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Intel, Microsoft Despised the XO Laptop

gregsim writes "The Wall Street Journal today reports that the new XO laptop, centerpiece of the One Laptop Per Child project, is stimulating an active response from both Intel and Microsoft. The companies evidently feel threatened by the little upstart, intended to help third-world children. (The XO runs Linux and uses AMD chips.) Microsoft has cut their software to $3 each and Intel has designed their own laptop called the Classmate to sell between $230 and $300, nearly double the XO's price. Rather than defend the relative merits of his creation, professor Negroponte is crying foul and (if the article is to be believed) not even arguing the technical merits. The initial demand for the XO has fallen well below Mr. Negroponte's projections as Intel and Microsoft have successfully argued that their entries are superior. 45,000 have been ordered through the Give One, Get One campaign. I am happy that I ordered mine — it will be a landmark model in any case."

7 of 521 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Ah, the canonical monopoly response... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 0, Troll

    The customers who bought a device got what they wanted. Those who didn't, didn't.

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    Deleted
  2. Re:Competition is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    she was your sister? small world. I probably mentioned it earlier this week when I did her up the pooper and up the vag (in that order).

  3. Re:When they discover they're worth $200 on eBay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Lagos, Nigeria.
    Attention: The President/CEO

    Dear Sir,

    Confidential Business Proposal

    Having consulted with my colleagues and based on the information gathered from the Nigerian Chambers Of Commerce And Industry, I have the privilege to request your assistance to transfer one XO laptop into your hands. The above computer resulted from an over-invoiced contract, executed, commissioned and paid for about five years (5) ago by a foreign contractor. This action was however intentional and since then the computer has been in a vault at The Central Bank Of Nigeria Apex Bank.

    We are now ready to transfer the computer overseas and that is where you come in. It is important to inform you that as civil servants, we are forbidden to operate a foreign account; that is why we require your assistance. The total sum required will be $200 (two hundred US dollars).

    The transfer is risk free on both sides. I am an accountant with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). If you find this proposal acceptable, we shall require the following documents:

    (a) your banker's name, telephone, account and fax numbers.

    (b) your private telephone and fax numbers --for confidentiality and easy communication.

    (c) your letter-headed paper stamped and signed.

    Alternatively we will furnish you with the text of what to type into your letter-headed paper, along with a breakdown explaining, comprehensively what we require of you. The business will take us thirty (30) working days to accomplish.

    Please reply urgently.

    Best regards

    Howgul Abul Arhu

  4. OLPC via PayPal??? WTF??? by bball99 · · Score: 0, Troll

    you can only buy via PayPal???

    no f'ing way i'll *ever* buy *anything* via PayPal!

    does anyone have a better CC merchant route? please?!???

  5. Re:Waste of time by level_headed_midwest · · Score: 0, Troll

    Don't mind the Europeans, they are just angry that they're not the ones holding the seed patents. The "US seeds are sterile and kill local species!" bit is exactly like the "if you do any OSS work, you have to give away everything you make" bit. It's all FUD through and through and you just have to look at who is behind it all.

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    Just "gittin-r-done," day after day.
  6. Re:Competition is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    I am really tired of hearing the old "netscape" bullshit over and over.

    Anyone who actually used the old Netscape Communicator suite quickly realized it was bloaded, buggy piece of crap software. After taking most of the market with (the at the time fantastic) navigator, netscape sat on their laurels, released a shitty update, and consequently lost the majority of their marketshare to IE. Compared to the Communicator suite, IE was a far superior product at the time.

    The only people who believe IE won out against a superior product either never used the netscape products at the time, or have their memory clouded by some kind of anti-MS nostalgia. That's not to say IE is still the superior browser (IMO it's not), but at the time that it got its majority marketshare, it certainly was.

  7. Re:Competition is good by torkus · · Score: 0, Troll

    There seems to be a lot of disagreement over which laptop is "better". Each model has their merrits, granted. OLPC is cheaper, MS/Intel magic is "windows" which is far more important when trying to integrate into the modern technical society.

    Yes, there are mac/linux/unix/VAX/etc. machines out there that a OLPC student might be able to equate their experience with (in theory as OLPC is extremely point-click-go oriented by default). But that leaves them out of the ~90% of computers that run windows and puts them at a substantial disadvantage in that regards.

    If you look at the computer from a non-techie world learning perspective, and assume you're not teaching these children for a career in technology but instead trying to use the laptop to facilitate basic education, the OLPC has the advantage for being outright cheaper.

    Now...OLPC took how many years of preaching before the price creeped up by 100% and it finally launched? MS/Intel took what? 6 months? It seems to re-inforce the point that i've seen a long time in the coming - OLPC is a good idea poorly implemented. MS/Intel, I think, have done a better job in making an expensive laptop destined for those who will most benefit.

    Would a starving ethernopian want a $200 laptop for free or $200 worth of durable farming goods (or whatever other example)? Would a lower-class poor child in a minor to moderately developed country (i.e. running water, electricity, basic telephone) benefit more from learning computer skills as basic food is available? If you really want to "help teh childrenz" how about offering what is most appropriate for someone's level of need.

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    You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.