Straw man not a good plan
Posted Feb 6, 2006 4:48 UTC (Mon) by
xoddam (subscriber, #2322)
In reply to:
Not a good plan by man_ls
Parent article:
$100 Laptop: Great for the world, great for Linux (ZDNet)
So you're saying that requiring fluency in English as a prerequisite for
using a computer network is counterproductive. I'm just not sure anyone
said that was the plan.
> ... most of them manage to avoid learning the bare essentials.
> ... most people don't speak the language.
As was pointed out elsewhere in the thread, no majority is necessary. A
few committed, capable individuals are sufficient.
> I know kids in Spanish schools are not able to translate anything;
I'm sure there are *some* kids in Spanish schools who *do* translate.
But as you say the demand for English in Spain is not as high as first
appearances might suggest. There is already a vast literature in the
Spanish language, partly because it's a former imperial language, still
spoken on an imperial scale. I'm quite sure it's a good No. 2 in its
global usefulness as a lingua franca.
(Several variants of Chinese have more native speakers than English or
Spanish, and written Chinese has more readers than either, but its
importance for international dissemination of information has declined
over the last three centuries. There's no saying when that might
change :-)
I don't think anyone suggested that English would be a prerequisite for
using this $100 laptop or that everyone should have English forced down
their throats. Rather, the suggestion is that, if there is demand for
information which is available 'out there' in some form, *even if* that
information is in English today, then translation is a possibility and
the computer network will facilitate it.
I don't even think anyone was saying it would in the first instance be
*children* doing the translating, though I don't see any reason why
students of a language shouldn't be translating useful, previously
untranslated work rather than rehashing the classics. Only the smallest
and poorest communities' educators would be completely unable to engage
decent writers or translators for educational purposes.
As for cultural colonialism and hunger -- yes, if your stomach is empty
and you have no roof then you are not in the prime target market for
computing hardware. But 'poor countries' are not uniformly hungry and
homeless; while there are always some very poor people and often
somewhere is in drought, the world has a food surplus to date and in any
one place famine is the exception rather than the rule. (The 40-year
exception which proves the rule is the Sahel, a vast region of marginal
rainfall which has lost its monsoon due to climate change).
Bring the price of a portable general-purpose networked computer down,
make it usable where electricity is unreliable, and its demand relative
to books and DVDs will rise.
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