Dell Aims Bright New Netbook At Younger Students


Computer

Dells new Latitude 2100, which is being unveiled at an event Tuesday in Australia, is part of a newly popular category of computer thats much like a laptop, but cheaper, smaller, lighter and less powerful.

Unlike Dells other netbooks, the 2100s shell is made from brightly colored, easily gripped rubber, not slippery plastic. Its underside is free from vents and other openings, so plopping the computer on spilled milk wont do any damage. And a light on the lid of the computer tells teachers when kids are connected to the Internet.

The extent to which laptops improve academic performance remains debatable, but Dell Chief Executive Michael Dell, perhaps not surprisingly, argues that computers in classrooms are a key ingredient to better schooling.

“Theres no question that technology can play a role in improving outcomes for students,” Michael Dell said in an interview. “This is not to say that putting computers and (information technology) systems in schools solves all problems – theres no chance of that. But it is to say that, look, these are required skills that people need to be successful.”

The 2100, aimed at students in kindergarten through eighth grade, has a 10-inch screen and a keyboard thats a little bigger than regular netbooks. It can be configured with a touch screen, which Dell says is useful for kids small hands, and an anti-microbial keyboard, because those hands are often grubby. A Web camera add-on is also available. It can run basic versions of Microsoft Corp.s Windows XP and Vista operating systems and the Ubuntu version of Linux.

Unlike the still-mythical “$100 laptop” envisioned by the nonprofit One Laptop Per Child organization, Dells machine starts at $369, which might put it out of reach in developing countries. Add on popular features and Dell said the price will be more like $500. David Daoud, an analyst for the technology group IDC, said schools typically negotiate prices down by about $100 per machine.

Dell would not say how much money it makes selling computers to schools. Michael Dell said the companys public sector segment, which also includes governments and health care institutions, takes in $14 billion a year, about 23 percent of Dells 2008 revenue.

PCs for schools and universities made up just 6 percent of the total shipped last year worldwide, according to IDC, with about a third going to the U.S. Worldwide, Dell was the top player with nearly 20 percent of the market. In the U.S., its grip was even tighter – about 36 percent for kindergarten through 12th grade and 43 percent at the university level.

In the U.S. in particular, theres room to grow in kindergarten to 12th grade classrooms as schools push toward a one-computer-per-student ratio, Daoud said. (Today, the ratio in U.S. primary education is more like one PC for every three or four students, said Larry Cuban, a professor emeritus of education at Stanford University.)

At the same time, universities are pressing students to come to campus with their own laptops rather than stocking computer labs, Daoud said.

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