected result... by kannen · · Score: 2
    The groaning aside, it is again amazing that kids will figure out how to use stuff. It does not seem to matter who the kids are or what the stuff is, they seem to figure out how to use it.
    We should expect this of kids, because that's the frame of mind kids have: they are in a constant mode of learning. As a baby, they learn to crawl, and then to walk. Eventually they speak, which means an intense amount of learning. First, they figure out that language is a means of communicating, which is why they cry for attention. Then they figure out that different sounds have different meanings, so they try to figure out those meanings. Then they try to make those sounds themselves. Eventually they figure out sentence structures. They learn how to dress themselves, how to use the bathroom, etc.

    Kids are learning MACHINES!!!

  81. Why the results are so successful... by mekkab · · Score: 2

    The kids using it place no immediate value on it. There is no sense of destruction with it. The Kids didn't pay for it, their parents didn't save up money for it, so there is no "be careful!" factor involved (as evindenced by the shivpuri results).

    Now to those of you who had computers as kids, think of your own past. It was either a gift to you or you were "stealing time" on a machine... You didn't know what you were doing, but you didn't care about doing something wrong. You just did it (and you probably screwed a few things up, too). And you learned from that.

    This method of trial and error, the "school of hard knocks" is by far the greatest teacher because that is how human consciousness is wired- to learn and pick up clues on causality from our environment.

    To this day, if you ask me how I wrote my CDLI device driver, I'll say "I took some code examples and hacked around until it worked!"

    --
    In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
  82. Tech Support by Presence+Eternal · · Score: 1

    Now I finally have a snappy comeback for all the labusers who get in my face and tell me how hard computers are and how much they stink.

    But seriously, this somehow reminds me of the old Shadowrun covers....

  83. come on by koekepeer · · Score: 1

    given the fact that everyone can patent stupid and obvious things nowadays, doing the same thing yourself is a valid strategy to protect yoour idea from being exploited.

    i suggest you try to understand my post before you try to punish me with smart citations. pot and kettle etc.

    regards

  84. New Slashdot Game: Troll Libs! by cascadefx · · Score: 3, Funny
    Are you getting tired of being baited by trolls? Think that trolls have nothing to offer to the slashdot community? Well I propose we change that. Let's make a game where posts that are modified to troll -1 are then turned into a Troll Libs.

    "What's a Troll Libs?" you ask. Well, I propose that a Troll Libs is a troll -1 post that has been reposted with a lot of the offensive material replaced by blanks to be filled in, in follow up posts, with words and phrases asked for at the end of the blank (in parentheses).

    This idea is to do something along the lines of that classic pencil and paper amusement Mad Libs.

    As an example, I will post the first one, based on the troll -1 above. Here is the Troll Libs text:

    It reminds me of the time I (verb, past tense) your (adjective) (noun) (nationality) (noun) in (pronoun) turtle-loving (something you own). Notice how I said " (adjective) (Nationality)". I don't deal with these (adjective) (sports team name). Those (noun, plural) are just (adjective). Anyway, no one is (adverb, ending in -ing) forcing (verb, ending in -ing) on the (noun, plural). You are obviously a (adjective) (noun) who didn't (verb, past tense) the (adjective) (verb), you (adjective) (noun) . The (adjective) (noun, plural) weren't (verb, past tense) (relative location, i.e. on top, behind) of the (verb) and (verb, past tense) they had to (verb) it. Like all (adjective) (noun, plural), who should be (verb, past tense), they chose to (verb, past tense) other (noun, posessive) (noun) without any (noun). You are a ( (verb, past tense)) (noun) for not (verb, past tense) some (adjective) (skill). Perhaps you should go back to (Location) and (verb, past tense) (noun) with (noun, plural) who have (noun) you (adjective) (noun). (verb) (noun). (verb) (noun) a million times until (noun) (verb) (noun). When (a possesion) (verb, past tense), I will (verb) (a posession) (that (verb) (noun)) to (verb) and (verb). Hey, how's your dad? Still a (prestigious occupation)? That's what I thought. You (activity) from the metaphorical (location) of my (descriptive adjective about size) (body part) . Take that (Name of a Sidekick)! And next time you try to be (adjective) and show that you've (adjective) a (noun), don't choose a (repeat previous noun) that is (desciptive adjective) you (Occupation)! You're a (adverb) (verb, ending in -ing) (Occupation) if you think (Currency) has any worth. All of you (adjective) (group affiliation, i.e. Shriners, Masons, etc.) (noun, plural) think that (literature genre) has some sort of place in the realms of literature. You're (statement of fact). It's (adjective) (noun) for the (Famous family name, plural) who think they want to (verb) the (location), but can't, so settle for (verb, ending in -ing) (garden implement) and/or taking it to the (Customer Service Oriented Business). That is some (adjective) (noun) right there, (Occupational Title). I want to (verb) you the (celestial object), you (verb, ending in -ing) (Occupation). (Famous Person) said to me one time, " (common phrase)" Think about it.
    Have at it. I hope you enjoy.
  85. Re:Unschooling v Schooling by majestyk2000 · · Score: 1

    That's freaking hilarious...er, you are joking, right?

  86. Re:Unschooling v Schooling by burts_here · · Score: 1

    er yeah, and? so i had fun, it's better than real life!

    --
    Burt "Out of my mind back in 5 minutes"
  87. What kind of mouse? by infinite9 · · Score: 2

    I bet head tracking technology as a mouse replacement works a lot better in India. I mean, the dot makes an easy target for the image processing software.

    --
    Disconnect your television. Do your own research. Draw your own conclusions. They're probably lying. Don't be a sheep.
  88. Improving Communications in Developing Countries by PhunkyOne · · Score: 1
    Somewhat similar to these people who really haven't used computers before getting on the Internet is a program that has been started by the University of Iowa, The Widernet Project, and Nigerian Institutions. The Project website is http://widernet.org.

    It's really an interesting project, they are training people right there in nigeria help them develop networks and computer systems so they can maintain and then spread the knowledge. If you have some time and want to see the world you could always volunteer.

  89. Dr Dobbs by fogof · · Score: 1

    There is a great article about this experiment in this months Dr. Dobbs.

    Great insign and funny stories on how kids where able to take the control of one of the machines.

    Personaly it's great to see ppl do good with tech.

    --
    --=.=-- www.cyber2000.qc.ca
  90. a real study.... by lawngnome · · Score: 1

    would be to set up a tv in a wall a few feet away that plays 24/7 - which would get used more?

    1. Re:a real study.... by jeff13 · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Well, setting up the TV next to the cmoputer might be interesting. Then test the kids for general knowledge. If most of the questions have to do with Ally McBeal I bet the TV kids win. ;-D

  91. March 2000 = 13 months ago? by hubbabubba · · Score: 1

    Must be some of that new math, eh chris? One of the linked articles was published 25 MONTHS AGO, so the experiment must have been started well before then. "News" indeed.

    --
    Fried ice cream is a reality. - George Clinton
  92. Interesting... by Some+Blonde · · Score: 1

    Curious how illiterate children can teach themselves the rudiments of computer use, while my graduate-degreed users who grew up surrounded by the best technology the world offers can't understand the difference between right-click and left-click. It boggles the mind.

  93. Like slum kids in Ender's Shadow? by Swami · · Score: 1

    Did this remind anyone else of the genius ghetto children in Orson Scott Card's Ender's Shadow?

    I sent a note to the webmaster at one of his web sites asking for his comments. This struck me as a delighful case of life imitating art.

  94. What do you think they're accessing? by almightyjustin · · Score: 1
    Bet they don't get much porn there normally...;)

    I just hope they don't get goatse'd...

    --

    Omnes arx vestrum sunt adiuncta nobis.

  95. Re:Welcome to the third world by powerbarr · · Score: 1

    Uh, go to some neighborhoods in DC, New York, LA, etc. Kids and adults have to scavenge for food in a lot of places. It is not just a third world phenomenom. Just because their are better charities in the US where a lot of these kids might get a meal or two, doesn't mean there aren't kids in the US who go hungry every night.

    The difference between the US and India is that instead of a few yards away, they are probably ten to twenty blocks away so passersby don't have to see them.

  96. My favourite quote by Cam+Wheeler · · Score: 1

    "The children also knew how to use Ctrl+Alt+Del and could restart the computer."

    Interesting that thats one of the first things learnt by Windows users.

  97. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  98. Hey, wait... by Rogerborg · · Score: 2

    No keyboard. A Windows box...

    How did they Ctrl-Alt-Delete?

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  99. No English.. but all fluent in Japanese... by tommck · · Score: 2
    Picture a bunch of 8 year old Indian kids browsing Japanese web sites with Bukkake pictures all over them.

    Next thing you know, they've got the 8 year old girls wearing plad skirts ... :-)

    --
    ---- It puts the lotion on its skin or else it gets the hose again. It does this whenever it's told.
  100. Oops.. forgot to spellcheck by tommck · · Score: 1

    plad = plaid...

    --
    ---- It puts the lotion on its skin or else it gets the hose again. It does this whenever it's told.
  101. Post-participation informed consent by securitas · · Score: 2

    I have heard of cases where, to avoid the experimenter effect, a benign study was conducted and upon conclusion the subjects were informed and given the option to opt in or out after reviewing the data collected.

    I have also read about experiments where the particpants were aware that they were participating in an experiment. However, the stated goal was different from the actual goal. Again, participants were informed after the fact and given the option to opt in or out.

  102. META: Something struck someone too close to home by securitas · · Score: 2


    Interesting that suddenly the comment was modded down as FLAMEBAIT of all things. A REDUNDANT moderation would have been fair since I had unknowingly raised questions similar to two others earlier in the thread -- tcyun and drDugan.

    Obviously someone was more than a little sensitive to someone raising questions about experimental ethics and the priorities in countries such as India where the disparity in standards of living between the majority and the few (such as our esteemed experimenter) are almost unimaginable to those of us in the West.

    HENRY DORS: Why is it worse for people in third world countries to be (relatively) wealthy?

    It isn't. But if you've ever lived or traveled in India, or countries in a similar stage of development, you would see the disproportionate mass of the population that lives at or below the poverty line in conditions that we woudn't allow our pets to endure. And it is in an open sewer that the experimenter decided to place his kiosk, where kids would naturally spend more more time. Do you see what is wrong in that?

    I haven't missed the point of what he was trying to do. I simply take issue with the method he used and question the relative merits of one action over another.

    As for my sarcasm in using the term troglodyte, the choice of words was deliberate so it's too bad you missed the point. However that is exactly how all too many of those elites see these desperately poor children. I think that the project is a worthy one if you first provide for those children's basic human needs. If the government is unable, unwilling or incapable of doing so than it is up to those elements of society with resources and means to do what they can to help.

    POWERBARR: The difference between the US and India is that instead of a few yards away, they are probably ten to twenty blocks away so passersby don't have to see them.

    While I agree that poverty like you described is a problem in North America, you are incorrect to reduce the difference to one of geography. The problem is also one of magnitude and proportion. The sheer numbers of Indians living in such conditions dwarfs the number in USA. The proportion of Indian society that lives in abject poverty is far greater (some would say the majority) than in the USA.

    MKS113: I find this wonderful. One thing you learn very quickly in a society like that is that you can not change the entire society and alleviate poverty.

    Nobody is saying that he has to change the entire society. Just try to do something in your community. What would be wrong with relocating the terminal so kids could surf the net in sanitary conditions? Or occasionally providing a bowl of rice or a glass of milk to the kids who participated in his experiment?

    NEGATIVEK: How does that old saying go? "Give a man a fish, and he'll eat for a day. Teach a man to fish, and he'll eat for a lifetime," or something like that. Dumping money into a problematic society isn't the way to do things. Educating the members of that society, teaching them how to make money on their own, helps not only the members of that society, but everyone else too. Giving away money will make people dependent. Teaching people is a practice that will pay for itself quickly.

    Agreed, but the problem is that sticking a computer into a wall isn't teaching. If he wanted to provide some basic self-directed language, literacy, math, and science lessons then that would be one thing. There was no teaching going on here -- at least not by the experimenter. Nobody mentioned anything about giving away money -- just using it a little more wisely. A hungry kid doesn't learn as well as one who is starving.

    SISUKAPALLI1: Familiarity with computers without the background education in reading, writing, composition, and comprehension, not to mention basic math and science will take a person only so far.

    Agreed. We are beginning to see that schools equipped with computers don't inherently make children better students by themselves. In fact there is ample evidence that it often does the exact opposite, while diverting critical and scarce funds from other areas of education when these schools are pushed into the upgrade cycle.

    Get a solid foundation in the basics and the kids will grow up well-equipped to learn about computers or any other subject they desire.

  103. Re:Funny...I can as well? by vortexau · · Score: 1

    Really funny ... I've surfed the Net for two years on a Commodore.
    Even configure, and upload material to my website from the Commodore I've had for eleven years.

    Yeah - hilarious! :)

    --
    (David Bowman, EVA near HUGE Monolithic Win-PC in orbit around Jupiter) "My God - its full of Malware!"