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User: Charbax

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  1. Re:OLPC is a success on Ivan Krstić Says Negroponte's Wrong About Sugar and OLPC · · Score: 1

    Nah, XO1 is sluggish with Linux as well. OLPC did not change any hardware to accomodate Microsoft. The main problem with the XO is that AMD did not help much improving the Geode processor to fit with more cost effective RAM and Flash memory components.

    But in 2007, OLPC did not really have a choice. Intel was crapping on the whole project with all its monopolistic corporate clout, and ARM processors did perhaps not seem ready enough for it.

    I could perhaps argue, and I think I did ask the question often, why OLPC wasn't directly choosing the ARM processor back then in 2006-2007 for XO-1, I would have argued even an ARM11 processor would have been good enough.

    Though, if you had to choose X86, I don't think OLPC did any mistakes in terms of hardware choices. Intel are absolutely impossible to work with and would have never wanted the netbook market to grow as fast as it is. Intel's profits are down 95% in 2008 compared to 2007 because of the netbooks cannibalizing the sales of more expensive processors in more expensive laptops.

  2. Re:OLPC is a success on Ivan Krstić Says Negroponte's Wrong About Sugar and OLPC · · Score: 1

    "bending the specs to fit Windows"

    That is BS. The specs were updated from 128MB RAM to 256MB RAM, not for Windows only, but for Linux as well. Same thing for the 1GB storage instead of 512MB.

    With XO-1.5 they are improving the processor significantly upwards 1Ghz, with 4GB storage and much better DDR2 RAM memory. All this without increasing the cost, because VIA simply supports their new processor better and AMD has stopped developping for Geode years ago and don't support those latest cheaper and better components.

    Last, your complaint about commercialization of OLPC to rich people like you. OLPC cannot do that cause they are a non profit. If you have them products on your market, you have them having to give 25% to resellers, paying for transportation, taxes, and none of the components would have been provided in the same way. And volunteers would not have contributed to the project in the same way.

    AMD could have found some OEM and some brand to sell commercial versions of it if they wanted. But they did not want to. The commercial versions of OLPC are the Intel based netbooks. Those Intel based netbooks WOULD NOT HAVE EXISTED if it weren't for OLPC forcing Intel into that market.

    Being a non-profit, OLPC's goals are not only to build and sell laptops themselves, but most importantly to influence THE WHOLE MARKET. Which OLPC so far has done amazingly well and will continue to do with VIA based XO-1.5 and especially with ARM based XO-2 coming soon with Chrome OS probably.

  3. Ivan agrees with Nicholas, I don't get the fuss on Ivan Krstić Says Negroponte's Wrong About Sugar and OLPC · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Basically you read Ivan Kristic's post, he starts off saying he's always been against the Sugar UI.

    Where in Nicholas Negroponte's interview does it say he thinks that the core Linux hardware/software development was the mistake?

    Where in Nicholas Negroponte's interviews does he say he thinks Windows support on the XO is better than optimized Linux?

    Talking about working for the evil empire, I'd say Ivan Kristic working for Apple should not have too much to brag about.

    He's a genius for sure, and the work OLPC engineers have done for XO-1 was simply amazing considering the very small amount of engineers employed by OLPC, but I simply don't get why Ivan doesn't simply recognize that an open platform like XO simply cannot and should not try to block Microsoft from doing whatever they want if they want to port Windows XP for the unit as well.

    Simply put, how can Ivan be working like this on an OPEN X86 based project and then demand that Microsoft not be allowed to port their Windows OS to it?

  4. Re:A lot of things combined to kill the XO on Ivan Krstić Says Negroponte's Wrong About Sugar and OLPC · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You guys a so wrong. OLPC is alive and strong. A million children are using it every day, and that number is increasing steadilly. Quit talking about it in the past tense.

    Mesh networking is crucial to OLPC:

    - Children in poor areas with NO internet connection can still collaborate on projects, share data.

    - Children in poor areas with LITTLE internet connection, can all share the same hotspot thus providing much cheaper Internet access, down towards $0.20 per child per month. This works.

    ARM Processors consume ALOT less power than X86. With ARM you are talking milliwatts of power used to run the laptop, not watts.

  5. Re:OLPC is a success on Ivan Krstić Says Negroponte's Wrong About Sugar and OLPC · · Score: 4, Interesting

    OLPC always said they'd reach the $100 price point by selling many millions of laptops. Initial goal was at least sell 6 million units to reach that price goal. Now, with "only" 1 million units sold, and an unsupported AMD Geode based hardware that uses non-optimized anymore components, you can't expect them to be able to lower the price.

    Though OLPC is launching XO-1.5 based on the VIA processor in the next few weeks or months as you can see in the videos on my http://olpc.tv/ Using this new lower power VIA processor, OLPC can speed it up 4x as well and still lower the cost and lower the power consumption.

    You complainers about Windows support need to learn that it's BECAUSE OLPC is an open platform that Microsoft is able to port Windows XP for it. You are completely ridiculous not understanding that for OLPC to not support Windows XP, they would have had to build a closed proprietary system. Since specs of XO are opened, and it's X86 based, Microsoft is obviously able to read the specs on the Wiki and build a port of Windows XP for it. It's just plain stupid to keep asking for OLPC to somehow block Microsoft.

    Give 1 Get 1 program was not a failure at all. Tens of thousands of laptops were given for free in dozens of countries. To create those dozens of hundred or thousand-laptop OLPC pilot projects. Those projects would not have been financed if it wasn't for the G1G1 program.

    Now sure, you can critisize OLPC for not having found more money if you want. I find it that considering they are just a 30-employee non-profit, finding $200 million to fund those 1 million first XO laptops is pretty decent achievement no matter what. Sure, I'd prefer if they had access to billions of dollars to help millions more children get laptops. People in rich countries are greedy, they only care to pay for stuff that they can get for themselves.

  6. Re:OLPC is a success on Ivan Krstić Says Negroponte's Wrong About Sugar and OLPC · · Score: 2, Funny

    Also, to reach those 100 million children, OLPC needs to have more than just a couple dozen engineers working on the whole optimizations of hardware and software for the project.

    What OLPC managed to build in XO1 and XO-1.5 with 30 employees and the little budget that they could get is absolutely amazing.

    But what OLPC probably needs for XO-2 to absolutely work and sell laptops soon at $50 to revolutionize education worldwide, is thousands of engineers and the support from Barack Obama and the European Union.

    So OLPC's political agenda definitely needs to be more targeted towards the politics of education and aid of the USA and Europe and with much more ambition to make things happen in huge scale as quickly as possible.

  7. OLPC is a success on Ivan Krstić Says Negroponte's Wrong About Sugar and OLPC · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Quit posting about OLPC being a failure. It is absolutely not.

    Thanks to OLPC, we have soon 50 million netbooks in rich countries.

    Thanks to OLPC, children have soon millions of cheap lower power laptops in poor countries.

    Thanks to OLPC, the PC/Laptop industry's interpretation of Moore's law has totally been reshaped, every 18month now PC/laptops will be half the price instead of 2x more powerful and with 2x more bloatware.

    Sure, I would have been happier, and so would most other Linux geeks if OLPC had shipped 100 million laptops to poor children by now, and not just 1 million units. Reason for that not happening yet in multi-hundred million scales though are several:

    1. Intel will do anything it can not to be killed off by a non-profit laptop technology revolution. Including abusing of monopolistic situations and corrupting politicians.

    2. AMD is not much interested in helping OLPC succeed in lowering the cost of laptops and PCs. Lower cost also means less profits and margins for AMD, and AMD has enough problems with profits and margins as it is.

    Looking forward, to reach those 100 million poor children sooner rather than later:

    1. OLPC needs to find an alternative to AMD as soon as possible. VIA is planned for XO-1.5 which could hopefully ship a few millions of units in a few months time, if VIA supports this move of OLPC creating a cheaper and lower power market using their processor. XO-1.5 could reach the $150 pricepoint soon and enable dozens of commercial netbooks using the VIA processor and also copying on the way OLPC is using the VIA processor.

    2. OLPC needs to implement the worlds best ARM processor based laptops for XO-2 working with Google to implement the so called Chrome OS on those. Cloud computing can work also for places without stable internet access, HTML5 supports offline web apps and offline databases. OLPC needs to push Google to make it work on WiFi Mesh networks as well. XO-2 can start at $100 when released and reach the $50 price point, when manufactured using any of half a dozen ARM processor companies chips. All of TI, Qualcomm, Marvell, Freescale, Nvidia and Samsung, all those ARM processors should fit in the XO-2 design. Competition will bring the prices down faster.

  8. Re:Negroponte is Right: Sugar WAS a Mistake! on Negroponte Sees Sugar As OLPC's Biggest Mistake · · Score: 1

    Well if you don't like Sugar, you can just follow one of many online tutorials to install any of many other Linux distributions on it.

  9. Re:I have an early OLPC and Sugar sucks on Negroponte Sees Sugar As OLPC's Biggest Mistake · · Score: 1

    euhm. Perhaps you didn't know, but Windows works on the same X86 hardware that is made for Linux. All details about the XO is open source. So really, asking for Windows not to work on the device, is moronic.

  10. Re:Negroponte is Right: Sugar WAS a Mistake! on Negroponte Sees Sugar As OLPC's Biggest Mistake · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Eeepc consumes 10x more power and costs upwards 2x as much. Not sunlight readable, not sand/water proof, not shock proof, not mesh networkable so many other things that are absolutely required in those places the 1.2 Million OLPC laptops have so far been delivered.

  11. Re:Time to reinvent the $100 Laptop 2.0 on Negroponte Sees Sugar As OLPC's Biggest Mistake · · Score: 1

    partner up with Google to use ARM processor based ChromeOS laptops (,,,)

    Each village gets a web server with wireless Internet access that can run Cloud applications in Google Chrome to save on storage space and invent new Cloud applications to run with Google Chrome.

    Exactly, but, HTML5 defines it so that servers are not needed for web apps to run. Each web app, could be 200kb, is cached and stored on the ARM laptop's memory according to how the Chrome Browser works. Each web-app only need to be updated when new versions are published. And web-apps also interact with a local database hosted on the $100 Chrome laptop itself.

    As for what village servers should be, I think OLPC should develop $50 WiMax2WiFi, WhiteSpaces2WiFi and HSDPA2WiFi routers. Those routers can also have a few GB built-in storage, be able to host low power USB hard drives eventually as well (where the USB hard drive is only powered when data needs to be stored onto it from a flash memory based multi-GB buffer). Then basically one router only required per village, and OLPC needs to keep going the meshing WiFi systems to spread that Internet in each village.

    Chrome OS needs to manage meshing as well, the setting should allow for Web apps and local databases of contents also to be automatically shared on Mesh networks.

  12. Re:FUD in the article... on OLPC 2.0 — One Laptop Foundation Reboots · · Score: 1

    Yup and again, consider, if OLPC was using a Lithium-Ion battery it would have over 20 hours of battery life in ebook black and white mode.

    But again, OLPC prefers a cheaper, safer battery, that absolutely does not have any polluting chemicals in it and that lasts about 3 times as long in terms of battery charge cycles. 2000+ recharge cycles before losing capacity versus 500 for Lithium-ion types.

    In western countries, people don't care much buying a new laptop every 2 years, in developing countries, the OLPC XO-1 has to last at least 5 years of daily use.

  13. Re:FUD in the article... on OLPC 2.0 — One Laptop Foundation Reboots · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You are probably using a big fat heavy 6-cell battery to get that type of battery life, thus a normal 3-cell battery on a netbook is 2.5 hours.

    It's a fact the OLPC XO-1 consumes less than 10x less power than an Intel powered netbook.

    The question shouldn't be only about the battery life of the battery, it should be about if the kids can recharge the laptop using a hand crank, using a bicycle or other human power generator system.

  14. Re:FUD in the article... on OLPC 2.0 — One Laptop Foundation Reboots · · Score: 5, Interesting

    the thing last 3 hours on normal use

    That's just not true. In full backlight mode and WiFi you might get 3 hours on the OLPC, but in black and white outdoor sunlight readable mode, in ebook mode without WiFi, you get 12 hours on the OLPC while netbooks get below 2 hours with a similar sized battery.

    Fact is OLPC chose a lower capacity battery using a new type of technology which, doesn't pollute, doesn't explode (like netbook batteries potentially do), and most importantly the OLPC battery lifetime is much longer. A normal netbook Lithium-Ion battery lowers it's capacity already afte 500 recharge cycles, after about 1500 charge cycles, a normal netbook lithium-ion battery usually is totally dead. While the OLPC battery keeps its charge capacity for moe than 5000 recharge cycles. Which means the same OLPC can last more than 5 years with the same battery capacity while netbook batteries last only about 1-2 years.

  15. OLPC is 10x to 20x lower power than netbooks on OLPC 2.0 — One Laptop Foundation Reboots · · Score: 3, Informative

    OLPC runs at below 2W all included, even below 1W in ebook reading mode, Netbooks need at least 20W all included.

  16. Re:NASA needs to send Humans now! on NASA Mars Rovers Hit 5-Year Anniversary · · Score: 1

    We've had ISS parts in Space for more than decades and they work fine. We know exactly how to build the spaceships right now. Read up on marssociaety.org for detailed plans of how to do it.

    And the Human to Mars project is going to be the most interesting thing to watch on TV. You must be insane if you really think such a show of the worlds first attempt at sending Humans on another planet isn't going to be the most interesting thing for everyone worldwide to tune into at any time of the day. Even if it takes then 6 months to go there, 1.5 years on Mars and 6 months back. Big Brother and Singing competitions and other reality shows on TV takes months at the time and are billions of times less interesting to watch.

  17. Human mission is $30 billion on NASA Mars Rovers Hit 5-Year Anniversary · · Score: 1

    Exactly, if you want to discover fossils or signs of previous life on Mars, if you want to find water and other minerals, ONLY Humans on Mars can find it and prove it.

    Try finding anything on earth with a bunch of automated robots, it's impossible. A robot can't even drive a car down a road without crashing it much less even taking out the rubbish. How do you expect to discover anything close to what Humans can using robots and artificial intelligence (since there is a 10+ minute light distance delay).

    Also the Humans to Mars program is going to cost 5 times cheaper then the Apollo mission at least. Cause we already have most of the technology right now. Only thing needed is to prepare a heavy lift booster in collaboration with the Russians, who already have one that is nearly available which they used not too long ago.

  18. Human mission = 60 rovers on NASA Mars Rovers Hit 5-Year Anniversary · · Score: 1

    But the rovers were super cheap. $500 million only. A Human Mission to Mars is about $30 billion. That's 50 times cheaper then the Financial bail-out. It's about the same price as supposedly "saving" the big auto-makers. It's 50 times cheaper then the War in Iraq.

    We cannot afford not to send Humans on Mars.

  19. NASA needs to send Humans now! on NASA Mars Rovers Hit 5-Year Anniversary · · Score: 2, Interesting

    NASA can send Humans to Mars right now, or start working on it now with full NASA manned budget on that instead of ISS and the Space Shuttle, and we could have the first Humans on Mars within 4 years from now. It will cost less than $30 billion to send 24 astronauts on 4 spaceships to Mars, with 4 earth-return spaceships sent there at the same time for the trip home. 6 months travel to go, 1 and a half years spent on Mars and 6 months for the return trip. It'd be a 2.5 year at least live Mars reality show, in HDTV cause more bandwidth will be available using a bunch of faster satellite links, just that is worth many billions in advertising revenues.

    Anyone who doesn't agree with me is a moron.

  20. Re:Stop spamming the slashdot with your book on Spam King and Family Dead In Murder-Suicide · · Score: 1

    My point is that we are all spammers to a certain degree. And you have to be a good spammer if you want to get a good job no matter your qualifications, you would always want to have the best job possible, so you have to spam.

    This guy found a way to make a few hundred thousand dollars spamming for penny stocks. This shouldn't warrant him being sent to prison. It's not going to deter any other spammer. Especially not the russian mafia that is spamming about a million times more then this guy, that control about 300 million zombie computer which they use to automatically relay spam. Spam is international, so really there is no point in trying to set some examples in the USA on this thing.

    The Government should rather focus on implementing strategies to block spam.

  21. Re:Sad... on Spam King and Family Dead In Murder-Suicide · · Score: 1

    He was in a prison farm, so-called minimum security prison, but that has nothing to do with security level, that has to do with budget. There is no budget to allow every prisoner have his own cell, they are stacked by the hundreds in big dorm rooms.

  22. Re:This quote says it all on Spam King and Family Dead In Murder-Suicide · · Score: 1

    Those so-called "minimum-security" prison farms exist for one reason only, there is not enough budget to let every inmate have their own cell. So they simply call the thing minimum security cause they haven't got enough money to pay salaries to have more guards.

  23. Re:This quote says it all on Spam King and Family Dead In Murder-Suicide · · Score: 1

    It doesn't discourage others to do the same. Every sociological and psychological study show that prison is not a deterrent, and death penalty is even less so. The more people you put in your prisons, the more revolt, the more crime, the more chaos you get in your society.

  24. Stop spamming the slashdot with your book on Spam King and Family Dead In Murder-Suicide · · Score: 1

    Stop spamming the slashdot with your unsolicited 2076 novel URL. I did not ask for it, it is totally unrelated to the discussion. Putting that link in your profile is despicable, I hope your wife doesn't know about it.

  25. You are a good dad on Spam King and Family Dead In Murder-Suicide · · Score: 1

    I hope for you and for your children that you are a good parent. Though try to consider a situation where you would have been sent to jail for some stupid little thing as some weed or that you had downloaded some music on BitTorrent. That the judge wanted to make an example out of you, that you were totally ridiculed infront of all your family and friends cause they didn't really know what your job was really about. The IRS then takes posession of your home and all your money (fair enough in a certain way if you took that money from people doing spam). Imagine a situation where you were in some crappy prison (like most prisons in the USA, be it minimum or maximum security, they are mostly extremely crappy). Your wife visits you and you see an opportunity to speed off with the car. Maybe your wife comes and tells you that she wants to leave you or something. Now you took the car and left not really thinking about the consequences. You're considering escaping to Mexico or something. But then, you find out by switching on the TV or logging onto the Internet that the FBI, U.S. Marshals, the IRS and the Rocky Mountain Safe Streets Task Force is after you, which makes it practically impossible to escape. And they have shotguns, they might even know where you are. While logging on the Internet you see that Slashdot and a thousand other blogs are making fun of you, the whole Internet is making fun of you. You see, bad circumstances and bad luck can always lead to bad situations and atrocious behavior under very unusual stressful conditions.