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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?"

6 of 168 comments (clear)

  1. It doesn't matter if it can't compete with an Eee. by FileNotFound · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you want to donate a PC you can always just buy a single PC for $199 and not bother with getting one for yourself.

    They never wanted to make a machine that can compete with the other laptops. They wanted to make one that'd be good for kids in a 3rd world countries. 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.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
  2. 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'?

  3. Keyboard by blitzkrieg3 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The number 1 problem with the XO-1 is the keyboard. The machine just wasn't made to fit adult hands. For a child, I'm sure everything is perfect, but don't expect to do any large amount of work on it without an external keyboard, which kind of defeats the purpose.

    Other than that it's a perfectly comparable to other sub-notebooks. Obviously twice the price of what it should be, but it's extremely light and rugged. It's the ideal machine for anyone wanting to run linux, since the entire machine is completely open, including the BIOS. The dual-mode screen could really be useful for if you want to work outside one day, which is pretty much impossible with my T60.

  4. Re:Culture shock. by girlintraining · · Score: 5, Funny

    > I remember back in the day when these cute girls would come to my door and try to sell overpriced cookies.

    I remember back in the day selling cookies to fat, middle-aged men who'd answer wearing nothing but boxers and a stained sports t-shirt while my mother waited impatiently in the car. If you ask me, they didn't charge enough.

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    #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
  5. 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.

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    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  6. Re:Give one? by grcumb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How many pads of paper, pencils and books does $199 get? Maybe be of more use than a computer?

    False equivalency. You can't video conference with a pencil. Or make (decent) music with a piece of paper. The OLPC's capacity for re-use is also somewhat superior.

    I live and work in the South Pacific. Let me assure you that, while paper and pencils are in short supply, it's mostly because paper doesn't last very long in any useful state in a tropical climate.

    The OLPC, on the other hand, is standing up quite well to the elements in the pilot project we're running here.

    --
    Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.