Slashdot Mirror


Give One Get One Redux, OLPC XO-1 Now On Amazon

404 Clue Not Found writes "The One Laptop Per Child project's XO-1 laptop is once again available to the general public via its Give One Get One promotion, where $400 will buy two laptops, one for the purchaser and one for 'a child in the emerging world.' Having learned from their delivery and fulfillment headaches the first time around, this time they partnered with Amazon.com to handle shipping. But a year after its initial release, the market has become saturated with Eee-wannabe netbooks from every major manufacturer. Can the XO-1's charitable appeal, unique chassis and dual-mode screen compete with the superior performance and standard operating systems of its newer peers?"

2 of 168 comments (clear)

  1. the problem was fraud, not shipping by SuperBanana · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Having learned from their delivery and fulfillment headaches the first time around, this time they partnered with Amazon.com to handle shipping.

    You mean the cases like one of my clients, who ordered two, and received none?

    When he called and asked WTF was going on, they couldn't "find" his order, and refused to refund his credit card, despite proof they'd charged him. He ended up having to do a chargeback.

    If OLPC couldn't ship 'em to donors, what makes anyone think they're shipping them to kids in the '2nd world'?

  2. Re:It doesn't matter if it can't compete with an E by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not one that'd be great in your living room. The only reason to get one has always been the uniqueness of it, not it's specs.

    Its specs make it attractive not for the living room, but for the camp site. I took mine to Starwood and Free Spirit Gathering and Playa Del Fuego, and it was great - easy to recharge off of a 12 volt battery, capable of picking up wifi from one campground's office, resistant to the elements. Hooked it up to my cell phone as a modem, and I could handle any work emergencies that popped up.

    For some of us who want a simple, rugged, portable box, it fits the bill nicely. Load XFCE on it rather than (shudder) Sugar, though.

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood