Everything to look up.
Nothing to fall into.
A student research device with no ads, no chat, no browser, no app store, and no accounts. Wikipedia, video courses from Khan Academy and Crash Course, fifty thousand books, and maps of the world. One search box across all of it.
Built for homework
Homework without the internet
Look it up, read it, cite it, done. No tab explosion, no recommendation engine pulling sideways, no chat window one shortcut away.
A classroom with no IT department
No WiFi to configure, no accounts to create, no filters to maintain, no updates mid-lesson. Hand them out. Collect them. That's the whole workflow.
Homeschool, K through college
Math, science, economics, humanities. Full video courses, in order, offline. The curriculum is already on the device.
Screen time you don't police
The worst thing a kid can do on this device is read too much Wikipedia. There is no second-worst thing.
The reference section
The parts of the library a student reaches for first.
As safe as Wikipedia. Exactly that safe.
The library is real reference material, and it is not censored. Anatomy is anatomy, history is history, and Wikipedia is Wikipedia. If you'd let your kid loose in a good library, this is that. A parent-controlled curation setting is on the roadmap; today, what's on it is what's on it.
Reserve yours
Tablet, solar panel, batteries, Faraday bags, full library. Ready out of the box.
$599 for Batch 1, then $899.