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First Photos of MIT $100 Laptop

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wed May 24, 2006 08:56 AM
from the only-a-matter-of-time dept.
An anonymous reader noted that MITs $100 laptop was unveiled at the Seven Countries Task Force Meeting. It runs a special version of the Fedora linux and it comes with native wireless lan support. You can see the photo album, and you can pledge to buy one at triple price... in order to donate 2 of them to children.

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A few quick updates on some recent Slashdot stories in Slashback tonight. We have some additional information on the ever-interesting hundred-dollar laptop, the ongoing flap over the trademarking of 'Web 2.0' for conferences, and the shutdown of the Pirate Bay site. Read on for details.
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  • How adorable!! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Rob T Firefly (844560) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @08:58AM (#15393226) Homepage Journal
    Awwwww, look at their little ears! I just wanna pet them!
  • These look great! (Score:5, Insightful)

    The final photo [flickr.com] in the set shows three different colours - they all look fantastic - this photo shows the fedora desktop [flickr.com]. Also looks great!

    It should be noted that the 'horns' are for directional wireless (and also cover USB ports when not in use) - remember that if you want to mock them!

    I say kudos to AMD, Brightstar, Google, News Corporation, Nortel, and Red Hat for making this possible. It's a pity Gates & Jobs couldn't join in rather then attempting to downplay the fine efforts of this group.
    • Re:These look great! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by tdemark (512406) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:19AM (#15393359) Homepage
      It's a pity Gates & Jobs couldn't join in rather then attempting to downplay the fine efforts of this group.

      Which Jobs are you talking about? The only one I am familiar with (Steve), offered free Mac OS X licenses to this group for all the laptops. His offer was declined [macnn.com]. You can argue all you want about his motives, but you really can't say that he "downplayed" anything.

      Gates, on the other hand, mocked [informationweek.com] the group's effort.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:These look great! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by coop535 (813230) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:53AM (#15393607)

      Belinda and Gates are attacking a different set of problems and they're doing it everywhere. I think their viewpoint is that this project's priorities are out of whack. Education is great, provided the person will live to use it.

      Letter from Bill and Melinda Gates [gatesfoundation.org]

      We believe health is the cornerstone of human development. When health takes hold, life improves by all measures. Conversely, poor health aggravates poverty, poverty deepens disease, and nations trapped in this spiral will not escape without the world's help. In Africa, the cost of malaria in terms of treatment and lost productivity is estimated to be $12 billion a year. The continent's gross domestic product could be $100 billion higher today if malaria had been eliminated in the 1960s. And if HIV infection rates continue at their present levels, the world will likely see 45 million new infections by 2010 and lose nearly 70 million people by 2020. That's 70 million of the most productive members of society - health workers, educators, and parents.

      Therefore, the foundation's Global Health program works to ensure that lifesaving advances in health are created and shared with those who need them most. Our primary focus areas are HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria, child survival and childhood immunization, and maternal and reproductive health.

      To begin, we invest heavily in research to help discover new and better products, particularly vaccines. The foundation also supports work to develop products that can be manufactured and distributed. Then, once a product is developed, we work to make sure that there are systems in place to adopt and sustain these new drugs as they become available. The foundation is a major supporter of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI). This alliance has provided basic immunizations to over 8 million children who would not otherwise have been immunized. As a result, GAVI has already saved an estimated 500,000 children's lives.

      ---

      The most pessimistic person could view this project akin to what Apple did when working with schools to get Apple software & hardware in cheap: become the defacto standard via goodwill. Get in early so that when they leave school they come back. Besides, that same person's pessimistic view will believe that they'll be stolen from schools as they'll be the most valuable thing in the school. (due to the fantastic engineering fortitude which is obvious to all).

      [ Parent ]
  • Hand Powered? (Score:5, Informative)

    by eldavojohn (898314) * <my/.username@@@gmail.com> on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:00AM (#15393235) Homepage Journal
    I don't understand something, these are supposed to be crank powered to solve the situation where there isn't any electricity. On the blog link, you can see the crank in the back. On the Flikr account, I can maybe see it being concealed in the blue-ish laptop but I can't figure out where it is on the other two. Perhaps it is folded up?

    Why are they showing us pictures of them just sitting there? Why aren't their pictures of people powering them up or people checking e-mail/forums?

    Possibly the biggest problem working on this laptop is its small 12' screen. I wish I could see what kind of resolution that results in but I can't see the screen in any of these shots.

    If you want to make the pledge but don't know the specs, check out the Wikipedia article [wikipedia.org] on it.
  • Substitute screen? (Score:5, Informative)

    by RobotWisdom (25776) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:02AM (#15393250) Homepage
    Are they claiming that screen is the production version, or just a placeholder? Because last I heard the (specially lowcost) screen was still being developed...
  • Dupe? (Score:5, Informative)

    by blcamp (211756) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:07AM (#15393276) Homepage

    Photos have been out for some time, actually.

    http://laptop.media.mit.edu/ [mit.edu]

  • I'm in... (Score:5, Informative)

    by PenguinBoyDave (806137) <david&davidmeyer,org> on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:13AM (#15393314) Homepage
    I'll pay for three and donate two any day of the week. I'm not rolling in cash mind you, but if I can help by providing something for those that can't afford it, then I think that is my responsibility, especially if I espouse the Free Software ideal.
  • /. effect (Score:5, Interesting)

    by i_should_be_working (720372) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:16AM (#15393335)
    It's hard to be certain because you can't zoom in, but this [pledgebank.com] may be the coolest example of the /. effect ever.
  • Software Question (Score:5, Funny)

    by rlp (11898) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:20AM (#15393370)
    Does it come with the Young Lady's Illustrated Primer?
    • Re:Software Question (Score:5, Insightful)

      by necro81 (917438) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:38AM (#15393505) Journal
      If I was lucky enough to have moderator points today, I'd mod that up for a well-placed geek cultural reference [wikipedia.org].

      On a more serious note, I think that your comment has more going for it than just that. Considering the people who will be using these devices, I almost think that it should have something along those lines. After all, all the laptops in the world can only be of so much use - one needs ways to educate people on their use as well. Sure, there'll be the precocious ones out there who will tinker around with the laptop and learn it front to back within a year or two without anyone teaching them.

      Most, like the rest of us mere mortals, will need some help and instruction along the way. Are there enough teachers in the wide world to go along with these laptops? I don't know. Bundling them with a sort of interactive and adaptive user's manual (not just for the computer, but for a total education) wouldn't be such a bad idea.

      Aiming it towards the empowerment of women in the third world would go a long way, too, I think.
      [ Parent ]
  • more useful info (Score:5, Informative)

    by user24 (854467) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:23AM (#15393389) Homepage
    http://www.laptop.org/map.en_US.html [laptop.org] gives a colour coded map of planned distribution areas

    and from the FAQ (laptop.org/faq.en_US.html):

    The proposed $100 machine will be a Linux-based, with a dual-mode display--both a full-color, transmissive DVD mode, and a second display option that is black and white reflective and sunlight-readable at 3× the resolution. The laptop will have a 500MHz processor and 128MB of DRAM, with 500MB of Flash memory; it will not have a hard disk, but it will have four USB ports. The laptops will have wireless broadband that, among other things, allows them to work as a mesh network; each laptop will be able to talk to its nearest neighbors, creating an ad hoc, local area network. The laptops will use innovative power (including wind-up) and will be able to do most everything except store huge amounts of data.
  • For the cheap-arsed geeks out there (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Nijika (525558) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:41AM (#15393522) Homepage Journal
    So we all dig these laptops for their day to day durability, and their lack of moving vital parts (HDDs), and their portability, and their flexability.

    And we all want one for $100, and we'd all gladly pay up to $400 for one. I've got a PowerBook, and I'd still love one. I wouldn't have to worry about it, but it would be really handy.

    This may indicate a market for such a device. Not a PDA, not a full-on "outfitted for war" laptop, not a (god damned useless) e-reader, not a handheld gaming rig, but the space between.

    This is the space for essentialy a portable, truly open device that will let us surf the web, and run shells, and edit text files or to-do lists, but that won't break us financially if it's snatched from us on the subway.

    MIT is showing us the market, and they're refusing to compete! Why have none of us embraced this yet?

    My formula would be a Gumstix and an eInk display, maybe? Anyone have any better ideas?

    • Re:Freedom where art thou? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Distinguished Hero (618385) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:06AM (#15393272) Homepage
      And if they do intend to engage in price discrimination, I hope they have found a way to prevent arbitrage, or else people may make businesses out of buying them at $100 and selling them at ~$200 in the countries where the negative price discrimination policy is in effect.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Freedom where art thou? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by benjjj (949782) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:07AM (#15393278)
      How is it forced charity? Forced charity would be if we were paying taxes for third world orphans to get gov't-funded laptops.

      This is just like being nice and giving to public radio, and they give you a sweet tote bag in return. Here, you're paying $300 to charity, as a nice, charitable human being, and you're getting a laptop in return.

      Don't be so whiney.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Freedom where art thou? (Score:5, Informative)

      by MindStalker (22827) <jlarsen@f[ ]edu ['su.' in gap]> on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:21AM (#15393375) Journal
      Did you even read the pledge to buy one page??

      It specifically stated that it was not associated with the MIT project and that infact that MIT has specifically stated that they cannot garantee that this is even possible. BUT it was implied that given a large enough order it may be. So some guy setup a website to see if he can meet a goal of 100,000 pledges in hope that MIT will agree.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:Freedom where art thou? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Kadin2048 (468275) <slashdot,kadin&xoxy,net> on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:24AM (#15393400) Homepage Journal
        That's also price discrimination; it only works because you can't easily resell medical care.

        Otherwise, I'd find some bum on the street, pay him fifty bucks to go into the medical center and get my "care," then buy it off of him for less than I'd actually pay.

        There's a reason you don't see too many 'sliding scales' used for physical goods: it's too easy to turn around and resell them. Really, you can only vary the prices by less than it would cost to transport the good to an area where prices are higher. (Unless you have some artificial scheme for preventing the movement of goods, i.e. DVD region codes.) Otherwise, it doesn't take Adam Smith to figure out that people will just ship the low-priced goods to the areas where they sell for more, undercut the "official" channel, and make a profit.
        [ Parent ]
      • Re:Freedom where art thou? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Fhqwhgadss (905393) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:32AM (#15393451)
        Oxfam [oxfam.org.uk] does this. But if you actually gave a shit you'd know this already instead of blindly bashing the $100 laptop project. After all there's more than one way to try to help others and nobody is forcing you to do it their way.
        [ Parent ]
    • Specs here (Score:5, Informative)

      by ylikone (589264) on Wednesday May 24 2006, @09:33AM (#15393456) Homepage
      From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%24100_laptop [wikipedia.org]

      Features: * CPU: AMD Geode GX2-533@1.1W * CPU clock speed: 400 Mhz with 0.25 W power consumption. * SVGA 7.5 diagonal transmissive and reflective liquid crystal display used in one of two modes: o Reflective "sunlight readable" monochrome mode with 1200 by 900 pixel resolution (for ebook reading outdoors--this is 200 dpi) o Transmissive Color/DVD mode with approximately 693 by 520 pixel resolution with backlighting (for laptop use) * 128 MB of DRAM * 512 MB of flash memory * Wireless networking using an "Extended Range" 802.11b wireless chipset run at a low bitrate (2 Mbit/s) to minimize power consumption. * Conventional layout alphanumeric keyboard localized for the country of use. * Touchpad for mouse control and handwriting input * Built-in stereo speakers * Built-in microphone * Audio based on the AC97 codec, with jacks for external stereo speakers and microphones, Line-out, and Mic-in * 3 external USB ports. * Power sources: o AC Cord that doubles as carrying strap o two C (R14) or D size rechargable batteries and a hand-crank generator o four C (LR14) or D (LR20) alkaline batteries.

      Intentionally omitted features: * no motor driven moving parts o no hard disk drive o no optical drive (e.g. CDROM or DVD drive) o no floppy drive * no IDE interface (as there are no drives with which to interface) * no PCMCIA card slot

      [ Parent ]