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Microsoft Attempts to Woo Students With 'Crowdsourced' Laptops

theodp writes "Q. What do Chris Brown and Steve Ballmer have in common? A. They both want you to Beg for It. GeekWire reports that Microsoft is touting its new Chip In program, a crowdfunding platform that allows students to 'beg' for select Windows 8 PCs and tablets that they can't afford on their own. Blair Hanley Frank explains, 'Students go to the Chip In website and choose one of the 20 computers and tablets that have been pre-selected by Microsoft. Microsoft chips in 10% of the price right off the bat, and then students are given a link to a "giving page" to send out to anyone they think might give them money. Once their computer is fully funded, Microsoft ships it to them.' Hey, what could go wrong?"

17 of 128 comments (clear)

  1. They are windows 8? by i+kan+reed · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Then I don't think anyone wants one. Begging and debasing yourself for a computer makes sense, if you really need one. Doing it for a computer that suffers from delusions of being a tablet? What's the point?

  2. can we do the opposite though? by slashmydots · · Score: 5, Funny

    Can we just beg for them to:
    Remove Windows 8 from a laptop we already bought
    Make Windows 8 and 8.1 (so basically 8.2) not suck so badly
    or just beg for them to stop begging us to beg them for Windows 8 machines.

  3. Windows 8 ? Urrgh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Who in their right minds wants a Windows 8 laptop ?

    I'd rather have a damp pizza.

  4. Spam by Big+Hairy+Ian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So it's a 10% discount for spamming your contact list

    --

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    1. Re:Spam by Krojack · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And microsoft then sells your list of contacts to marketers or uses it themselves to spam.

    2. Re:Spam by Seumas · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The funny thing is, this is for college "kids"... in other words -- grown fucking adults.

      When I saw the shitty Slashdot blurb, I assumed this was going to be for disadvantaged children or something. Instead, it's for those poor unfortunate ADULTS who are so disenfranchised and disadvantaged that they're attending (through one manner or another) tens of thousands of dollars for college tuition and related expenses, but need to beg and spam people for the $600 for a laptop.

      Ridiculous.

    3. Re:Spam by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That those same loans would cover in fact. I know, I bought a laptop that way once. I had no working computer and needed it to do my university homework.

  5. Forward this to 10 friends and get a free laptop!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This almost reminds me of all those e-mails from way back when that say if you forward the e-mail to 10 or so friends, Bill Gates will send you a free PC. I'm already very suspect of any e-mail asking for money, even if it is from someone I know.

  6. I'll tell you what could go wrong... by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 5, Funny

    You could end up with a laptop with Windows 8 on it.

    1. Re:I'll tell you what could go wrong... by tompaulco · · Score: 5, Funny

      The second place winner gets two laptops with Windows 8 on it.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  7. Crowdsourcing is interesting... by intermodal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...but it really doesn't help when this kind of project tries to get people to turn it into spam. Want to drive your early 1980s Vanagon through China on the Silk Road, and write a book about the experience? Good project for crowdsourcing (but didn't make its kickstarter goal). Want to record an album with your band or film a documentary on something super-nerdy? By all means give it a shot.

    Poor student wanting to buy a device Microsoft picked for you? Just makes the whole concept of crowdsourcing look like what it is: begging. The appeal of crowdsourcing, in my opinion, is that if the project succeeds, something fun, interesting, or exciting gets brought back that the people who helped it happen get to enjoy. Not just the person who gathered the funds.

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    1. Re:Crowdsourcing is interesting... by femtobyte · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is worse than begging --- this is *lobbying*. You're not asking for the computer you'd particularly want given the whole world of available choices; you're working on behalf of Microsoft to provide advertising for Microsoft so that people will give money to Microsoft, and in return you get a crappy device that's not what you and your family/friends would have decided to spend the same $X00 on in the first place.

  8. kinda pointless given a few facts by nimbius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. microsoft already enjoys lock-in at most universities and private colleges. shit like outlook and sharepoint has unfortunately shoved years of well-maintained unix to the roadside in an effort for universities to seem more cutting edge. protracted multi-month outages (ahem, University of Kentucky) requiring expensive consultants drive alongside patch tuesday now in the race to time best wasted.
    2. 90% of the engineering labs, the ones we slashdotters fondly pine for, are sadly Microsft lock stock and barrel. each desltop basically exists as a $500 PuTTY workstation.

    id be willing to guess microsoft is trying to reduce the amount of apple on campus. in the arm and in the backpack of millions of students rests the most egregious chunk of the student loan, the macbook. Microsoft wants that few inches of space so badly they can taste the sweat off steves greasy forehead, but theyve failed catastrophically in the past and if history is any indicator, this will just serve to ever cement microsoft as the spreadsheet king. the Zune was a godless abortion, the netbook was an underpowered way to piss off university hackers, and the tablets are about the only thing left until you realize apple has been doing it better for years. Now we're going for the laptops...and its worth noting most $college macbooks run XP or 7 so as to comply with university requirements for courseware. Make no mistake however, they roll back over to mac whenever theres a party and someone needs to fire up a jukebox playlist fitting for kegstands.

    making college kids beg wont work. at the end of the day sure, theyre accustomed to it with their parents but microsoft doesnt represent anything they inherently need that they cant already download off bittorrent or use a lab for. victory has defeated you microsoft, your ubiquity is the titration point at which college students simply dont care about your products. they all know windows, they all use it, but there is no fundamental 'want' or drive you can possibly conjure up that will spur kids to fall to their knees the way steve jobs could get them to.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  9. Re:Forward this to 10 friends and get a free lapto by Krojack · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I can already hear the Internet scams popping up right now.

    You go to some family get-together.
    Uncle: Hey Jimmy, I got that message about the laptop you wanted. I donated $300 for you!
    Jimmy: Umm, I never signed up for any laptop nor did I send you a request to donate to buy one for me.
    *crickets*

  10. Sweet! by Arancaytar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That 10% discount is almost as much money as you could save by forgoing Windows for something useable and free.

  11. Re:Bah, US only... by Stuarticus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That doesn't sound like GP's problem, it sounds like ASUS' problem. Yours is accepting that "doesn't boot well from USB" is an acceptable state to sell a motherboard in.

    --
    If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
  12. UEFI is a pain - 'secure' or not by Rob+Y. · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are more problems with UEFI than 'secure' boot. I bought an HP box with Windows 7 and secure boot disabled. The thing wouldn't boot Windows after I installed the drive from my old PC as a secondary SATA drive (believe me, I tried every available BIOS setting). The Windows EFI bootloader insisted on trying to boot from the secondary (MBR-formatted) drive if it was there - even though a live-booted linux CD was fine with it. But if I left a gap in the SATA drive numbers, Windows would boot (and mount the SATA3 dirve as drive F:), whereas my live linux CD didn't even see it as SATA3 (apparently the BIOS didn't report it there with the gap).

    Essentially, I was only able to 'use' this drive after I completely wiped it and replaced its MBR partitioning scheme with a GPT scheme. But my point is UEFI has 3 problems as I see it:

    1) Secure boot locking out non-signed stuff (why can't it just warn you when you try to boot non-signed stuff and let you continue).
    2) Weird implementations producing crazy, inexplicable behaviors. Including inconsistent ability to boot from external media, and some systems actually getting bricked by booting a Ubuntu CD.
    3) Forcing use of GPT partitioning, which many Linux distros don't handle yet, and which even Windows doesn't need till you go over 2 TB drives.

    Most of this is the result of an awkward transition to a possibly better partitioning and booting scheme, but forcing it on everyone - combined with poor implementations of much more complex firmware. Maybe it only seems intended to make dual booting hell. In any case, it succeeds beautifully.

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