Two high school sisters in the Boston area have helped begin a program to bring sturdy, inexpensive laptop computers to underprivileged students in South Africa. What is most remarkable is the way that this small idea is already beginning to grow and how two people have been able to make a difference. Some might argue that perhaps laptop computers ought not to be a priority when dealing with issues of poverty, but it seems that education is a vital variable when looking at how to address economic inequality and lack of opportunity. Laptops may not be the most important thing these kids in Kliptown need, but surely they deserve access to an increasingly technology-driven, wired world if they hope to break the cycles of poverty.