Version: 2008

Comments on: Is $100 laptop project flawed?

Computer Aid director says One Laptop Per Child project is based on a "misunderstanding of the history of tech."

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Another Reasone to Keep The Crazy Aunt in the Basement
by WJeansonne June 20, 2006 1:20 PM PDT
Problem number one--Linux, Problem number two--non-standard the professor says. Problem number three--Linux is a total failure as an desktop OS. Try to get kids to use an archaic OS like that is ridiculous!

Just keep Linux in the backroom or basement away from users and everything will be okay. Then maybe it will just go away or better yet die.
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It's Corrupt Governments That Are The Problem
by maxwis June 20, 2006 1:45 PM PDT
If there are 100,000 computers sitting unopened and unboxed then it is more likely a problem with government corruption. Those boxes were probably opened, filled with bricks, and taped back shut. What the charity is really saying is that if they deploy the refurbished equipment directly to the local area that needs it, the equipment suddenly becomes operational. Therefore, if the $100 laptop project is to succeed, it will need to follow the same local deployment model and bypass the governmental levels above it.
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Absolutely
by Hernys June 20, 2006 9:45 PM PDT
But keep in mind that it's not only corruption, but also inefficiency.
I know a case in my country where about that number of PCs kept really unopened for at least ten years. It wasn't direct corruption (the computers were there, I saw them) it was just that bureaucracy and lack of interest kept the computers from being efficiently moved (oddly enough, one reason for that was that fears of corruption prevented somebody hiring an adequate company to do the deployment). Of course, the cause of most inefficiencies is probably corruption in the end, so this is just another form of the same disease. And the OLPC project will suffer from both. What a waste...
This whole thing is so freakin' stupid
by Neo Con June 20, 2006 1:52 PM PDT
How about we quit wasting money on laptops that won't work and are guaranteed to cost 5 times as much as they think just in training and deployment and spend it on something worthwhile, like DDT deployment to eliminate malaria. I don't think the millions of people who die yearly from that disease (thanks to the WHO) really give a flying crap about laptops.
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Agree with one thing
by jdbwar07 June 20, 2006 5:31 PM PDT
DDT isn't a good solution to malaria because not only is it toxic but mosquitoes quickly build up resistance to it. It isn't true that if we would just flood the developing world with pesticides diseases like malaria would just disappear.

However, I do agree that having their own laptop is one of the least of their worries. If you live in a third world country impoverished country and don't even have to enough food to eat, your life isn't going to magically improve just because of a computer.
Or even electricity
by Hernys June 20, 2006 9:33 PM PDT
One of the many reasons why this project will fail is the lack of electricity in the intended geographies and the unrealistic assumptions included in the generator design.
Spending that money in bringing electricity to those populations will raise their living standards way more than a broken laptop.
They said no to a free osX
by Peter Bonte June 20, 2006 2:03 PM PDT
dumb nitwits
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Article is tainted by Microsoft monopoly.
by b3timmons June 20, 2006 4:14 PM PDT
A web search shows the following on the background of the critic's organization:

"Computer Aid is a Microsoft-certified refurbisher"

We already know that Gates has heavily criticized the project while conveniently overlooking Microsoft's own failures in the past.

The real problem is not Computer Aid, which is likely obligated to Microsoft, but Microsoft itself, with its attempts to sabotage efforts that do not fall in line with the monopoly.
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Attack the reasoner
by Hernys June 20, 2006 9:31 PM PDT
not the reasoning. That seems to be your strategy.
Who cares who said it? What matters is that what they say is well founded and reasonable. The OLPC project is full of bad planning, bad strategy, whishful thinking and omissions. It will most probably fail (unless they swallow their egos, start listening, reassess their plans and make big changes) and it will be unfortunate, because those kids really need something to help them advance in their lives.
Finally, there is a sensible article
by pdude June 20, 2006 4:59 PM PDT
The $100 laptop guys said no to free OSX and free Windows CE. They wanted to develop every thing from scratch and give that weird looking laptop to a kid Ethiopia so that he/she can stare at the lousy screen. By the way, that kid does not have maths and science text books to study!
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Lot of ignorant comments as usual...
by rklrkl June 21, 2006 3:35 AM PDT
I'm not sure the OLPC project will actually succeed, but a lot of comments here are quite misinformed. The reason Linux was chosen wasn't just because it was free (otherwise why not pick "free" OS X and I bet Gates would stump up a load of "free" licences for Windows too for the publicity and chance to wean users onto the teat of Windows), but because it was completely customisable, unlike OS X or Windows.

OLPC have taken Fedora Core 5 and heavily stripped it of unnecessary code, resulting in quite a streamlined GNOME desktop that runs fairly well on the very low-end hardware of the OLPC laptop. It still means that you can run the full range of Linux apps on the box (though weightier packages would be sluggish).

As for the comment that Linux is an archaic OS, that's ludicrous - it's actually the most modern OS out there, with major releases of distributions every 6-12 months. It's *Windows* that's the archaic OS - released 5 years ago, band-aided by a couple of service packs and never ending security updates...

It should be noted that the weak point of Linux isn't the "serious" applications (there's free equivalents of almost all major Windows apps), but the paucity of commercial (usually 3D) games. However, on a low-end laptop like this, you don't get 3D acceleration, so it's not such an issue (and there are plenty of good free 2D Linux games out there).
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forward to: 99% unemployment
by tnt1954 June 26, 2006 7:38 AM PDT
machines making machines making machines, operating computers which operate computers
which make computers, mind-reading satellites
and thought police operating the whole earth
system. what do chordates do all day and
night? since everything is being taken care
of and done for them? automatically and
electronically? just be friendly and neighborly
in the masonic utopian 'paradise'. what to
do when fun gets to be boring? work. but
working is illegal in the society evolving.
for protoplasm types anyway. as we work hard
to work ourselves out of working. so we can
be 'free'. lolol?
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