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Intel Laptop Competes With One Laptop Per Child

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Mon May 21, 2007 02:34 PM
from the highest-form-of-flattery-still-doesn't-pay-the-bills dept.
Tracy Reed writes "According to the BBC, Intel has designed and begun marketing it's own low-cost laptop targeted at education in developing countries. 'Professor Negroponte, who aims to distribute millions of laptops to kids in developing countries, said Intel had hurt his mission "enormously". Speaking to US broadcaster CBS, Intel's chairman denied the claims. "We're not trying to drive him out of business," said Craig Barrett. "We're trying to bring capability to young people." Mr Barrett has previously dismissed the $100 laptop as a "gadget".'"
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  • by microbob (29155) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:37PM (#19212149)
    Can I buy either one of these? I'd like to get my hands on them to see what they are all about.
    • by Odiumjunkie (926074) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:40PM (#19212195)
      No, you can't at the moment, although there are various conflicting rumours that the OLPC machine will be on sale to the general public. It was my understanding that it would be only be possible to buy two at a time, with one going to a child in the developing world, but I'm not sure wether or not that turned out to be true.
    • by rmdyer (267137) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:35PM (#19212897)
      ...to me that they can build these things for less than the price of most MP3/AAC music players. More materials, more software/hardware development, etc. And they still stand to make a (some small) profit? That leads me to believe -we- are being taken "quite" advantage of by vendors of music/movie players. In fact, and in general, we are all being taken advantage of these days by big corps that vend anything from cell phones to TVs, and especially those that include any kind of "service" plan.

      It's no wonder they can sell Xunes. All it takes is 1 customer and they've made a profit! I give up. ;-(

      • by goombah99 (560566) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:53PM (#19213115)
        Some of the reasons the costs are lower than an mp3 player are because only governments can by this in bulk

        1) pass on all distribution, shipping, marketing costs to the government.
        2) likewise no warrantee or after sales service.
        3) only volume pre-orders. so their is no risk to the manfacturer on scale of production. All ecnomoies of scale are achieved on the first order.
        4) Other than the software there's no expensive cutting edge components.
        5) no retail stores, no middlemen, no warehouses.
        6) no sales floor packaging.

        Presumably those costs account for the majority of costs in the sales price of your MP3, which if it lacked any of those you would not buy it.

      • by X-rated Ouroboros (526150) on Monday May 21 2007, @04:05PM (#19213261) Homepage

        Most children have laps.
        They do not necessarily have desks.
        Or bicycles.
        Or generators.

          • by mrchaotica (681592) * on Monday May 21 2007, @06:14PM (#19214875)

            If the Screen and CPU are seperate units, you can have a small portable computer, with a box to keep dust and dirt out of it while not in use.

            Sure, but so what? How would that be any better or cheaper?

            What is really needed is a small, very low cost, fairly durable (especially for dust and debris) portable computer.

            Right: small and durable (and low-power). Hence, a laptop.

            Really, even if you were trying not to give them laptops, by the time you analyze the requirements you end up with a laptop anyway! Why fight it?

      • by PopeRatzo (965947) * on Monday May 21 2007, @05:57PM (#19214697) Homepage Journal
        A hand-powered, field-capable, inexpensive wireless laptop is something that many many consumers want very much.

        That means there's almost no chance of them ever becoming available to the public.

        The corporate world no longer believes they have to give consumers what they want. Because, we have become the consumables.
  • by CastrTroy (595695) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:39PM (#19212181) Homepage
    Isn't this a good thing? Isn't having many companies working towards the same objective, offering similar products, good for competition, and good for making things cheaper in the end? Maybe lots of competition could give us the $50 laptop. Having a monopoly in any business, even charity, or to help the poor, is necessary to ensure that costs are being kept to a minimum. How do we know that the $50 laptop isn't possible unless there's competition against the guy offering the $100 laptop.
    • by Odiumjunkie (926074) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:44PM (#19212233)
      Competition is one thing in a regular market, but the accusation is that Intel is using their marketplace power and financial reserves to undercut a not-for-profit to force them out of the market as part of their corporate rivalry with AMD, who supplied the CPUs for the OLPC machines. That's something different from healthy competition.
      • by elrous0 (869638) * on Monday May 21 2007, @02:50PM (#19212339)
        What the Hell did Negroponte expect? Did he think Intel was just going to roll over the let their biggest competitor sell tens-of-millions of chips without offering their own alternative?
      • by CheeseTroll (696413) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:55PM (#19212435)
        Exactly. And the danger in that is that once OLPC is forced out, then Intel will also discontinue their efforts.
          • by flitty (981864) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:43PM (#19213001)
            You forgot one
            Intel joins the fray, OLPC can no longer get enough countries to sign on for the project (due to worries about the new intel machine), making the mass production price of $100 unattainable, OLPC drops out when they run out of money.

            Intel, in using Windows and their massive R&D team finally concludes that $100 is too cheap, and decides it's not worth it to their "stockholders" to continue the project, and they drop out also. Everyone loses.
            • by DMoylan (65079) on Monday May 21 2007, @05:04PM (#19214079)
              or another option. do what the swiss army do.

              the swiss army knife is made by 2 companies victorinox and wegner. they buy 50% of their knives from each as they did not want to have to depend on a single manufacturer. it lasted for about 100 years till it looked like wegner was going to be bought by a non swiss company. victorinox stepped in and bought wegner but maintains it as separate company.

              http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swiss_Army_knife#Vict orinox_and_Wenger [wikipedia.org]

              perhaps the olpc project could buy 50% of their chips from intel and 50% from amd. of course they would have to each be making a very similar chip or for intel to be building the amd chip under licence. they could still compete and profit as they each find cheaper ways to make the same chips. they would each be demonstrating that their interest is in educating the children which is very good pr.
            • by Grail (18233) on Monday May 21 2007, @09:17PM (#19216339) Journal
              Except that in your "everyone loses" scenario, Intel still wins because they never actually shipped any product, but they succeeded in blocking one of their competitors from entering a new market.
      • by Mike1024 (184871) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:23PM (#19212755)
        Competition is one thing in a regular market, but the accusation is that Intel is using their marketplace power and financial reserves to undercut a not-for-profit to force them out of the market as part of their corporate rivalry with AMD, who supplied the CPUs for the OLPC machines.

        On the other hand, if Intel provided a product that achieved OLPC's educational aims, but heavily subsidised it, one could argue that the OLPC project fulfilled its aims - Just instead of distributing their own product they tricked Intel into designing, distributing, supporting and paying for it.
        • by Plekto (1018050) on Monday May 21 2007, @05:01PM (#19214035)
          Intel's FUD aside, there are four main reasons why the OLPC has nothing to fear.

          1: Power. Built-in generator is a sweet thing as other as pointed out. In fact, there are schools in Mexico and other 2nd world countries where electricity is either too expensive to pay for or not available.

          OLPC - No cost to run.

          2: No fan, no vents, sealed against elements like a typical cellphone. This is the main reason they went with a low powered chip - to make it weatherproof. Not to really save power. Intel's design is going to have problems in the U.S. - let alone someplace like Egypt or Brazil.

          OLPC - more rugged. Less maintainence issues.

          3: Open Source. OLPC is giving the nations in question a free ride. Full source, free upgrades, and so on - in short, a package that can be maintained for zero cost by their education departments. Forever. (this is the part where despite the FUD, that Intel hits a big brick wall - cost to maintain) These countries aren't idiots. They just don't have the money, so whatever costs less down the road and can be maintained for a decade without major upgrades (or more!) is going to win. OLPC was carefully made to fit exactly this requirement. Intel's Windows box is a disaster waiting to happen and they know it. Plus, the Intel box runs slower! Faster CPU but the OS bloat is apalling while the OLPC is efficient. Clear win for Negroponte.

          OLPC - no cost to maintain the software.

          4: FUD doesn't work with these countries. They have a built-in loathing, verging on abject hatred for being exploited by foreign interests and corporations as it is. Intel doesn't get this at all. The guy offering to be their friend for real will get ten times the traction. He has little to worry about. This is why foreign leaders listen to President Carter. Because he's a decent person who isn't going to stab them in the back for profit (and he's a nice guy, too). Megroponte has nothing to fear - he's a saint in their minds already compared to Intel or Microsoft.

          OLPC - true philanthropy at work.

          He really doesn't have much to fear. But, yes, I wold also be a bit ticked off at their FUD.
    • No. Intel and Microsoft are interested in replacing the OLPC (small, light, huge battery life, open, safe) with little shrunken down normal laptops. With the OLPC you get the great battery life, all the programs (and programming languages) designed to encourage learning. With the Classmate you get... Windows. And Windows software.

      As I see it, the OLPC is about learning about computers and getting kids interested in learning. There is a ton to like about it. The Classmate is about getting kids used to Wintel computers, and locked into the status quo. Sure, they are both "computers", but they are targeted very differently.

      But OLPC is not for profit but Intel can dump classmate PCs cheaper than they can be made. They can call this "philanthropy". They can kill a better (in many ways, but not hardware speed wise) computer and get more people who come up on their system and used to that. But they are cheaper (or could be)! They are more powerful! They run Windows (read: it's a "real" computer).

      The OLPC is a revolution in many ways. If Intel really wanted to just help people, they would donate free CPUs or memory to the OLPC project, or at least sell them undercutting AMD. Instead of doing that and helping, they shrunk a normal laptop, made a few little changes, and have decided their way is better.

      Negroponte came off a little paranoid in the 60 minutes interview, but I agree with him. They are scared. If Intel subsidized the OLPC maybe they would be willing to put the little Intel stickers on every one.

      I'd gladly buy an OLPC today if I could. I find the little computer fascinating (both hardware, software, and principal). The other groups (MS and Intel, mostly) just seem to be trying to make a low cost laptop that is otherwise what everyone else uses, with the same problems.

        • I see no reason (aside from the hippie objections of you OSS diehards) why it can't be just as effective a laptop (or even better) for students than the OLPC version.

          How about these:

          • Usability by children who can't read yet
          • Usability in environments with no power available
          • Networking with zero infrastructure
          • Usability in full daylight
          • A mode that allows tens of hours of e-book usage on a battery charge
          • A security model that allows mobile code without compromising safety
          • A computing model that teaches kids to create and modify software, rather than just consume it
        • I see no reason (aside from the hippie objections of you OSS diehards) why it can't be just as effective a laptop (or even better) for students than the OLPC version.

          Well, let us address these reasons, and perhaps you will learn to see them.

          Both have good battery life (more than enough for kids to use at night then bring back to the school to recharge in the morning)

          The OLPC isn't just intended for kids to do their homework on. It's intended to be a window on the world, providing collaborative computing and access to information.

          When they're not using the OLPC as a schoolbook, they can be using it to help their parents find information that will help them all survive, for example.

          Also, you might not be aware of this, but many schools in the third world don't have electricity. If they have light other than the ambient, they're burning something. The yo-yo charger of the OLPC is infinitely more useful than the plug-in charger of the ClassmatePC if there's no where to plug in!

          Advantage: Clearly goes to OLPC.

          both will likely have good educational software and wifi support

          Actually, there will likely be far more for the students to do with their wifi than the classmatepc will provide. ClassmatePC provides the hardware and the OS, and that's it. Period, end of story. OLPC provides educational (and other) software out of the box and provides it on a system with an interface that is, if not intuitive, at least more intuitive, less language-oriented, and vastly simpler than Windows. The ClassmatePC is okay for the developed world where the children already know how to use Windows, but the OLPC's simple and clean interface is a huge advantage.

          In addition, it can not really be argued that Windows could be more secure than the ClassmatePC. So there is another reason to avoid Windows. There people have no reason to reduce their total cost of 0wnership.

          Advantage: OLPC

          the Intel version comes with a plain old ethernet port too, for wired schools, unlike the OLPC

          The idea of the OLPC is primarily to serve people who live in places where there probably isn't going to be anything to plug in to. And the OLPC plus a USB ethernet device is cheaper and still lower-power than the ClassmatePC. But virtually none of the target audience for the OLPC needs wired ethernet.

          Advantage: Intel if anyone, but really nobody. Irrelevant.

          If Negroponte were TRULY interested in the kids more than his ego, he would be working WITH Intel, not against them. There is no reason they can't work together.

          I can think of two reasons. First, intel doesn't want to work with them, because their CPU is from AMD. Second, intel had the chance to work with them, but instead they called the OLPC a "gadget" and decided to make their own competing device, then in order to sabotage the OLPC project in favor of the ClassmatePC they started putting out articles on "what's wrong with" the OLPC and publicly discrediting it in totally irrelevant but still media-attention-grabbing ways.

          Intel is not interested in working with the OLPC and never had been. They see its popularity only as a sign that they need to enter the market themselves; but in doing so they have brought a product which is utterly unsuited to the target market.

          It's not a surprise that intel is scum. They're a publicly traded company and they have a responsibility to be bastards to satisfy their shareholders. But it is a surprise that so many morally bankrupt individuals would defend their actions and act as if the OLPC project or Negroponte caused this problem.

        • by CustomDesigned (250089) on Monday May 21 2007, @04:29PM (#19213619) Homepage Journal
          Microsoft games would be just as good for grammar stage learning, but once you get to the logic stage of child development, there is a world of difference. (Grammar, Logic, and Rhetoric are terms from the Trivium concept of classical education.) At the logic stage (which kicks in sometime between age 6 and 21 depending on the child - bell curve thing peaking around junior high), kids want to understand how things work, not just memorize facts. M$ actively prevents going very deep into how their system works. That is why I've seen all the students at the Logic stage saddled with M$ donated equipment and software go out and buy TI calculators that they can barely afford. The reason is that they can access a much lower level. I watch them explain symbol tables and software interrupt vectors to each other saying, "Cool!" and such.

          In the class I teach, they use a Linux system (FC4), and can do the same thing, plus have a vast library of real code to look at. Many of my students are handicapped with parent provided Windows computers at home. Fortunately, there are interpreter based systems like Squeak and Python that run on Windows and let them dive into a lot of low level details (just not to the hardware level).

          The bottom line is that an OSS based computer, whether Intel or OLPC, will be far more valuable for computer science education of interested logic stage and older kids. In the poor areas being targeted, either system will need to be useful for a long time. I can see a synergy between the two hardware devices. Use OSS software for both systems. Use the Intel Classmate for computers that stay in the classroom as a resource. Use OLPC as take home devices owned by the children.
    • by Oldsmobile (930596) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:16PM (#19212659) Journal
      The problem is, this isn't about competing in a free market.

      Here's the 60 minutes clip: http://olpc.tv/2007/05/21/60-minutes/ [olpc.tv]
      • by Old Man Kensey (5209) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:54PM (#19212399) Homepage

        Again, Intel is just trying to generate press, "Look at us! Look at how great we are! We are trying to help the poor!"

        And AMD wasn't when they inked a deal with OLPC?

        Intel would be more advise to give money to the OLPC project so the per-system cost could be lowered. Team work is needed here, not competition.

        That would be completely stupid of Intel. First, it would be putting money in the pockets of AMD. Second, AMD press would have an absolute field day -- "If Intel trusts us for the hard stuff, shouldn't you?" The reality is that Intel's choices were roll their own, or stay out completely.

        • by SiChemist (575005) * on Monday May 21 2007, @03:06PM (#19212555) Homepage
          AMD was already producing the "OLPC" processor before they were contacted by OLPC. It's a "computer on a chip" called the Geode. We have one here at work in a low-power PC running Debian. Bought it in 2005. Works quite well for a low power consumption but fairly powerful single board computer. Our system was used in the field as a data collecting computer for a research project.
          • by Old Man Kensey (5209) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:22PM (#19212735) Homepage
            I'm not saying the Geode is custom for the OLPC. I'm saying I'll bet you dollars to doughnuts that AMD is providing them at a steep discount, but is banking on recovering that money in general goodwill for future consumer purchases. To impugn Intel as "only interested in making money" ignores the reality that AMD no doubt got involved in OLPC for exactly the same reason. Somewhere, some accountant at AMD had to draw up a balance sheet showing the OLPC CPUs as a net profit over time -- to do otherwise would be to risk the near-certainty of a shareholder lawsuit.
            • To impugn Intel as "only interested in making money" ignores the reality that AMD no doubt got involved in OLPC for exactly the same reason. Somewhere, some accountant at AMD had to draw up a balance sheet showing the OLPC CPUs as a net profit over time -- to do otherwise would be to risk the near-certainty of a shareholder lawsuit.

              The difference is that AMD is working to make money by doing something positive, and intel is working to sabotage that positive thing in order to make money.

              Personally I don't give a crap why someone does something, aside from it being a potential indicator of future plans. I don't care what they think of something. What I care about is what someone actually does. And what intel is actually doing is sabotaging the OLPC project in pursuit of profits. In the process they are spreading lies and generally damaging the credibility of the OLPC project through falsehood.

              I don't think that AMD is good and intel is bad, I think that AMD is there and intel is bad, in this situation.

                • by mickwd (196449) on Monday May 21 2007, @06:23PM (#19214955)
                  "First, did we ever just jump into large endeavors without considering the costs?"

                  Iraq ?

                  "I have no idea if you read/comprehend your own posts..."

                  This is quite the most curious comment I've seen in a long time here.

                  Nevertheless, you've made your point and I've made mine. Let others make of them what they will.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 21 2007, @02:41PM (#19212207)
    Two Laptops Per Child
  • OLPC review (Score:5, Informative)

    by EricBoyd (532608) <mrericboyd@NOspAM.yahoo.com> on Monday May 21 2007, @02:45PM (#19212275) Homepage
    I got to play with an XO laptop yesterday at the Maker Faire [makerfaire.com]. It is not a gadget - it is a computer built for a child (small keyboard) with little prior experience with IT (simple GUI, etc). I wrote up a review [digitalcrusader.ca] (with pictures) on my blog.
  • by $RANDOMLUSER (804576) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:46PM (#19212279)
    Video linky here [cbsnews.com]
  • <tinfoil> (Score:5, Informative)

    by garbletext (669861) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:50PM (#19212335)
    Perhaps the [MP|RI]AA have a stake in intel's competing design: it includes a TPM chip!
    From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classmate_PC [wikipedia.org]:

    The Classmate PC, in contrast to the XO (which does not require anything extra) includes a Trusted Platform Module (TPM)[2] to provide any local Windows XP Embedded installation with access to hardware-based DRM.
  • by milgr (726027) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:53PM (#19212385)
    According to Intel [classmatepc.com], the screen resolution is 800x400. This pales compared to the OLPC's 1200x900 [laptop.org] resolution. 800x400 seems barely usable. Additionally, Intel shows students straining [classmatepc.com] to read the screen.

    Which would you rather use?

    • by DerekLyons (302214) <fairwater&gmail,com> on Monday May 21 2007, @04:21PM (#19213523) Homepage

      According to Intel, the screen resolution is 800x400. This pales compared to the OLPC's 1200x900 resolution. 800x400 seems barely usable.

      Ah, yes. Unless the laptop in question has the mega resolution of the modern desktop - it's not useable. The fact that 800x400 (or 640x480) worked quite well for thousands (millions?) of PCs for years is simply irrelevant.
       
       

      Additionally, Intel shows students straining to read the screen.

      'Straining' is a subjective judgement - not a fact that can be discerned from the picture.
       
       

      Which would you rather use?

      Which I would use is utterly irrelevant, as the criteria for my machine are vastly different from the criteria by which an educational machine should be judged.
      • by DragonWriter (970822) on Monday May 21 2007, @05:26PM (#19214363)

        Ah, yes. Unless the laptop in question has the mega resolution of the modern desktop - it's not useable. The fact that 800x400 (or 640x480) worked quite well for thousands (millions?) of PCs for years is simply irrelevant.


        Those millions of PCs were not being marketed as a platform for reading to replace the paper books and the associated distribution costs in third-world countries, replacing them with electronic distribution and duplication. That's part of the vision of the OLPC, if not Classmate.

        The role that the OLPC is aimed it is not the role that computers were used in when they first started to be used widely in US schools, so comparing them with, say, those computers isn't all that reasonable. The features ought to be viewed in light of the intended use. For reading in place of books, both the reflective mode and its high resolution are key features.
  • by Stu101 (1031686) on Monday May 21 2007, @05:46PM (#19214585)
    People, Don't forget that with this OLPC system, not only does M$ crap itself at the thought of millions of linux competent kids, as intel does in chips, but Intel could loose out in another way, as could M$

    OLPC is a paradigm shift in computing. There are NO licence costs, everything is useable, for free, Everything has been designed from the ground up, its a new legacy free, tightly tuned computer that has thrown out all the old PC baggage and nastyness, with a new light, useable OS, that can fly on a 350ish MHz machine.

    If it works, there is no reason why they cant make desktop systems using the same code, optimised, open source components. Imagine an OLPC desktop with 512MB RAM and a hard drive, and perhaps an 800MHz chip. It could potentially change home desktop computing in developing worlds forever.
  • by Futile Rhetoric (1105323) on Monday May 21 2007, @06:58PM (#19215281)
    Isn't this a shitstorm. I especially like the fellow who coined the term "armchair economists" -- clearly, his trimester of community college economics 101 has left him quite enamored with the idea of perfect competition and all the wonderful things that it entails. Unfortunately, markets (other than a handful of notable exceptions) don't work like that. There is no perfect information; there are significant barriers to entry; consumers, and in this case governments (Third World governments, no less) don't always act in a utility-maximizing way. The addition of a competitor need not make things better, at all.

    We're not dealing with free market economics here, there is a multitude of ways in which they are and can be distorted -- hell, the market doesn't even exist, yet. There is no infrastructure in place. The final consumers aren't the ones making the decisions, either -- governments are. Had I decided on which laptop I'd want as a gift instead of my father, then HP would have sold one less "entertainment laptop" with an integrated Intel Graphics Accelerator. There is a limited number of (quite possibly poorly informed, certainly if Intel can help it) customers. Government officials don't always know what the hell they're doing, and they can certainly be susceptible to meaningless marketing drivel (not to mention gifts). There is no reason whatsoever why the best product will win the competition in this case, and unless Intel can increase the value to the children, for whom the laptops are intended in the first place, enough to make up for the losses of economies of scale by OLPC (not to mention the possibility of its complete demise), a market with two participants makes no sense whatsoever.

    This is quite possibly a one-shot endeavor; it has to succeed now, or it will written off as worthless. There may not be a second round -- if Intel uses its considerable capital to price OLPC out of the market by offering their laptops below cost, there may not be any coming back if Intel decide to pull out due to lack of profits later on. I haven't heard anyone argue that the Classmate is a better machine for the purpose of educating Third World children yet, and I find this most telling.

    On the one hand, we have a consortium of corporations (you could go with just Intel I suppose, but I'm quite certain that Microsoft are backing the project, as does everyone else here it seems) with considerable economic and marketing muscle, whose sole purpose it is to make a profit off of their operations. On the other, we have a non-profit organization whose purpose it is to provide children with educational opportunities in parts of the world that need them; to reach as many children as possible by minimizing costs; to design a machine which best serves those goals. The latter is what's at stake here -- it doesn't take a genius to figure out which direction Intel will go in if Intel's goals (making a profit) clash with the purpose of the project.

    Finally, I'm amused by the cynicism and ad hominem attacks against Negroponte. A project which he obviously feels strongly about (and believes will do a lot of good) is jeopardized by people who're in it to make a buck. If he believed that Intel's involvement would better serve the goals of OLPC, his reaction may have been entirely different. He does not, and he has every reason not to. He's snappy about it, and so am I -- and I'm not even personally involved in the project.
    • Re:Jeebus (Score:5, Interesting)

      by garbletext (669861) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:45PM (#19212273)
      Negroponte's upset that Intel has been sniping out the specific countries that OLPC is targeting, telling governments to hold off until Intel's offering is ready, publishing material like "the shortcomings of the One Laptop per Child approach," etc. Intel doesn't at all like the fact that a huge number of kids around the world are going to cut their teeth on AMD / Linux based systems. As a for profit company, the tactics they're using to compete with the (non-profit) OLPC group are kind of sad, since it's only the kids who will really suffer from this.
    • Re:Jeebus (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Oldsmobile (930596) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:46PM (#19212283) Journal
      Well, it IS four times as expensive, it hasn't been designed by a bunch of educators and it isn't running open source.

      I guess it's sort of like taking a school history curriculum, desgined by educators to teach kids and comparing that to learning about history by watching the History channel.

      Both will work towards the same goals, but are not equal or comparable.
      • Re:Jeebus (Score:5, Funny)

        by eln (21727) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:25PM (#19212775) Homepage
        learning about history by watching the History channel.

        Hey now, the History channel has taught me more about ghosts, biblical history, major disasters, and true crime than my stuffy old history professor ever did.
    • Re:Jeebus (Score:4, Insightful)

      by drinkypoo (153816) <martin.espinoza@gmail.com> on Monday May 21 2007, @02:58PM (#19212479) Homepage Journal
      That's a rather silly statement. I mean, even apples and oranges are comparable. They're both fruit. OLPC and ClassmatePC are two systems designed to do basically the same thing, except the ClassmatePC was intended to run Windows from the beginning. OLPC can be made to do it, but it's not the idea. ClassmatePC is basically only useful in a classroom setting, whereas OLPC is useful anywhere, because of the power supply. ClassmatePC is faster and has more storage, OLPC is lower power and uses less power :)
    • by goombah99 (560566) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:32PM (#19212859)
      OLPC is like apple, it's and end-to-end specification. I forget which CPU they are using, I assume it's a VIA since the whole thing is 4 watts. But even if it were an Intel CPU it's a grave danger.

      1) Like apple they could choose to change processors at any time. Thus they could move away from X86 if they wished.
      2) they will establish a huge software market that does not use intel specific advancements.
      3) It will use graphics other then Intel graphics

      In short by creating an enourmous consumer market for generic lowest common demoninator software, it removes a tremendous amount of product differentiation the INtel sells. To see this think back about 8 years ago when you had a choice of buying an intel P4 or P3 or buying whatever AMD was selling. You were not really sure if all your code optimizers would work on AMD, not sure if certain drivers would fail on AMD. It was a gamble. The answer was in most cases there was no problems at all. But we all had seen examples of problems. Intel was the safe bet. Plus when optimizations using SSE or analogs came out they were written for intel first. And lord save you if you bought Via or god forbid, transmeta.

      With a giant market in non-intel optimizations out there this advantage will be nullified. Software will respect the generic CPU needs. That hurts intel's premium price advantage.

    • by kebes (861706) on Monday May 21 2007, @02:52PM (#19212369) Journal
      I think the problem is two-fold:

      1. If Intel were really interested in "trying to bring capability to young people" then why didn't they sign on with the OLPC project in the first place? By having Intel generate a separate project, resources are inherently divided. According to TFA, Intel originally laughed at the idea of OLPC. Now they are copying it. Why didn't they just agree to help OLPC?

      2. In TFA, Negroponte reportedly is accusing Intel of selling their Classmate PC below production cost. Such a tactic is used, of course, to driver others out of the market, so as to establish monopoly. If OLPC and Intel both try to sell their laptops to various countries, and the Intel one has "more bang for the buck" (because they are subsidizing it), then obviously countries will pick the Intel one. Then OLPC dies and suddenly the Intel ones start mysteriously costing more.

      The OLPC project has the aim to create extremely inexpensive educational laptops in a cost-effective way. They want a sustainable solution to education. Intel, according to Negroponte, is not working towards that goal.
      • by Locutus (9039) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:17PM (#19212661)
        Negroponte probably has some good proof that the ClassMatePC is being sold below cost since his group has been working on a lowcost design for a couple of years and included negotiations with both Microsoft and Intel. Both of which are involved in the ClassMatePC.

        Just like how Microsoft started giving out Microsoft Windows for far far below market costs to Taiwan when those HP and Dell notebooks running Linux were selling very well, they both( Intel and Microsoft ) are subsidizing their product to keep the "competition" from gaining ground.

        If I was seeing Linux on the ClassMatePC instead of MS Windows, I might be able to believe that Intel could be motivated by charity but with Microsoft involved and how BOTH companies blasted OLPC in the press, it's all about business and their sole purpose here is to get OLPC to fail. The ClassMatePC would be pulled from the market later since cheap hardware and software is NOT what Intel or Microsoft want. IMO.

        LoB
         
      • The intel system is simply not useful in the places where the OLPC is most needed. But by existing it effectively drives up the cost of the OLPC; less OLPCs will be sold, reducing the effects of volume, and keeping the prices higher. The OLPC is not a moneymaking attempt, it is there to help the world. Intel is not there to help the world, they're there to make money. Thus intel's quest for cash is harming the OLPC project, while at the same time, the ClassmatePC cannot help people that the OLPC can. I think it's reasonable to be upset at intel's metooism.
    • by Mattintosh (758112) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:12PM (#19212609)
      His main complaint is that Intel is "dumping", that is, selling them below cost (and more importantly, below the OLPC's price) just to get a foothold on what could grow into a really nice monopoly somday.

      Intel with $$$ vs. a non-profit group with no $$$... that's just poor sportsmanship. Intel needs to back off.
    • Re:Who cares? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Locutus (9039) on Monday May 21 2007, @03:52PM (#19213109)
      If the goal is to get technology to kids in developing nations, do we care who does it?

      This is not the main goal of the Microsoft/Intel project. They will say this to the public but their intentions are to stop the competitions products from gaining a significant market share. Both Microsoft and Intel had been offered opportunities to be part of the OLPC project and most likely pricing was their main issue. Negroponte knows this and it is likey why he said what he did in the 60Minutes piece.

      If Intel can pull it off cheaper, should I feel bad for Negroponte?

      They can't but they can get Microsoft involved and split the loss so they can compete with a small group who have researched and invested a few years into making it work and have no licensing issues/expenses by using Linux and OSS. Again, Negroponte knows this because they've already tried to negotiate with Microsoft and Intel along with know what such hardware is going to cost to manufacture in quantity.

      If this is truly altruistic work, then he should embrace Intel's commitment, and try to work together.

      Microsoft and Intel have no purpose doing what they are doing but to protect their marketshare and their brand names. Both of which help them keep their prices and market pricing at fat profit levels. The OLPC does not appear to be driven by profits and what Negroponte has done in the past shows he has an altruistic foundation. Microsoft nor Intel can show this and history shows quite the opposite.

      If this is for-profit capitalism, merely disguised as charity, then may the best man win.

      One side is business profit driven( Microsoft/Intel-ClassMatePC ) while the other is charity driven( OLPC ). They are crossing paths and we already know that the billions behind the Microsoft/Intel project is hurting the OLPC project since Negroponte has already said this.
      And it just blows me away that Intel would fall for this level when there has been nothing said in the press or otherwise which would have locked Intel out of future designs. AMD is not giving their CPU's away for free. Now Microsoft, that's another story since they absolutely can not allow Linux and OSS to gain traction anywhere. Once you've stopped cleaning Windows, you don't go back and with the open nature of the OLPC, the closed box of Microsoft Windows/software would be painful and constraining.

      LoB