Former OLPC CTO Aims to Create $75 Laptop
theodp writes "Mary Lou Jepsen, who left her One Laptop Per Child CTO gig on Dec. 31st, has reemerged with her sights set on a $75 laptop that will be designed by her new company, Pixel Qi, which is described as a 'spin-out' from OLPC. In a Groklaw interview, Jepsen calls for 'a $50-75 laptop in the next 2-3 years' and says it's time to go Crazy-Eddie on touchscreen prices as well."
This is probably good news to Bruce Perens, who thinks that the recent report of Microsoft's dual-boot XO project (with Windows as well as the Linux-based Sugar OS) is a feint driven by Microsoft's fear of "the entire third world learning Linux as children." Update: 01/10 21:22 GMT by T :
ChelleChelle adds a link to an excellent interview with Jepsen in the ACM Queue, in which she discusses OLPC and some of the technologies it contains.
Why not just send all the kids TI-89's and teach them how to program those. I can't imagine anybody creating a PC of any worth for less than the cost of a graphing calculator.
Love the smell of Vapor in the morning.
That's "vapour", for my fellow POHMs.
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
It's probably sad that when I saw "Crazy Eddie" my first thought was of Moties.
End of lesson. You may press the button.
We already have the $10 laptop
...and it will end-up being $175 instead. We all saw how the $100 laptop dry run went.
The game.
When I was young, all the computers at school ran MacOS. My entire introduction to computing was done on Apple IIs and Macintoshes. However, when it came time to buy a computer for home, our family bought a Windows machine because it had better specs. Starting these kids out on Linux doesn't necessarily mean that they'll stay with Linux.
We all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it
I don't see the LCD screens getting down to a price making this possible. The other option would be the laser projectors but it's new technology and it'll be years before they are cheap enough. With memory prices dropping I can see it with most of the components but I can't see anyway around the display problem.
Support NYCountryLawyer RIAA vs People
If the OLPC was supposed to be a $100 laptop but is sold for 200, then this new crazy laptop will cost 150. This is great news. Maybe they should develop a voting machine based on this technology, sell it to the government and give the laptops away for free to the OLPC.
You can't handle the truth.
I found this article - very interesting analysis: http://naturalbornpundits.blogspot.com/2008/01/rise-and-fall-of-olpc.html
So I'm guessing she was upset from the cost and believes that she can cut cost by doing again what she did for the OLPC, designing a better, cheaper display. This time, she can probably negotiate better deals as I'm sure the # of XOs in development causes display manufacturers to salivate.
So, before you accuse this of being vaporware, I would caution you that she has held up her end once for the OLPC
Now, what makes me salivate is the site's promise to keep everything open. The software's a given at this point but open hardware would be revolutionary and present yet another learning possibility for users.
My work here is dung.
You walk in to a computer store, and you see the 100 dollar laptop and right next to it you see the 75 dollar laptop -- which one you gonna spring for?
Time to go Crazy Eddie? They do know that Crazy Eddie was forced to sell out of his own company, fled to Israel, and later went to jail for fraud, right? There's good reason companies don't usually mention his name these days.
Although as a kid I used to go to his store to get cheap video games...
Developers: We can use your help.
Although not a laptop I can show you a 5 cent word processor
OLPC is non-profit. You can't really leave and get into "competition" with an charitable organization.
"People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
As far as I can see, her company is NOT in direct competition- the OLPC folks seem to be treating selling to the developed world to be something to be avoided; even this buy two get one program was set to end at the end of last year so they could focus their efforts on the undeveloped places. She however wants to sell to people with money. I'd think the two companies would get along rather well with each other, and be relatively happy information, and even where possible coordinate on components to drive down costs, to the benefit of both.
Were the OLPC peeps paid? If not, then I can't imagine any of them even reading a NCA without riotously laughing first.
Wasn't it an offshoot of academia, or at least headed by an academic? If so, then they aren't the type to use NCAs.
When I was young, all the computers at school ran MacOS. My entire introduction to computing was done on Apple IIs and Macintoshes. However, when it came time to buy a computer for home, our family bought a Windows machine because it had better specs. Starting these kids out on Linux doesn't necessarily mean that they'll stay with Linux.
Why not, Linux is widely recognised as having better specs.Better specs don't sell though. Marketing and subsequent mindshare do (case in point : Windows - various incarnations).
May contain traces of nut.
Made from the freshest electrons.
A friend of mine did that.
Well, he and a bunch of others were made redundant by the company (company A) they worked for. So they decided to do it themselves (at company B) and do it better. He's worth a few million now IIRC.
What happened was they bought in a solution from another competitor (company C) and acted as a reseller to get the company off the ground whilst they wrote their own software. Company A then accused them of theft of code and used the fact that Company B were selling software so soon after startup as "proof". FACT/FAST and the police presumed guilt and immediately impounded all their equipment. My friend spent some time in a cells at a police station. There were various court appearances.
After about a year it was all cleared up, but they went through hell first.
And this didn't even involve and patent disputes.
Since the XO was based upon Open source software they can't make her sign any agreements not to use the software. About the only thing they could stop her from doing would be using their hardware, and since she intents to make laptops even cheaper she probably won't be using any of that knowledge. Well that's my non-legal background guess anyway.
When I saw the quote, I thought about the scene in the book where the Moti Engineer took apart and put together Lady Sally's palmtop computer which was thought to be impossible because everything was one single unit.
To hit $75 for a laptop, the same technology will be required.
myke
Mimetics Inc. Twitter
Q: I understood that you have one or more patents in screen technology which are in the XO laptop. Are you taking those patents with you for licensing, or do they belong to OLPC? Can you clarify the patent situation for us?
Mary Lou Jepsen: When we eventually filed papers to make the OLPC 501c6 real, we also then started hiring (in early 2006). I then assigned the inventions that I had both already made and would make to OLPC. Pixel Qi -- my new company -- is now licensing my inventions from OLPC. This isn't an OLPC employee benefit, it's a deal I created with OLPC and Pixel Qi, and the benefit will go to OLPC and to the children of the world, lowering the price of the laptops, and thus allowing more kids to get laptops.
A possible failing is that Negroponte was operating outside of the market. Who knows his costs? He is soliciting governments directly, not competative bidding.
His intentions are noble, but the execution is questionable.
You might want to read the Groklaw interview. It is said there that her new company is licensing the tech she developed for OLPC from OLPC.
As you see, your post is plain wrong and very unfair to Ms. Jepsen. Too bad it was modded +3...
http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=1096
The last sentence of the story renders in an odd way for me.
This is probably good news to Bruce Perens, who thinks that the recent report of Microsoft's dual-boot XO project (with Windows as well as the Linux-based Sugar OS) is a feint driven by Microsoft's fear of "the entire third world learning Linux as children."
for me, 'fear of "the entire third world learning Linux' is underlined as a link, but '"the entire third world learning Linux as children."' is green like a link. Does this have something to do with closing the link in the middle of a quote? Is this a slashdot problem or a problem with my rendering engine?
I'm using Safari Version 3.0.4 (5523.10.6)
Help I'm a rock.
Ahhh, if these kids parents could afford laptops with better specs, I doubt they'd be getting OLPCs in the first place.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
As an educational tool, it doesn't have to be that complicated. Look at the laptop type devices being put out by Leapfrog, V-tech and Fisher Price. All in the $50 range. Adding a larger screen and internet access, might be possible for $75. It depends on what you want it to do and the profit margin expected. My Atari 2600 put some darn good games in 4K. The XO laptop is close to duplicating a full featured laptop for only $200. It is a resounding success. If for profit companies can build on that with a number of educational appliances that cost $75 and down, even better. If OLPC and the XO have a problem it isn't the hardware, it's software designed to allow kids to learn themselves and an inability to market that idea. Like schools in the US, the administration wants control, and they often resent kids learning on their own.
It's up to the OLPC folks if they wish to make an issue of it, but yes, you can get into "competition" with a charitable organization. 1) You can compete for donors, if donations are part of your 'business' model. (Not in the for-profit sense of a model of how to turn some resource into profit, but the model of how you're going to get done what it is you are trying to get done.)
2) You can compete for IP. If OLPC has patents on any novel hardware developments, perhaps part of the plan is to license those patents to futher the charitable goals.
3) Didn't we just have a story about Intel being in competition with OLPC for contracts? Granted, that case is for-profit Intel vs non-profit OLPC, where as I gather this new company is also non-profit.
Using more than one OS ensures that they'll learn general skills instead of just learning how to use app ABC on OS XYZ.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
The announced final price for the XO Laptop is $188.
If the same inflation figure is used, the $75 will rise to $141.
Which is still pretty amazing.
The Nintendo DS...
Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
I saw an ad in the paper this morning; 3GB core, 300GB disk, wifi, DVD burner, webcam $999.
2GB/160GB $549
But it does fall in line with my past modding experience. When I try for informative/insightful I usually get modded 'funny'. When I try for funny I get 'troll' or 'flamebait'.
And apparently when I talk out of my arse without the facts, I get 'interesting'. Go figure.
OLPC is good enough to access content like MIT Open Courseware. Expanding access to content like that from what was previously available to these kids is just amazing.
There are a lot of brilliant people in the world who, for lack of access to good education cannot realise their potential. I would prefer that your lack of imagination not prevent them. We are going to need them.
I would also prefer that the next billion people to come online in the digital age not be burning 300 watts each to support Microsoft bloatware. That's a lot of carbon for no real benefit.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
So here's what I think actually happened. Jepson (Ms. or Mrs anyone know?) got tired of turning down backroom deals from Microsoft and realized there was insane amounts of money to be made by creating a low end device and letting MS pay you to not install Linux on it. She figured she could make herself untold riches and at the same time drain some cash away from MS, potentially weakening them and helping third world countries. I see the business model as follows:
Why not make a cheap computer that can be plugged into a TV? I'm sure there's a large population of children in the world who have TV but no computer.
Bigtime Consulting - "We're the best because we cost the most"
suddenly this answer to solving lack of computers in poor countries is going to be compatible with commercial OSs? does it really matter? I'm not a big linux fanboy, hell, if i took the fanboy label, i would prefer the bsd fanboy. with that said, I thought the purpose of this laptop is to be an inexpensive communication device - does it matter what OS it runs on? from what i understand, Mozilla contributed to this project - for free - a browser that can be compiled for most OSs. now microsoft is going to be operating system number 2 on this laptop - charging a small price.
ok , so im ranting now - but i guess my point is that negroponte has forgotten the purpose of this project, if he wants to sell a laptop that has 2 OSs competing against each other (by default?) I can see countries' reasons for war changing from religion to operating system preference. bleh.
But you fail to see that whatever computer she creates may not compete with the OLPC at all. The OLPC is aimed at underdeveloped countries and is a non for profit effort, whereas this new computer could be aimed at the general American market (open market). They are completely two different kinds of markets, and it can even be argued that one of them is not a market.
Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
Let's take that in context.
The enormity of the price overrun is attributable to M$ getting OLPC to increase the specs drastically until the hardware became at least theoretically possible to run M$ Cruftware. If M$ boosters cannot kill the OLPC, they have to at least slow it down by any means necessary. Failing to do so means that a market for notebooks opens up without their monopoly. Todate M$ business model has focussed largely on leveraging the desktop monopoly Bill's mom got for him from IBM. We have a few decades of experience to watching M$ products and services become less and less competitive. Preserving the monopoly is the only way to keep the cult going.
Further, if Linux takes over the new market, or even breaks into it, the old markets will want it, too. We're almost there, with manufacturers like Dell and Lenovo almost offering Linux pre-installed.
Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
Given that all of those laptops can run Windows, and also many of them probably have the Mac version of Office installed (ever bought a fresh copy of Windows/Office not attached to hardware? Costs a bit much, and gives Microsoft quite a bit more money on a per-computer basis than the bulk licenses), I don't think Microsoft has much to worry about. It does bother me a little that some schools mandate computer types, and that's coming from someone who uses Windows reluctantly for school/work and boots into Linux for everything else.
Hitchhiker: You heard of this thing, the 8-Minute Abs?
Ted Stroehmann: Yeah, sure, 8-Minute Abs. Yeah, the excercise video.
Hitchhiker: Yeah, this is going to blow that right out of the water. Listen to this: 7... Minute... Abs.
Ted Stroehmann: Right. Yes. OK, alright. I see where you're going.
Hitchhiker: Think about it. You walk into a video store, you see 8-Minute Abs sittin' there, there's 7-Minute Abs right beside it. Which one are you gonna pick, man?
Ted Stroehmann: I would go for the 7.
Hitchhiker: Bingo, man, bingo. 7-Minute Abs. And we guarantee just as good a workout as the 8-minute folk.
Ted Stroehmann: You guarantee it? That's -- how do you do that?
Hitchhiker: If you're not happy with the first 7 minutes, we're gonna send you the extra minute free. You see? That's it. That's our motto. That's where we're comin' from. That's from "A" to "B".
Ted Stroehmann: That's right. That's -- that's good. That's good. Unless, of course, somebody comes up with 6-Minute Abs. Then you're in trouble, huh?
[Hitchhiker convulses]
Hitchhiker: No! No, no, not 6! I said 7. Nobody's comin' up with 6. Who works out in 6 minutes? You won't even get your heart goin, not even a mouse on a wheel.
Ted Stroehmann: That -- good point.
Hitchhiker: 7's the key number here. Think about it. 7-Elevens. 7 doors. 7, man, that's the number. 7 chipmunks twirlin' on a branch, eatin' lots of sunflowers on my uncle's ranch. You know that old children's tale from the sea. It's like you're dreamin' about Gorgonzola cheese when it's clearly Brie time, baby. Step into my office.
Ted Stroehmann: Why?
Hitchhiker: 'Cause you're fuckin' fired!
http://imdb.com/title/tt0129387/
My work here is dung.
This is huge news. I've always said we need a computer that many people in the world can afford. With 5-6 Billion People a 600 to 700 machine is so far beyond their reach. I'd really like to see a $25 machine but $75 great.
My theory, un-tested is that most family's can't afford to budget more than 1 weeks income every 3-4 years for a computer. Of course the wealthy can do whatever they wish. Personally I spend $800 on a monitor every 5-7 years and $400 to $500 on a new CPU/Box every 14 months.
With a price at $75 I would expect that means there is at leaset 1 BILLION people whose family can now afford such a device, and may be more than that. I'd like a machine that 4 Billion people could afford every 3-5 years. They we will have a real shot a planet wide culture. Today we have A few 100 million to a Billion people spending most of the $$, most of the energy, etc.
Putting a cheap computer in their home will not change economics but it can help teach them to read, and give them a path to education, which might take a few generations but will help all over time.
Personally low powered desktops would be better than laptops esp. a model that could use the TV screen to lower costs, for those homes that have TVs.
http://www.hawknest.com/
When I was a kid my school has TRS-80 model III's and my family bought me an Atari 800. The Apple II was over $1000 then.
Yeah, some people have learned how to use one-button and two-button mice!
Crazy Eddie is supposed to fail.
Kinda like Seven-Minute Abs.
Patrick Doyle
I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
First, these are laptops we are talking about. Students can take them home. As long as the more powerfull Windows machines
don't have anything more to offer than the OLPC, students would prefer to work on them. The truth is that powerful Vista machines have nothing more to offer with respect to web browsing and editor capabilities, children would stick with the same machine they use at school just because of the convenience of not having to copy their work from the OLPC to the windows machine and vice versa.
Second, a large portion of the market for OLPC consists of low income families. They don't have the means to buy extra home computing devices
with better specs.
This is a like a sick PR version of the Price is Right ... I bid $1 Drew!
Sooner or later the global market is going to teach MS that the marginal cost of software is $0.00. At that point the platform that is better at doing things for free is pretty much sure to win out.
So yeah; bring it on.
In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
The truth is that powerful Vista machines have nothing more to offer with respect to web browsing and editor capabilities,
Yes. Yes, they do.
Have you used an OLPC? I got one recently (through the Give 1 Get 1 program), and the software is crap. The browser doesn't have tabs, or even history besides Forward/Back, and it can't play YouTube videos (I don't know if this is just a software limitation or if the hardware is too weak). You can bet Firefox or IE on a full-size PC has "more to offer". The word processor isn't so bad, but (AFAIK) it can't open or save to a location in the file system - storage is accessed through a poorly-implemented "Journal" interface. (I know the intent is to be less confusing to new users, but a) it's still plenty confusing and underpowered and b) it's poorly integrated - f.ex., trying to upload a file to a web page opens a standard file selector dialog.) Applications are slow to start, and you can't view more than one window at once (or open new browser windows - you have to, slowly, start another browser process). Etc.
Don't get me wrong - I like the OLPC concept, and the hardware, and the idea of an OS more suited to children's use, and I'm sure future revisions of the software will fix some of these problems, but I'm in awe that these machines are actually being given to children in their current sorry state. The starry-eyed open-source idealism, overly-ambitious wheel-reinventing, and general amateurishness of their software development effort are pretty disappointing.
That might be the build price. By the time you add in margins and other costs it could be way higher.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
Last year? I saw this new implementations of Atari games in a device that looks like their original joystick, that you plug to the TV. They sold for around $25, and you can find them for about $15 now; the later ones have new games, with other characters (Dora, Spider man etc) and actually sell you a 'software key', so they have another way to make money; Having something like that but open (as in, I can program it myself) would be great.
The point of linux isn't to secure 1000s of Linux users in the future.
The reason for linux is it's free. If I have to make something for as cheap as possible am I going to be able to get there paying a license to some company for their OS?
It'll cost $150 and you'll have to buy two of them at once and only get one, right? And you'll only be able to buy it for a week. No, two. No, a month. No, 6 weeks. No, however long we say.
That seems like how the last "$100 laptop" program worked out for OLPC.
I don't get why Slashdot gives so much press to these people when they admit they can't maintain their own goals, the program is mired in political bullshit, and the very idea of giving kids a laptop and acting as if it will cure all their ills is idealistic at absolute best. OLPC is bust, Netcraft confirms.
Family finances are really more flexible than that.
The "Poor" get EIC credits, which they turn around to spend on things. Not all of them spend every last cent on the cheapest Price-per-pound bread, rice, & celery.
The "Middle Class" can often "afford" to budget more than "one week's pay per 3/4 years". This group is susceptible to the "Coffee Fallacy". If you get them in an emotional mood, they'll say "I can't afford to spend Five hundred dollars on a computer...". Then they go buy a coffee and go back to work.
I would rephrase this as "I don't like the value received if I spend my money on a computer. I prefer weekly amenities instead".
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
I think EIC is US thing? I'm not really sure. I'm fairly sure that the bulk of the world's poor, up to 5 Billion of them in places like China, India, Africa, etc. don't get EIC.
http://www.hawknest.com/
Then it was a fortuitous move since having it even more underpowered would make it a most unpleasant user experience. Never attribute to malice what can explained by incompetence (or merely wishful thinking).
Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
Crazy Eddie is supposed to fail.
But in a way that drags others along - for instance, after a period of apparent success.
And that's exactly what happened with this one.
Given the location and timing, I wonder if this "Crazy Eddie" actually was the inspiration for the one in the Motie story.
Is Jerry P. active on slashdot these days? Maybe he can tell us. (Ditto Larry N. But I know Jerry P. is active in hacker circles.)
= = = =
Reminds me of "Crazy Jim's" hamburger stand in Ann Arbor back in the '60s. Greasy but cheap.
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
But the OLPC doesn't come with "more than one OS."
... presuming you apply it to cutting price rather than increasing performance.
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
When you post, tell us specifically if it is a 'funny' post or an 'arse' post etc... so we can moderate appropriately.
BTW, all my posts are Insightful unless otherwise stipulated.
Thanks for your cooperation,
UTW
Hans Rosling has shown that the fundamental variable in the development of society is the improvement of health care. Once the health of a country is improved it moves inexorably towards a better standard of life.
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/92%3E%3E%3E%3E%3E%3E%3E+.r1885 - it's a 21 minute video that also proves monkeys are smarter than Professors.
Karl Marx, held the opinion that improvements in society were a result of the invention of the railways which provided low cost travel for activists to travel around encouraging the creation of trade unions and cooperatives. Andrew Carnegie's donation of libraries to Scotland and his other philanthropic activities are often presented as evidence of the effects of a fair distribution of knowledge. Neither of these innovations provided the level of observable improvement in living conditions for the average Scottish citizen. Improvements to living standards only began to appear post 1947 when universal free health care became a canon of British society. Children were vaccinated, millk and vitamins were provided free, schools dinners were subsidised or free and health checks were a normal event at primary school. So while I welcome the development of low-priced gadgets and anything else that might have a useful application anywhere in the world and have no doubt that it will be important, I would encourage everyone not to assume what impact sexy products such as these will have.
Posts, MyBio or Sig, may contain satire, sarcasm, bolded nouns be sardonic or even witty & be Church of SD
Well I can't imagine it would be screaming fast, though there is little technical information on the Sugar GUI. It would really be good to see even a simple comparison vs fluxbox or something similar. Fluxbox ran nicely on a 333 MHz PII w/128MB of RAM that I used to have. However, we had in the early 80's reasonably fast, if simple, GUIs that ran in <32 KB of RAM on 8-bit 1 MHz CPUs, so even smaller is possible.
The lightweight fvwm and other window managers are definitely simple enough, the question remains can the be made all simple, candy-looking. Again, though, what are the requirements for Sugar and how does it compare?
Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
I'd like to mention that while that may seem bad - My cousin who goes to Fanshawe college in London Ontario was forced to buy a mac laptop (for her photography program course). Personally I find it ridiculous. (I admit my bias I plainly hate everything apple, and won't touch something if it has an apple logo on it - Though I don't consider myself a linux or windows fanboi I genuinely prefer either of them over anything apple. Though my preference still lands in linux land)
Some days I just get bored and Troll post all the memes I can think of...