OLPC Manufacturer to Sell $200 Laptop On Open Market
srinravi writes "ArsTechnica reports that Quanta, the company manufacturing the XO laptops, has plans to begin selling low-cost budget mobile computers for $200 later this year. 'According to Quanta president Michael Wang, the company plans to leverage the underlying technologies associated with OLPC's XO laptop to produce laptop computers that are significantly less expensive than conventional laptops.' While OLPC plans to sell the laptops in bulk to governments, which will then distribute the hardware to school children, the XO computer itself is not for sale on the open market. These XO-like commercial devices are still something of an unknown, but it has been announced they'll be using Open Source software."
For such a device, they sure are wanting to not release it - when that could be a good way to fund such devices. Is there some sort of problem with quality at that kind of mass amount?
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
Mine come WITHOUT the hacking locks they have in place. I will want to replace their OS with something that is my own and the current iteration does not allow that.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
People still use and support the Tandy Model 100 http://www.club100.org/. AFAIR, it cost more than $200 when it was new, adjusting for inflation.
All ideas^H^H^H^H^Hprocesses in this post are Patent Pending. (as well as the process of patenting all postings)
I think part of the reason the $200 laptop costs $200 is that they're selling them in bulk to governments. It's then up to the government to distribute it appropriately. If you're doing it yourself, you've got to pay for the distribution infrastructure yourself, which gets tacked on to the cost of the $200 laptop. Now, these days with Amazon and Dell, you can do pretty good at minimizing these costs, but it'll still make it more expensive.
If that ends up bringing the cost of the laptop into the $300-$400 range, you're suddenly competing with the likes of Dell and other low-cost laptop manufacturers.
Yes I understand only goat farmers in Kenya are entitled to cheap usable hardware whereas poor people in the US are not. Moreover, middle class people in the US should be grateful at having to spend $2000 for a VistaBloat machine because, well that's the White Man's Burden.
What I don't understand is how they think this is going to get manufacturing efficiencies in volume working for them? I mean, couldn't they swallow their liberal guilt a little bit and at least charge Bwana $300? I think we'd be willing to do that. Because let's face reality here. I know of no school in the US that's going to gut their Windows infrastructure for these, no matter what they say about selling these units to governments to 'give' to schools.
Otherwise I guess we can go out and buy a bunch of old used laptops for $200-400 each and put Ubuntu on them and tell OLPC to got jump in the lake. At least here in the US where we don't have to worry about electricity and whatnot.
I would certainly be interested, if I knew that it did not include a kill switch which would allow my government or anyone to destroy it on a whim. linky
More music, fewer hits
I know at least several cases where people working on medical diagnostics projects have tried to get their hand on the OLPC kit for the purposes of field medical lab automation and have been told to sod off.
There is a long list of diagnostic technologies which require a computer for analysing data in the field. At the moment this means using either a specialised system or a commercial ruggedized portable. In either case the overall bill for a small field lab goes into the many 1000$ range which makes this technology prohibitive for mass deployment. OLPC class hardware would have been the perfect replacement bringing the cost down into a range which will make it affordable.
So if the OLPC gets sidelined and the same kit is available commercially, personally I would give one big cheer. This will mean that people like Medicines sans Frontiers will finally be able to have proper diagnostic (and medical records) kit anywhere they go, no matter how in the middle of nowhere it is.
Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
http://www.sigsegv.cx/
The goal of the OLPC project is education. These computers will make the world of information available to those who would otherwise have been limited to their indigent backgrounds. Cleaning their water for them is great, cleaning their water for them and teaching them how to clean their own water is even better. You're not going to make any real progress in the third world until it has been saturated by education.
If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
It makes sense to me to sell them outright to the general public but make them pay a fair market price to fund the distribution system so that real controls are in place to make sure that these things aren't sold in flea markets or used for nefarious purposes. I mean the intentions of OLPC are very honorable from an idealistic viewpoint- I'm just very worried that these things in the real world are just going to be too valuable to get passed down to the distribution chain to their intended recipients. We're sending what are essentially consumer electronic toys in to the heart of the poorest places on the planet and expecting that the people in control of these regions won't try to scheme and maneuver this project for personal financial or political gain. To prevent that real controls need to be in place and those controls can only be provided with a distribution system that is well funded. The funding should come from the people who want to buy these things as personal toys with the added benefit that there then will be less incentive for these things to end up on the black market.
Roll it all into one, you should expect GooglePC/BroadBand (beta ofcourse) sometime soon. If the hardward price drops far enough it can even sustain itself giving away the hardware and live on advertisements alone!
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
I don't understand why they are not trying to market this for the educational market in developed countries. At $200 it would make sense for mass distribution to secondary school students in developed countries. With an office suite (OpenOffice) and a browser, it would fit most of the needs of secondary school students. Add an IDE (Eclipse) and it could be used in introductory programming classes. Instead of a computer lab, students could bring it to class, for note-taking, or to read documents or view presentations. And students could take the units home to do homework.
It would also help the effort to distribute machines to poor countries by increasing production volumes (and lowering costs), as well as resulting in more software being available for the laptops. So, I'm puzzled why they're not looking at this market.
[Insert pithy quote here]
I know it might blow your mind, but there really are a lot of kids who live in areas that are somewhere BETWEEN the relative wealth levels of "must buy an iPod for my dog" and "must steal more cardboard for the roof". The XO isn't going to help a kid who can't lift her malnourished bones off the hardscrabble. The XO is going to help a kid who would have to travel 10mi to the nearest well-stocked library.
The cellphone has become a major boon for farmers in several countries-- they can call ahead and negotiate their crop's value before spending the resources to haul perishable product to an uninterested market. The XO may have other "game changing" advantages. It will only have the chance to make a difference if the rich people quit naysaying every last little nit based on their own shortsightedness.
[
what if they use it to meet online predators? Doesn't anyone watch "To Catch a Predator?"
It's like giving a monkey a loaded gun.
Can I pay $50 more and have a special "OLPC Sponsor" logo etched into the case, with the $50 going directly to the OLPC project?
Think (RED) only different.
Think how chic this could be:
- cool logo
- cool charity
- indie coolness: Look ma, no Microsoft!
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Maybe they're going to be even uglier than what everyone is thinking they'll be like? I don't see how that's possible; in any case, I'm sure a few will "escape" from wherever they've been deployed to the US. But the lack of access to the device by first-world coders will tend to reduce application availability and ultimate usefulness. Maybe someone could release an emulator?
1. Make nice little $200 Laptop.
2. Announce to Geeks around the world "You cant have one".
3. Give Laptop to poor child.
4. Poor child puts laptop on e-bay.
5. Geeks gets kool laptop.
6. Child no longer poor.
Old COBOL programmers never die. They just code in C.
I have watched the OLPC for some time. As time goes by, It seems like less of a deal. I just picked up a nice Compaq with a 15" wide screen, 512 meg of memory, 802.11 card etc. At Best Buy it was $350. By the time they get the OLPC out the door, normal low end laptops will be in the $200 range.
Thank you for your valuable FUD. Here's further reading.
The XO is going to help a kid who would have to travel 10mi to the nearest well-stocked library.
In the rural U.S. community where I grew up, it was in fact 10 miles to the nearest well-stocked library.
Step into a huge movement. Don't Tread In Me.
i have been shopping for a new laptop since my wife is in grad school, which means that my current laptop is also in grad school. buying the current one was a sort of existential hardship... paying $600 for something that is too underpowered to play games on. perhaps a small device with a comparatively small pricetag and with a keyboard big enough to take notes and things on might be just what the doctor ordered.
sarcasm:
-noun
1. harsh or bitter derision or irony.
Perhaps, but this whole thing is a waste of time as long as there isn't the infrastructure to keep the water clean.
Laptops for the children really don't contribute to that goal. There are steps that need to be taken and for this project to skip the ones involving sanitation and food is really just a way of western countries giving themselves something to pat themselves on the back with rather than actually accomplish something.
It isn't the lack of education that is the problem. People that live in an area without the resources to have food and clean water are going to be in trouble whether they are educated or not. Pretending like we can just skip to an educated population in any part of the world without first establishing some sort of sane supply for the basic essentials is fanatasy world stuff.
With the demand the way it is for these laptops here, there is a good chance that the proceeds made from selling them could go a long way to providing the training and access to things like food and water which are much more important. Laptops are not necessary for providing the sort of training to deal with those types of issues. Many parts of the world have gotten along quite fine without them. Even if books and writing supplies are too expensive for things like sanitizing water one can teach that orally if need be.
and has plans to make their own low cost laptop.
Many techno-savvy people have also criticized the laptop and Nelson Mandela demonstrated it to the UN and the crank handle broke off in his hand.
I heard it is very poor quality.
Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
I would *love* something useful enough to browse/read/write/email on the go, but cheap enough I wouldn't stroke out when it inevitably got lost/stolen/squashed/hosed with a Diet Pepsi.
If it was as rugged as claimed, @ $249 I'd by another for my 6 year old to keep him off the machines I actually care about. I predict somebody is going to package this for the children's market and discover a license to print money...
Keep your eye open and you can find two year old models (512MB, 80GB) laptops in the $400 range. Will run 3rd party software.
Just out of curiosity, why should I focus on that? Am I really so ignorant that the millions of people that die from things like malaria, dysentery, cholera and starvation are a figment of my imagination?
Of those things, both dysentery and cholera are killers as well as having a straightforward method for preventing people from getting them in the first place.
A laptop isn't a necessary device for learning. Yes, it can be used for that, but the cost is quite a bit higher than just the cost of the device, getting the support staff and somehow getting the lesson plans on it takes money. As it turns out quite a bit of money.
Considering the amount of information that can be taught orally about how to deal with the aforementioned killers, it seems really disingenuous to focus attention to a problem which can't be solved without fixing the lower level problems. There is a reason why societies typically focus on getting food/water and shelter before focusing on education that isn't directly related to that.
People like the OLPC because it is kind of feel good. It allows one to feel like one is making a difference without actually solving the largest problems. We often times feel obliged to provide treatment to people in the third world with HIV without really thinking about the cost relative to the much more urgent need for treating other things.
So, seriously, could you really explain why selling a significant number in the developed world to fund projects that make a difference is such a bad thing?
As far as the governments taking the laptops and doing something evil or keeping them from their intended users, does anybody know how far OLPC is going to step in with the education and support issues? Negroponte has said many many many times that OLPC is not a hardware project, it is an education project based on decades of research with children and computers. It would seem odd if they didn't send their own people out in the field to provide support and guidance to the teachers and students who get to experience the XO. I would love to be one of them!
Summary:
Quanta != OLPC
OLPC != hardware project
If Quanta will sell me an OLPC with 256 meg ram and a 1-2 Gig CF flash drive and the capability to run either Puppy or DSL Linux on it. I would buy one for $200.00 in a heartbeat.
Depending on how well it worked out, I might very well end up buying 5 of them, one for everybody in my family. Primary uses would be E-Book reader, web browser and email. I particularly like the nice screen and the capability to self charge, so you could take it camping/traveling without having to worry about remote power.
I have one question. If the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture is not in charge of Gundam, then who is?
The government is already buying books for these kids, to the tune of about $20/year. Or not, in which case you can be sure they're NOT going to buy laptops. But if they are, then they convert the textbook into an ebook. Use of the laptop as an ebook pays for itself
Or are you suggesting that governments shouldn't provide a free education for their children? That's an idea worthy of consideration, but I suspect it's one you disagree with.
Don't piss off The Angry Economist
Would you have benifited from the internet?
I can't quite understand why people insist in the misconception that these computers are for those who face terminal misery.
These computers are not for starving children. We have to reach those by other means. What they aim is to provide better education for less (printing and shipping good books is very expensive) so that more money can be used in some other projects like bringing food and water to populations in need, with the added bonus of a better educated population for what amounts to essentially no additional money spent.
I live in a third world country and I would have to drive (with my carbon-neutral ethanol-running car) about five hundred kilometers to be face to face with someone who has no access to food, water, basic healthcare or a decent social security network. And, even in the poorest parts of the country, most of those really do have access to these basic services, but nobody ever told them how to get them.
We have to deal with the most basic human problems with other tools. These computers are the tools governments will use to create the other tools, whatever shape they happen to take.
http://www.dieblinkenlights.com
FYI, here is a very interesting video about misconceptions about the "third world": Myths about the developing world
I think the US should really consider employing the XO in education.
The US population is very sparsely distributed. I am quite sure education in rural areas is not up to the same standards as in urban areas. This technology is cheap enough to be able to help and be barely detectable in the overall expenditures.
Besides that, the US alone could create the critical mass for this project to be successful
http://www.dieblinkenlights.com
We give them prophylactics, tell them how it's spread, and they insist on believing in witchcraft. I don't mind helping people, but I hate helping ingrates.
My blog. Good stuff (when I remember to update it). Read it.
ttuttle is a rankmaniac
Maybe you should read every single one of the OLPC discussions here on /..
You know, the one's where some asshat spews-off about how food is what will help the starving. You're right! Food will help the starving, as well as clean water will help those without. However, if you HAD actually read any of those discussions you would see your argument brought-up and destroyed every single time. These are not for children/communities where fresh water is a problem. The OLPC is designed for people who are beyond that problem and are facing educational issues, NOT starving.
put the what in the where?
Remember Simputer http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simputer/ ?
By the time it was released, it was overpriced and underwhelming. I wont be surprised is this device meets the same fate.
As a point of comparison only:
I priced a budget desktop using parts:
Pentium D 805+ECS PT890T-A mobo: $90
Cheap PCI-X video card: $30
Cheap case+PS: $40
Cheap 30GB SATA drive: $30
Cheap DVD-RW: $40
512MB DDR2-PC4200 RAM: $45
Speakers, mouse, keyboard, monitor, all used total $35
Free OS: priceless
--------------------
Total: $305
You can probably do better but not a lot unless you use older parts.
You can also sometimes get "banged and dinged" or discontinued PCs at major retailers at a substantial discounts. I've seen complete PCs without monitors for under $300 more times than I can count. Sometimes even "new in box" factory-refurbs are under the $300 barrier, with Windows.
A few times a year, Fry's Electronics has their Linux PC marked down to around $100. It's very low end but what do you expect for a C-note?
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
That's $310.
I hired an ex-Arthur Anderson accountant to do my math.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
I'd pay $250.00 for one and they could take that extra $50.00 and use it to subsidize the cost of sending them to really poor countries and villages.
Why are they so fricking insistent on not selling them retail? I'd pay a lot to be able to whip out a bright green laptop and hand-crank it in the middle of a meeting. Don't mind me, please have your sales droid prattle on incessantly as if I weren't even here.
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
Two other machines vying for the low-end space include:
Intel Classmate PC
Data Evolution Holdings' Personal Internet Communicator
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
OLPC offers a smaller packaging (it's a laptop!) and a superb screen, for 100 less. Are you sure your budget computer still stands the comparison?
You have really no clue of what are the modern education requirements. Oral lecturing is good, but per se it's definitively not enough. You need literature (in the broader sense), material teachers can use to make their case. An example: you are teaching about malaria. How are you going to describe the processes of infection to the kids without books, and any resource? Yes, because libraries and books in developing countries are very expensive to maintain, and to keep updated. That's where the OLPC comes in, as an easy access to a universal encyclopedia which is the Internet, always updated and ready to go. Lower level problems need to be handled, but education is among them. Think the AIDS epidemic in Africa, education is the key to lower the infection rates. OLPC is trying to fill partly the gap. Nobody forced the goverments of such countries to join the program. So unless you have a better plan to reduce those lower level needs, shut up.
So true. Unfortunately lots of people are complaining based on their ignorance. They think everybody in a developing country is a starving dry country. Bad education, not there but in the developed countries. It'd be about time schools in developed countries should start making distinctions as you did. Otherwise we will keep hearing these folks denigrating a potentially great project based on their total ignorance (and proud of it).
of oversized, power-hungry laptops to run bloated OS's.
If the OLPC turns out to be a useful tool at $200, it could significantly hurt Quanta's OEM customers.
This is pure politics, though. If Quanta can churn out millions of OLPCs at under $100 cost and sell them at $200, they should be drooling all over the place and not worry about the other OEMs too much. But I'm sure they already feel the pressure from Dell & co.
thegodmovie.com - watch it
What about support costs? A small number of governments and NGOs are a lot less work to deal with than potentially tens of thousands of consumers.
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
Would you have benifited from the internet?
I work full-time as a web designer - something I learned how to do on the internet. In fact, when I went to college, there were no classes on web design. When I hear about some new thing, I look it up on Wikipedia. I'm reading MIT's free online computer science textbook right now. I read Neuromancer, Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, and Metamorphosis of Prime Intellect online. I read A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court for the first time at the Gutenberg Project site.
So yeah, absolutely. Not only would I have benefitted from it as a kid, I benefit from it now.
Step into a huge movement. Don't Tread In Me.
With the new hardware upgrade (256MB RAM, 1GB non-volatile, 433MHz CPU) the OLPC is now considered capable of running Windows XP. This may nor may not be a good thing.
For example $70 gets you http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS2837651365.html . For less than $20 you can put together a board using an Atmel ARM micro or NXP ARM micro packed to the eyebrows with ADCs etc.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
Thank heavens someone finally noted the screen. My $1K dell is useless in direct sunlight and even the shade can be insufficient. That, plus power and the general rugged design mean that it is a killer for outdoor applications.
See my journal, I write things there