One Laptop Per Child founder hopes new development will broaden use of the machines by students
Primary Topic Channel: One to one computing
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The One Laptop Per Child initiative is about to find out whether Microsoft Corp., a rival that the nonprofit group once derided, is the solution to its problems in spreading inexpensive portable computers to school children worldwide.
Microsoft and the laptop organization announced May 15 that the nonprofit's green-and-white "XO" computers now can run Windows in addition to their homegrown interface, which is built on the open Linux operating system. That had been anticipated for months, but it amounts to a major shift.
Nicholas Negroponte, the founder of the laptop project--which aims to produce $100 computers but now sells them at $188--acknowledged that having Windows as an option could reassure education ministers who have hesitated to buy XOs with its new interface, called Sugar. Negroponte had hoped to sell several million laptops by now; instead, he has gotten about 600,000 orders.
Beginning in limited runs next month, XO buyers will have the option of computers loaded with or without Windows. Versions with Windows will cost $18 to $20 more; $3 of that is for Windows, and the rest covers hardware adjustments, such as an additional memory-card slot, needed to make Windows run.
Soon Negroponte hopes to sell just one kind of machine with a "dual-boot" mode, meaning users would have Windows and Linux and choose which to run each time. Because that will take advantage of a broader hardware redesign, the dual-boot XOs will cost about $10 more than today's versions, Negroponte said.
Despite the higher price--and Windows' inability to take advantage of some key features of the XO--Negroponte said his project would benefit from Microsoft's strengths in selling and deploying technology.
"I think our goals are dramatically enhanced with Microsoft's decision and this partnership, because we will reach many more children," he said. "There are now many more countries prepared to look at the XO and collaborative learning and some of the things we stand for."
The partnership culminates an odd dance.
Not long after Negroponte first dreamed up the idea of seeding the developing world with $100 laptops for education, he talked with Microsoft about using a version of Windows on the machines. That seemed to vanish before long, as Microsoft's Bill Gates and a close partner, Intel Corp. Chairman Craig Barrett, publicly dismissed the XO's scaled-back processing power and small screen.
At first Negroponte wore the criticism as a badge of honor, saying it showed that his little group would upend the laptop market. "When you have both Intel and Microsoft on your case, you know you're doing something right," Negroponte said to cheers at a Linux convention in 2006.
Negroponte had other reasons for pursuing a path separate from Windows. For one, Linux is free. That's key when you're trying to make a computer for $100. Plus, Linux was seen as easier to configure for the XO's specific innovations, such as its ultra-low power consumption.
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OK Good to have windows in OLPC
I thank Negroponte 10 million times for the initiating projects $ 100 laptops. He was right. Assus made it at $ 230 retail in USA, , intel made it at almost same price. Mary Lou claims she can do at $ 75 by 2010 . They are all right. OLPC will cost also $ 75 by 2010. No doubt. But sorry to say that Prof. Negroponte does not run this project professionally. He needs a good business manager not foundation managers. He cannot convince governents to buy OLPC at $ 188 FOB Taiwan. Then one have transportaion costs, distribution cost, service costs etc etc. How Negroponte does not realise all these. Because he is not a business man. He did not distribute anything in his life. ONLY good will is not enpough to run a project. OLPC cannot be run like "help the poor " project. It is a business project. It has to be run like this. It has to be run by businessmen. Look all year passed. Only 600,000 are distributed. Even Alabama is reluctant to buy, finally they bought without knowing what will happen to them. I do worry about quality as well. Who will be behind the product after it is sold. Who will follow up the upgrades and new developments, Quality issues. etc etc. Congratulatigon for cooperation with Bill GATES. It had to be done at the beginning. It is again a business mistake. Sorry to bother any anyone. I want to see OLPC succesfull. But they insist to be run unprofesionally. mgozaydin@hotmail.com
Posted By: mgozaydin, 2008-05-16 1:55 PM
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So much for this version of OLPC
Great, so a program that once had lofty goals of placing a laptop in childrens hands globally in order to compete in a global marketplace, became a vehicle to distribute a non-standard OS (even in 3rd world countries M$ is obtainable), then when that didnt sell became a vehilce for a crippled OS? XP Home is what is being placed on these machines. You cant centrally secure them, you cant add them to a domain, you cant place Group Policies on them, you cant protect them adequately enough from malware or virus'. Support for XP Home is set to expire soon. Oh, and the hardware specs on the OLPC will mean that the XP Home install will be at or close to bare minimum requirements. This is going to be a global trainwreck. And the kids are the ones who will pay for it.
Posted By: vgaibor, 2008-05-19 11:11 AM