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Type | Privately held, for-profit company |
---|---|
Industry | Computer hardware |
Founded | October 2006 |
Founder | Michael Rosenberg [1] |
Headquarters | London , UK |
Number of locations | 1 [2] |
Area served | Products in 64+ countries [3] |
Products | desktop computers, thin clients, nettops, workstations, embedded systems, set-top boxes, servers, computer monitors, and solar panels [3] |
Services | eClinic software as a service [4] |
Number of employees | 4+ [5] |
Website | aleutia |
Aleutia Computers Ltd. [6] (pronounced al-oo-sha [3] ) was a privately owned computer manufacturer based in London, United Kingdom. Its product range consisted of low-power desktop and server computers. Its products are used in the developing world [7] and as original base designs for externally branded products. [3] Its computers have been purchased by Unicef, Tesco, Schlumberger, Pret a Manger, Virgin Media, BAE Systems, and the National Health Service. [3]
Aleutia was founded in London by Michael Rosenberg in October 2006, [8] motivated by the unreliability, inefficiency, and expense of the Hewlett-Packard PCs in the internet cafe he had set up in Takoradi, Ghana in the summer of 2006. [3] [9]
The company's first product, the E1, was introduced for public sale in October 2007. The E1 was a fanless, low-power computer targeting the need for energy efficient computers in Africa. [10] This was followed by the E2 in 2008. [11]
In 2015, at Intel's Developer Forum in San Francisco, Aleutia launched its R50 Computer, a fanless Intel Core i5-based system with a unique hybrid enclosure of CNC machined copper and aluminium to maximize heat dissipation and enable computing in the most challenging environments. [12] Aleutia also launched an off-grid kiosk for charging tablets in African classrooms [13] as well as a prefabricated Solar Classroom that was rolled out across Kenya. [14] [15]
On 28 February 2019, the company passed a special resolution stating that it could no longer "by reason of its current/impending liabilities continue its business". Liquidators were appointed on the same date. In their interim report of 23 March 2020, the liquidators stated that, after taking advice, the company's goodwill and customer database had been sold on 30 April 2019 for £3,360 to World Rising Ltd., a company of which Michael Rosenberg was the director. [16] In June 2019, it was announced that British industrial computer manufacturer and designer, Captec, had acquired Aleutia's legacy assets. The sum paid was not disclosed. [17] On 26 April 2022, the liquidators presented their final account showing total asset realisations of £11,805. This sum was wholly offset against the cost of the liquidation. No distribution was made towards the £130,618 owed to unsecured creditors. The company was dissolved on 4 August 2022. [16]
Aleutia supplies the T1 computers used as point-of-sale servers in every Pret a Manger store in the United Kingdom, United States and Hong Kong running Omnico Hospitality software. [18]
A project being run by the Uganda Communications Commission to provide ICT to all Ugandan schools has chosen the T1 over the Asus Eee due to the T1's fan-less design. [19] According to the BBC, this has been rolled out to 137 schools in Uganda. [20]
The Ethiopia ConnectED project aimed to "build a solar-powered computer learning center that integrated the technology, theories of change, and pedagogical practices from the Hole-in-the-Wall, Education for All, and One Laptop Per Child initiatives." [21] Aleutia supplied T1 PCs running Edubuntu, along with LED monitors, and solar kits. [22]
Aleutia was the technology supplier to Varkey Foundation for its DFID-funded programme Making Ghanaian Girls Great, with distance learning enabled at 144 schools in rural Ghana. [23]
Aleutia supplied the hardware and "eClinic" software used on the ground by the "Access to Basic Care" (ABC) programme, which runs 12 healthcare clinics in Oyo State, Nigeria. [4]
Aleutia's computers were used in the Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya in 2017 in partnership with Crown Agents. [24]
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