Lorin Hochstein

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The rejection of the XO laptop by half of the program’s child-beneficiaries challenges the notion that computers—and especially these specific computers, designed as they were to elicit programming from children—are somehow radically different, and far more compelling, than previous technological innovations, making it safe to ignore the tepid (generally incremental at best) results of the introduction of previous technologies touted as solutions or replacements for traditional classroom education.
The Charisma Machine: The Life, Death, and Legacy of One Laptop per Child (Infrastructures)
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