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Windows Cheap Enough For $2B Aussie Laptop Deal

An anonymous reader writes "Windows-based netbooks aren't too expensive to be ruled out of the Aussie government's billion dollar promise to give a laptop to every school-aged child, according to several education departments. The admission follows an earlier report that open source machines based on Ubuntu or Mandriva are the only option to deliver up to four million computers to students for under $2 billion. Microsoft itself claimed it will keep costs per unit down by hosting a lot of the educational software in the cloud rather than on the netbook devices."

30 of 234 comments (clear)

  1. Too bad there won't be a useful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    internet connection for each of those school children.

    1. Re:Too bad there won't be a useful by tchiseen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If the students get OLPC's maybe they can use the ad-hoc wifi capabilities and make Australia's best internet :P

    2. Re:Too bad there won't be a useful by lysergic.acid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      well, since they're netbooks, not desktops, you'd need ubiquitous wireless access in order to match the functionality that would be provided with Ubuntu + OpenOffice. and considering that Australia's one of the few developed countries behind the U.S. in internet infrastructure, that seems very unlikely.

      to get the full benefits of the hardware, you pretty much have to go with FOSS or spend a heck of a lot more money.

    3. Re:Too bad there won't be a useful by unit8765 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No useful internet because of internet filtering in Australia.

    4. Re:Too bad there won't be a useful by bsDaemon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You do realize that the United States is over 2.27x the land area of the EU, right? Australia is also over twice as large as the EU.

      The point I'm trying to make is that people complain about the lack of "broadband saturation" in the US, but don't seem to realize that South Korea is 32,622 square miles while the US is over 3.7MILLION square miles.

      There is a whole hell of a lot of space to cover, lots of people, etc. The major metro areas have things covered, but its terribly difficult to to get everything covered in a place like the US or Australia where everyone isn't cooped up on top of each other in a small space.

      Cut us some slack, dude.

  2. $500 a "netbook"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Must be some pretty damn good machines to pay $500 a unit on an order of 4 million units.

    1. Re:$500 a "netbook"? by Akzo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Things outide the US are generally more expensive, not including shipping/customs costs and currency differences.

      --
      Sig is for Signature, so you don't have to manually sign every post.
  3. The Pusher by Forrest+Kyle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Drugs are always affordable when the dealer is trying to get you hooked.

  4. Educational applications in the cloud by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Educational applications on a web server are nothing new. It's funny, though, that Windows would need them. I have one of these small-cheap-light laptops that cost $350 and is intended for use with Windows "only for web browsing and email". I put Debian on it. There's only one thing I have found that it can't do: build the Linux kernel quickly. It's kind of slow at that, but it works. OpenOffice is no problem, etc.

    But with a cloud, you can tie all of those kids into a network that Microsoft will be able to monetize, propogandize, etc.

    Bruce

    1. Re:Educational applications in the cloud by Rene+S.+Hollan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Duh.

      Besides, "code you have on the box beats code that might be available".

      What's sad here isn't that Mr. Perens comment is, well, common sense, but rather that so many don't see it as so obvious.

      --
      In Liberty, Rene
    2. Re:Educational applications in the cloud by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You miss the point of this statement:

      Microsoft itself claimed it will keep costs per unit down by hosting a lot of the educational software in the cloud rather than on the netbook devices."

      It will keep the costs for the hardware down by hosting the applications elsewhere. Or, to put it another way, they will host education apps online for free (now) so that the required hardware specs are lower, allowing more of the total to be spent on (Microsoft) software used to access the (.NET, Windows-only) server side software (which may not remain free for long after the initial investment on Windows laptops has been made and you are locked in).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    3. Re:Educational applications in the cloud by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's what "monetize" meant :-)

      I don't think they're reducing the cost of the hardware, though. $350 USD pays for an Acer Aspire One with 1G RAM and 160G disk at retail. And you can probably get a much better price in a bulk purchase. I think they are budgeting AU $500 per unit. That leaves a lot of money for Microsoft even in the initial purchase.

  5. Oops! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I can see a hosted version of Microsoft Office 2007.

    The internet (or LAN) goes down, or there's some major power outage, and no-one can do their work or homework.

  6. Save money by lordharsha · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wouldn't it be more efficient to ditch Windows and use the extra money to give laptops to more children?

    --
    I am, and that is sufficient.
    1. Re:Save money by Yfrwlf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Even if Windows was given to them for free, which it very well could be, Microsoft would still get a lot from it and the school district, parents, and students would still lose in various ways.

      --
      Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
    2. Re:Save money by Yfrwlf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Right, it's great advertising, etc etc, like you said, so M$ certainly could offer them money for agreeing to choose them over Linux. Just depends on how far M$ is willing to go and if they think it's worth it to do so.

      --
      Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
  7. Teachers were probably the reason. by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Of course.

    I have a feeling that is what the case will be. The teachers who have Windows desktops in their classrooms took one look at Linux and went "No. You give us Windows or the boxes will wind up collecting dust in the back of the classroom." And that was probably was what alot of the Independent Education software vendors said too. "We have thousands of man hours and workers tied up in this Windows only education software. We will not port our software to Linux. Put Windows on your boxes or we will take our business elsewhere."

    1. Re:Teachers were probably the reason. by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, because ISVs often dictate the terms for government contracts.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    2. Re:Teachers were probably the reason. by jbolden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      QuantumG is correct also look at the quantities. 4m. 4m units you get to set terms to software vendors.

    3. Re:Teachers were probably the reason. by UncleTogie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What the Departments and consultants would be saying is...

      So counter those arguments as thus:

      1. The teachers that get sent off for Windows "training" come back nearly as clueless as to usage to make it a laugh at best. Just pick your apps, train a few staff, and have them take it from there. You tell the teachers what to click, and they do so. This is NO different than Windows or OSX. Once those boxes are set up and networked, there is VERY little a teacher needs to do that'd require anything above "user" level.

      2. Key phrase here is "teachers pulled from the classroom". If they're already teaching, then they've already been trained on whichever system they're using that year. It isn't like they're going to be installing RAID arrays and other hardware. That's usually saved for the hardware vendor. Once again, this is showing someone how to show someone what to click. No worries.

      Here it doesn't matter if Windows or Ubuntu get picked as they both serve the purpose well.

      Sure, were it not for the MS plan to host this in "the cloud"... {Oooo, do I hate that 2-word phrase. It's a network, ya doofs. Fraggin' buzzword bingo. {/soapbox}}

      Internet access isn't cheap in Australia. Unless they're considering local hosting, MS's apps will eat bandwidth for no reason other than to run a word processor. Multiply that by just a few hundred students, and it starts looking ugly for whomever's paying the ISP. Multiply this by the number of students in Australia, and it's downright nasty.

      I could care less which OS they use, as long as they're using SOME sense about it.

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
  8. What a great alternative by meist3r · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Owning a netbook that merely runs a basic version of an operating sytem that the company itself wants to get rid off and as the only reason to chose over a full-scale FOSS option I get an MS version of Google Apps? No thanks, take the Linux computers and spend whatever you're saving on some Tux-savvy teachers.

  9. Cloud == Cheaper?? by Lord+Byron+II · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't think so. It's just a nice way to guarantee that the government will have to buy and maintain some MS servers.

  10. Computer != Education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sure, it's a tool, but wouldn't that $2 billion be better spent on smaller class sizes, better teachers, etc.?

    1. Re:Computer != Education by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is $500 per student. I'm assuming those are Australian dollars, so around $330 US dollars. That buys you somewhere between a quarter and a half of a teacher, for one year, per class of 30. Looking at some real numbers, the starting salary for a teacher in Australia is $41,109, or the same cost as 82 laptops. I couldn't find any data on the average class size in Australia, but buying 1/82 of a teacher per child doesn't sound like it would make much difference, especially since it would only last for one year.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:Computer != Education by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Australia is very much a Keynesian oriented economy. Australia is also not currently in recession and has a budget surplus. We may not have a surplus when it's over and we may get dragged into recession by the rest of you, but for now the government can spend to keep the economy from going into recession. In fact, it's the Keynesian way :-).

      Because big government contracts coming from the budget surplus (or even a small temporary deficit) give the economy a much needed kick.

  11. Pay now or pay later... you still pay the MS piper by Reapl · · Score: 2, Insightful

    OK, so Micro$haft have come up with a cost model that in the short term "may" allow the laptops to be purchased for the same money, but ffs can't people look long term with this stuff and not just the initial up front cost.

    So you aren't paying the MS tax for office now, but instead you are just amoritising that cost over years of needing larger internet bandwidth to the "cloud". With some of the crap being bandied about down here lets go out on the edge and look at issues with this...
        - The new $8Billion national broadband network of which one core issue is to provide school networks if it doesn't come off then stuffed internet for schools means no cloud that will be useful
        - The great aussie internet fence (like the rabbit proof fence not the great wall)... if you are using the cloud lets hope no cloud server accidently gets put on the black list...
        - I have not seen anything from MS that show the ongoing cost analysis of this
        - how much to upgrade the version of office in the 'cloud'?
        - how and at what cost to get non-MS products into this mysterios 'cloud'?
        - when are MS going to force me to upgrade ALL my netbooks because the latest cloud products don't work on the old core netbook OS? (and it will be forced look at their track record)

    Basically, I don't like ther risks or the costings of this cloud computing model for schools like this...

  12. Re:What a surprise by Yfrwlf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If it came down to it, M$ would give it to them for free rather than see Linux being used of course. That's why it's up to intelligent employees to realize what the long term costs are, and what they are doing by "selling" the Windows platform to students, so free for them would still be an excellent deal for Microsoft in numerous ways.

    --
    Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
  13. Re:Pay now or pay later... you still pay the MS pi by Yfrwlf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's simple, Linux = free. Windows = cost. They want money, they're a business, that's why they push their product. Even if they sold it to them for free, M$ would still benefit from them using it.

    So, I don't need to see a cost analysis, and I definitely don't need to see one from M$ to try to justify their existence to me. Money should go into FOSS through paid development, bounties, and support. That should be what all institutions are geared towards, but instead they are stuck in the past.

    "Here's a government contract to make the FOSS equivalent of Reader Rabbit for students for our schools. We are now taking bids."

    That's the kind of stuff everyone should be seeing from their governments. The amount of money that every single school district spends on individual purchases for close source software, oftentimes it being the same software over and over and over again for all the licenses, would be enough money to pay developers to program every single piece of open source software schools would ever need all over the entire world a hundred times over, and what's more it would be a long-term investment instead of a flash in the pan. When governments wake up to this, the world will be a better place, but they won't wake up until citizens start waking them.

    P.S., of course you can apply it to all other branches of governments, to businesses, and everyone else. The amount of money thrown away for temporary software orgasms is astronomical. More cooperation is needed for the new age of software development.

    --
    Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
  14. Bad idea, Microsoft or not by pembo13 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Having all of your apps in a remote "cloud" cannot possibly be a good idea, at least for a school. How much are they going to have to beef up their network just for that alone?

    --
    "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
  15. Re:Get off your high horse, kid by Ant+P. · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It is never upgraded

    Well when you're used to an OS that needs reformatting every six months to get it back to a usable speed, I can see why that might be an issue.