Slashdot Mirror


$100 Laptop Repriced at $175

prostoalex writes "The $100 laptop introduced by Nicholas Negroponte as part of the One Laptop Per Child program will end up costing $175, Associated Press says. The demand for the program is apparent as 'seven nations have expressed interest in being in the initial wave to buy the little green-and-white "XO" computers — Uruguay, Argentina, Brazil, Pakistan, Thailand, Nigeria and Libya — but it remains unclear which ones will be first to pony up the cash.'"

22 of 323 comments (clear)

  1. The price will go down when they get more volume. by QuantumG · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and thanks to Moore's law.

    This isn't news, they've been saying this for over a year now.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  2. Needs a new name by wmwilson01 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think they should rename this to One Laptop per 0.57 Child

  3. Re:DAMN IT, SLASHDOT!!! by Upaut · · Score: 4, Funny

    Jack Valenti just fucking DIED of a stroke and all you can think about are $175 laptops?????

    Alright, I'll get it over with: *ahem* Ding, dong, the witch is dead

    Now thats over with, onto the more notable laptop. Got to say, still excited about this project. Last time I held a computer class in the DR, a massive power surge nearly killed me when the computer in question was powered up... These little things should be able to take the abuse, and the unstable power grids of many of these developing countries. Still cannot wait until a consumer model is released, so I can prepair a few classes on them for next time I go down.

    --
    3 degrees of separation from Vladimir Putin
  4. Re:Why not....? by fractoid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Desktops are only more repairable if you have a geek-type house with a stash of spare parts. Try troubleshooting a desktop on a dirt floor in a mud hut and you'll find that it's a lot more delicate than a sealed unit. It looks to me like the OLPC is aiming at the sweet spot between 'rugged' and 'cheap', which will let the units get the maximum use per dollar in their target environment. Kind of like those kiddie computers you can buy (sealed unit, membrane keyboard, small LCD) but with enough grunt to be useful as an actual work or learning tool.

    --
    Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
  5. Getting that first 3 million orders. by pschmied · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems to me that they could probably get the first batch paid for by us geeks who have been drooling over the OLPC hardware for a while.

    Hell, I'd pony up ~$400-$500 for a unit. I wonder how many orders at that price point would be enough to get manufacturing cranking.

    Plus, from my way of thinking, the OLPC project could use some more content creators doing homebrew design on the OLPC hardware.

  6. Re:I'm just waiting... by fermion · · Score: 5, Funny

    Or simply call it the £100 laptop.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  7. Re:No story here. by Dara+Hazeghi · · Score: 5, Informative

    Either you're a crazed hippie completely out of touch with reality, or you're a troll:

    Euro value 4/26/05 = $1.29
    Euro value 4/26/07 = $1.36

    Not exactly spiraling out of control. Total loss of value in two years = 5.2%, not half.

    --
    Left 404: Why the RIGHT is WRONG
  8. Re:Why not....? by burns210 · · Score: 4, Informative

    which are devices that hardly fit the description of "rugged"..
    Have you actually used one? Like, at all? The machines are quite "rugged". Or were you just making a baseless claim?
    As for why not desktop machines? Power requirements and portability are two of the reasons.

  9. Re:And if Microsoft or Sony did this? by BenSnyder · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I get your point. It's fun to try to kick a little Slashdot ass. But I'll take your question seriously and try to answer it.

    The idea of putting a laptop in the hands of somebody who can't afford the technology is very appealing. We like it. It makes us feel good. It makes us feel like we want to be part of that. Look at the other posts that say they'd spend $500 to buy one for themselves if they'd also send one to the originally intended recipients. That's a very strong statement of support. If the price goes to $175... well, who can really fault us for not willing to take back that we like the idea that low cost computers are being given to people who could really really could use them.

    It wouldn't matter who made the mp3 player. Nobody wants to hear about a significant price increase on a plentiful commodity like an mp3 player. There's too much competition and Microsoft, explicitly, has a long history of credibility problems with delivering on their marketing claims in their product in the first place.

    Aren't there a host of things missing from Vista? Aren't we all aware that the "revolutionary" new file structure got cut and that DRM was a priority? For Microsoft, you reap what you sow.

    So I reject your comparison. We're not assholes (as your suggest - or at least, not for this reason), we just want to see the OLPC thing succeed.

  10. Re:I'm just waiting... by heptapod · · Score: 5, Funny

    A hundred pound laptop? I thought these were for kids not weightlifters.

  11. From TFA by MonkeyINAbaG · · Score: 4, Informative

    CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - The founder of the ambitious "$100 laptop" project, which plans to give inexpensive computers to schoolchildren in developing countries, revealed Thursday that the machine for now costs $175

    AND

    Negroponte's team has always stressed that $100 was a long-term target for the machines, but recently publicized figures had put it in the $150 range. Negroponte says the cost should drop about 25 percent per year as the project unfolds. He added that Citigroup Inc. (C)'s Citibank division has agreed to facilitate a payment system on a pro bono basis; Citibank will float payments to Quanta and other laptop suppliers, and governments will repay the bank.

    The project is still on track to its price target of $100, it is still in BETA FFS!

    Quit with the FUD already! Theres nothing like working on something high profile to make you grow a bit of a distaste for /. hype!

  12. Re:I'm just waiting... by Cutie+Pi · · Score: 4, Informative

    As of today, one Euro = $1.36

    It takes 36% more dollars to equal one Euro. The Franc doesn't exist any more. Your math abilities and world knowledge should seriously concern people.

  13. Re:And if Microsoft or Sony did this? by JeffAMcGee · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "I might get modded off-topic for saying this, but ..." on slashdot people regularly post the question "How would slashdot react if Microsoft did this?" This post is usually modded insightful because the mods see it as thinking outside the box—it looks like you are breaking away from the herd mentality when you post this question. The only problem is that people regularly post this question, or a paraphrase of this question, so it really isn't too insightful.

    This post usually gets one of two responses: "It would not be the same because..." or "Slashdot is not one person, the members of the slashdot community can disagree with each other."

    --
    This sig cannot be proven true.
  14. Re:Expressed interest by grcumb · · Score: 4, Informative

    And in addition, if this were a Microsoft product, everyone would be yelling "vaporware!" and bitching about the price increase.

    OLPC would qualify as vapourware if:

    • The first production run weren't already going ahead.
    • There weren't already programmes in place to deploy this laptop, and lots more in the works.
    • The company producing them hadn't already stated their desire to market them into the consumer supply chain as well.

    For those of you keeping score, India's attempt at this died on the vine, Microsoft's $600-cell-phone-attached-to-keyboard-and-TV alternative does meet the criteria for vapourware. Intel's ClassmatePC is barely out of the gate. And AMD's offering seems to have been shelved (wisely, perhaps) in favour of OLPC.

    Near as I can tell, OLPC is the one project that least resembles vapourware of all the announced projects out there.

    --
    Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
  15. My two cents by kitzilla · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'd toss in my two cents worth on this issue. But with opinions hovering near three cents, I think I'll just save up for a better topic.

    --
    This is my post. There are many others like it. If you don't like what you read here, go try one of the others.
  16. Re:DAMN IT, SLASHDOT!!! by forkazoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Jack Valenti just fucking DIED of a stroke and all you can think about are $175 laptops?????

    GET SOME PRIORITIES!!!


    A million school children with an ability to appreciate freedom of information, and the open source ideals that are the antithesis of Valenti's anti-copying propaganda... I just think of it as Jack's ideas being dead along with him.

    On a more serious note, as for the priorities, should I stock up on beer or snacks for the Jack Valenti is Dead party?
  17. Re:me thinks kids in inner city schoos ... by DeadChobi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The best thing the federal government could possibly ever do for the public schools is actually put some funding behind the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, and No Child Left Behind. They make a fuckton of demands on the public schools, but then they don't back it up with funding. It's been like that since the 70's. Frankly if you're going to place strict requirements on the schools that they educate *everyone* even at significant expense, you should put your money where your mouth is.

    Would you be upset if your boss told you "Okay bub, do this, this, and this. But I'm not gonna pay you for it since you're doing such a good job already."

    And as for our schools being shitboxes I've got a questionnaire I'd like to ask you:

    1.) Can you read?
    2.) Can you write coherently?
    3.) Can you do mathematics?
    4.) Do you have a job that is not simply menial in nature?
    5.) Do you have a decent understanding that there is a world outside your state?
    6.) Were your parents able to work while you were growing up?

    If you answered yes to any of the questions above, you may have benefited from a free public education.

    --
    SRSLY.
  18. Cheops' Law by Chas · · Score: 5, Informative

    Everything takes longer and costs more.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  19. Re:me thinks kids in inner city schoos ... by Bryan+Ischo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem is endemic to a society that does not value education, and does not place personable responsibility above entitlement. In this case, the knife cuts both ways: stingy and selfish people do not want to fund schools; and apathetic and irresponsible parents do not enforce proper behavior in their children either at school or at home.

    I guess that some people believe that other places have the opposite problem of the USA; whereas the USA has too many resources and not enough personal responsibility, there is a belief that other places, especially third world countries, have personal responsibility but not enough resources. So the goal of projects like this is to try to help people who, it is believed, would actually make something out of themselves given the chance, instead of squander whatever resources are spent to attempt to help them better themselves.

    My personal opinion is that, the difference between the uneducated in the USA and the uneducated in a third world country is likely to be alot less than what other people may believe. I have been to a decent number of places in the world and the thing which strikes me most is that people everywhere are pretty much the same. The only real difference is the larger circumstances, usually beyond their control, that they find themselves living in. I think that more children in a third world country would benefit from something like OLPC than would children in the USA, but more because of their circumstances than anything else. In both cases, I think the number of actual children who will benefit from being given a free laptop with educational tools on it is not as high as philanthropists would like to believe.

    That being said, I am a 100% supporter of OLPC because, first I think it's a cool project from a technical standpoint, and second, I think it *will* provide some benefit to today's generation of third-world children, and that this benefit will be multiplied as these children grow up and can help to educate even more of the next generation of third-world children. Also I like to hope that I am wrong in my assessment of humanity, and that things will go much better than I would have predicted.

  20. Re:Kind of cool but is this really worth it? by fireboy1919 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Drop Vista and install Linux and you can save a few bucks

    You mean add a few bucks. There's a price break for crapware. It pays for the cost of Windows and then some.

    neutering the technology

    No harddrive less memory, but better LCD, more efficient and flexible OS. Not to mention wireless meshing capability. It's specifically designed to interact with other devices of its kind and to display information - only allowing for simple mechanisms, crude mechanisms for data input.

    Its exactly like a high-end PDA.

    Is a PDA a neutered PC? Is a golf cart a neutered car? Is a housecat a neutered lion?

    It's a different beast.

    So while this computer is cool how will it's usefulness fare long term when people discover they can't do all the stuff people are doing with their normal computers in the developed world?

    "S'ils n'ont plus de pain, qu'ils mangent de la brioche."
    Assuming that they could get PCs, about as well as PDAs fare in the developed world. Really, though, the point is that every single dollar counts.

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
  21. Re:Kind of cool but is this really worth it? by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 4, Informative
    Here's the features I can think of that the XO has that the listed laptop does not:
    • Screen is readable in full sunlight
    • Power consumption is targeted at 2 Watts
    • Laptop can sleep while the screen stays on (e.g., when reading a book)
    • No moving parts
    • A minimal number of wires and connections (for instance, the motherboard is right next to the screen)
    • Water-resistant design -- you can pour a cup of water right over the keyboard without damage
    • 802.11s wireless, allowing connections with peers and connections to the internet via peers
    • The wireless routing stays on even when the rest of the laptop is off
    • Built-in camera/video
    • NiMH (or LiFeP) battery, to avoid the safety issues of Li-ion batteries; generally toxic components are being avoided
    • Targeting 2000 cycles of the battery (typical batteries are 500-1000)
    • You can use a stylus on the touchpad
    • Monitor revolves into tablet configuration

    If you want a scaled-down version of a normal laptop, the Classmate PC is basically designed like that. You can see a direct comparison in this table. Frankly it looks clunky and lacking in creativity when compared to the XO.

    Generally the XO is designed for durability and low power consumption, not speed. It also takes into account its very specific target audience in many small ways. It's not a general-purpose machine, it doesn't have any commercial aspirations, it's purely a laptop for children, particularly those in developing nations.

    Unlike WebTV this has a very good screen -- it's small, but it's completely usable. It runs normal Linux applications (they don't fit into the environment that well unless you make some modifications, but they do run). The processor is x86. It has a reasonable amount of memory and disk -- small by today's standards, but still reasonable even by today's standards. 256Mb of memory is really quite good. Also, unlike those products, this is not a niche product. This is intended to be deployed in considerable scale, and so it's a viable target platform all on its own.

  22. Re:Why not....? by youthoftoday · · Score: 4, Informative

    I was doing tech support to a school network in Uganda a couple of years ago. They had a room full of machines. This was a concrete building with a good roof, but even so the 'mud hut' effect still happened. The amount of dirt that got inside EVERYTHING was frankly astounding. I'll never forget the day I spent removing bat droppings from all the mice.
    So in hot, dusty under-developed countries, it is a problem. And the OLPC's membrane keyboard and sealed widgets are certainly welcome.

    --
    -1 not first post