OLPC Experiments With Cow-Powered Laptops 189
An anonymous reader writes "The One Laptop Per Child Project (OLPC) is toying with a novel source of power for its low-cost XO laptops: cows.
"We plan to drive a dynamo (taken from an old Fiat) through a system of belts and pulleys using cows/cattle," wrote OLPC's Arjun Sarwal, in an October 21 e-mail posted to one of the group's discussion lists.
Sarwal and others are now finalizing the design of the cow-powered generator."
Something doesn't smell right (Score:5, Funny)
There is no way they can get cows to power laptops, there is no way they would stay in their wheel.
Now, if they suggested a beowolf cluster of hamsters then I would believe it.
As it stands this article is just a load of bull.
Wow...Second world nations? (Score:4, Insightful)
Poor people using such animals tend to have a lot more common sense than we do. This is absolutely preposterous.
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You can say that again, I'm pretty sure you go to hell if you work a cow to death in India.
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I know if I was an OLPC cow I'd probably wish someone would kill me.
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Wouldn't you harness them to a pole that is perpendicular to the shaft of the generator.
I'm sure they used to grind flour with the same sort of technology.
Re:Something doesn't smell right (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Something doesn't smell right (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Something doesn't smell right (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Something doesn't smell right (Score:5, Funny)
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On a more serious note, OCPC is actually called Send A Cow (http://www.sendacow.org.uk/ [sendacow.org.uk], they try to aid farmers to support themselves by donating livestock.
The Heifer Project http://www.heifer.org/ [heifer.org] could also be called the OCPC. I am not familiar with Send A Cow, but it sounds similar to the Heifer Project. As of the last time I checked, the Heifer Project had an amazingly low overhead. Meaning that most of the money donated to them actually went to the cause, not to paying an expensive staff.
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taking on a debt you can't afford to pay for a 50" plasma tv is NOT a good debt
i'm sure you can spot the difference... or maybe you'd rather they starve? or live on handouts for the rest of their lives?
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Vous avez deux portables...
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In famine struck nations, what are the odds most OLPC cow powered batteries will permanently lose their charge over dinner?
Cow Power (Score:4, Funny)
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Super Cow Power (Score:2, Informative)
$ apt-get moo
(__)
(oo)
/ | ||
*
~~ ~~
Why do I get the image... (Score:2)
Cows don't walk much (Score:4, Insightful)
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They should make this device "girlfriend"-sized.
Re:Cows don't walk much (Score:5, Funny)
Any of us who've got this "girlfriend" you speak of should already have her working on our dynamo.
At least that's what I call it.
Re:Cows don't walk much (Score:5, Funny)
A girlfriend is a girl that wants to be just friend. Every girl a slashdotter encounters is like that, no need to hit wikipedia for that.
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Horses? yes. the like to walk in circles on the exercisers.
Their best bet would be figuring out how to get these people cheap solar panels. A panel array that is the size of the OLPC that folds out to be 6 panels
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I would have bet the farm that you were going to say cheap horses.
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If you flip the ol' TV over to PBS, Discovery, or any random channel that shows either historical farming in a developed nation or current farming practices in a third-world country, you're bound to eventually see an Ox, Cow, Buffalo, or similar creature pulling a plow. Shockingly - to a fi
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Re:Cows don't walk much--but oxen do (Score:2)
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Oxen are basically a type of cattle, so it's not inaccurate to say cow-powered even if they are ox powered. The ones that do work are usually castrated - they are also called "steers". Regarding how much power they generate, it's angular velocity times torque. These are pretty strong animals, so they don't have to move very fast to generate a lot of power.
I only know about this because my next door neighbor is a rodeo performer and has such animals in his yard. The steers make me nervous, because they
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I think you mean a cutting horse, although most cutting horses are quarter horses they can be any fast and smart horse. On a side note, even mules and dogs have been trained to cut cattle.
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As it is the OLPC looks like it's going to be the first 800kg laptop (including power supply). Way to go !
Cow Cafe (Score:5, Funny)
I can see it now
Later that evening he is having a romantic chat with his girlfriend in the next village. Things get intense and the low power warning comes on her laptop. They are cut off as a great big cowpat soils his keyboard.
(I could have gone further, but hey, this is a family show, right?)
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disappointed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Old hat (Score:2)
We will also cultivate edible plants for biodiesel. Cow dung would be used as more biofuel. Of course, we will have to deduct the methane from their belches and flatulence for calculating carbon credits.
And for the customers who cannot afford large (MW class) wind turbines, we will offer them (alo
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Bull(ock) power is common in India (Score:5, Informative)
It would be a trivial thing to gear up an oil press and drive a tiny generator to power a few laptops.
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GNU (Score:4, Funny)
You know, I bet you could use a gnu just as well as a cow. Same electrical power, higher meta factor.
"You're using a gnu to power a GNU-powered device? My mind just exploded!"
One Cow per Child Project (OCPC) (Score:2, Funny)
(OCPC) needs your charity donation to save children from cowlessness. For only $1 a day you
can feed a cow and make a child happy! Thank you for your attention.
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Signed,
One of your cousins.
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(OCPC) needs your charity donation to save children from cowlessness. For only $1 a day you
can feed a cow and make a child happy! Thank you for your attention.
Being Thrifty (Score:3, Interesting)
My question of this working is that I would expect the cow section to run probably 1 RPM. I would expect that the generator must turn somewhere above 400 rpm to put out a full 12 volts. (alternators usually above 700 rpm). So that is a pretty good gear ratio. Hence you see the double gear increase. Seems like it would be better to use a horse, which walks a bit faster, for several hours a day to charge the batteries instead of a cow.
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I suspect that a draft horse - a work horse - has become rather too valuable an animal to be put to such mundane use.
The design needs improvement. (Score:4, Informative)
Low-power laptop (Score:4, Informative)
Any Get Fuzzy fans? (Score:2)
Oblig (Score:2)
Torque (Score:5, Interesting)
When you consider the use of a cow vs. the use of a small animal (like a hamster) you start having to understand how we turn physical motion into electricity.
A small animal like a hamster is really cute, but they don't produce much usable electrical power. They only run long enough to get a workout, and if they get tired... they stop running. Yes, someone actually turned their hamster's wheel into a generator. [otherpower.com] The hamster could light up LEDs, but that's nowhere near powering a laptop.
A cow, on the other hand, will produce excellent torque - if you can get it to walk - but then you waste some of that power changing the low-amp high-volt power into higher-amp lower-volt power. Remember - pumping water is essentially a high-torque/low-speed process, but most electrical generation is low-torque/high-speed. (But that's because most electrical generation is for AC power, not the charging of DC batteries. For DC charging, high-torque/low-RPM might work nicely.)
However, what they're probably going for here isn't the optimal conversion of animal power to electrical power. What they're probably trying to do is transform into electricity what they perceive to be widely available power.
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AIK
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You're absolutely right - those are all better ways of getting power - if they were trying to power the village.
I personally prefer a mixture of wind and solar, with possible inputs from animal (even human) sources.
What about llamas? (Score:2, Funny)
Bio Enegery (Score:2)
overkill? (Score:2)
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I think that they're trying to come up with a solution that is an alternative to solar. Some places are known to be overcast for weeks at a time.
why a treadmill? (Score:2)
adapt kinetic watch tech http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automatic_quartz [wikipedia.org] to charge up a battery pack.. how impossible would it be to have battery packs you clip onto and off of the cows legs... let it walk where it will and at feeding time, swap batteries...
plug in? (Score:2)
Excuse my ignorance... (Score:2)
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The primary use of the laptops will likely be as a Textbook.
If you have 4 $50 textbooks used by a class of 30, it is cheaper for each to have a $100 laptop and 4 e-books than for each to have $200 of textbooks. Of course, none of thes
Wouldn't it be more efficient... (Score:2)
To hook up a couple of Labrador retrievers?
Don't flame me--I actually own one and trust me they have a LOT of more excess energy to spare compared to a cow! But, of course, that would be mean and if you really want to create a win-win situation, it would be to hook the electrical grid up to the treadmills used on The Biggest Loser [nbc.com] and supply the whole damn city!
On the surface this sounds like one great big practical joke of a story. But I don't know if I'm impressed or disappointed at the lack of cow fl
The Matrix (Score:2)
But does it have cow bells? (Score:2, Funny)
That's good news (Score:2)
Gateway OLPC (Score:2)
Cow Solar Adapter (Score:3, Interesting)
Instead of a dynamo of belts and pulleys, which requires a lot of maintenance and isn't portable (like many nomads and people who herd cattle), how about they work on fermenting that grass for fuelcells? The cattle won't have to work as hard, so they won't need as much grass, which extra grass can power the OLPC. The dynamos they're proposing must be supplied elsewhere anyway, even from Fiat taxis, so why not get fuelcells instead? And why not use the demand for them to grow local fuelcell production industries?
And if fuelcells are too expensive or complicated, why not just some standard PV cells, feeding the OLPC batteries? A PV collector the size of a cattle pen could power several OLPCs.
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The whole thing they're planning seems like overkill. These OLPCs probably consume less than 100W. If they could cannibalize a Fiat to make something like a "self winding watch" that charges OLPC batteries while the cow is walking around grazing, that would make a lot more sense than the cow doing
Silly power vs. real power... (Score:2)
Something tells me that there are a lot more people and/or
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If racism is politically incorrect, why aren't these animalia supremecists criticized for their kingdomism? Flora is life, too.
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Opposition against humans wearing animal fur, humans hurting animals, "anything that harms animals" as you say occurs within a similar subset of the human population, but is - as far as I know - not equal to veganism or vegetarianism.
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The vegan society says:
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Re:Have you mooed today? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Finally! (Score:5, Funny)
aptitude moo
aptitude -v moo
aptitude -vv moo
aptitude -vvv moo
aptitude -vvvv moo
aptitude -vvvvv moo
aptitude -vvvvvv moo
Moo.
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Those and the grand-parent's commands are in reference to the following (I think):
apt-get help
(..)
This APT has Super Cow Powers.
apt-get moo
(ascii cow)
...."Have you mooed today?"...
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Nope - not clean enough (Score:2)
Sorry, couldn't help myself, which is an unintentional pun in itself
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Oh dear God! Don't let my daughter see this or she'll want one. The gerbils and pet spiders are bad enough.
It's probably the simplest solution (Score:2)
Feeding grain to cows is more of a developed agricultural thing. It's used to improve the quality of meat and help increase milk production. Even so, grain, such as corn is usually only a smaller portion of a cow's diet, hay, green feed (cut grass/clover), and pasturing still provide the bulk of a cow's daily intake.
In places where farming is more closer to subsistence, cows are pretty much left on a diet of strictly grass that is naturally available. Using a cow to generate electricity is probably the