Intel Calls $100 Laptops Undesired Gadgets 429
dolphinlover writes "Craig Barrett, Intel Corporation chairman believes that the $100 laptop computers to be manufactured by the MIT media lab run by Nicholas Negroponte beginning in early 2006 are merely 'gadgets', making them unattractive to consumers who will be disappointed by their 'limited range of programs'." From the article: "Negroponte said at their launch in November the new machines would be sold to governments for schoolchildren at $100 a device but the general public would have to pay around $200 -- still much cheaper than the machines using Intel's chips. But Barrett said similar schemes in the past elsewhere in the world had failed and users would not be satisfied with the new machine's limited range of programs."
Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:5, Interesting)
i wonder if powerhungry processors and the electric generators necessary to power them are the actual root of global warming.
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:5, Insightful)
Not that he doesn't have a particular bias, but he's probably right in that these devices are not going to be laptops like most people think of them. Instead they're more like special-purpose hardware for special-purpose software, something like the PDA you mention only marketed as a laptop. That's not to say these won't have a place, because I do think they could very well serve the purpose for which they're being manufactured.
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:4, Insightful)
And as a matter of course, you may find developers catering to these little boxes, whether its some way to add new software, games, or cater to whatever browser is on them.
Anything of which there are a million or more sounds like a market, no?
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:5, Funny)
Obligatory (Score:3, Funny)
Just a matter of time before some opportunist does thus:
My name is Ebou Nogamono and I need your help in retrieving 14,732 gold coins from Croesus' Vault...
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:5, Insightful)
You got modded "Funny", but as long as it can run Linux, I don't think there's going to be a shortage of software to run on it. And at $100 or so, that's less then what the original Palm devices sold for. Look how many applications were developed and written for the PalmOS.
As long as we (the public) can purchase these in lots of 1 or 2, I suspect the manufacturers won't be able to meet demand.
Barrett sounds like typical, Intel-style, sour-grapes. Something tells me that they're upset that these systems won't be based on over-priced Intel chips. (Or that, if they were involved, they got shunted to the side due to costs or licensing issues.)
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:3, Informative)
A groovy, wee hub
Emerge, and distcc:
Wi' Gentoo rock'n dis byotch,
We'll kick Sony BMG in the crotch,
An' prolly end up Gentree!
Burma Shave
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:3, Interesting)
When Tandy introduced the Model 100 with a z80 and about 32k ram, most people used them for the built in PDA, word processing and comms programs. But others found very unusual and creative ways to deploy them. In many ways, the fact that it was such a lightweight made it more valuable.
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, and they have infinitely more power than NO computer at all, as the current situation with most third world schoolchildren is.
Hell, if I were one of them, I'd love to get such a device, because it is definitely better than nothing.
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:3, Insightful)
wonder not, it has nothing to do with how much power is being used, but rather the _source_ of the power is fossil fuels. the earth used to be a lot hotter, in fact at one point in time the entire planet was covered with magma. global warming won't quite acheive that level, but we can easily reach jurassic era warmth... just a few more decades of reliance on good old coal and oil, a
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:4, Informative)
in fact 3 years ago I had a Vaio (I hav it now but it is dead) with that resolution, and I was carrying it to do work, and everywhere
It was perfectly OK to have files with me, to run office aps, and a browser, and to connect to cisco and other appliances and run a term on it
it was also fairly smaller than my current toshiba, that I am not carrying anymore as i consider it too big, too bloat, too expensive, to throw on a car seat and then drive on dirt roads and alike
Actually I would be happy if someone sold a 800x600 laptop, with a small screen and I top it with what some might agree with :
I do not need a color screen
1GB of flash is also killer anough for a lot of things
Re:Bah, Sayeth Scrooge (Score:3, Insightful)
Those of us who have actually been following the design of this device know full well that a 'normal' notebook screen is no damned good, and this device will have quite a different display technology.
Reason? The device has to be usable outdoors, in full sunshine. Many of the target locations run classes outdoors. You ever tried using a lappy in strong sunshine
Oh, what a surprise! (Score:5, Insightful)
Next week: Bill Gates denounces its operating system.
Re:Oh, what a surprise! (Score:2, Funny)
I'm surprised all the battery makers haven't jumped on the badwagon, saying hand crank is no way to run anything and solar power is impractical, now if you'll just look at these lovely Duracells...
Re:Oh, what a surprise! (Score:2)
In other words... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Oh, what a surprise! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Oh, what a surprise! (Score:5, Funny)
Well, until they see that the blue "e" is missing and they ask why "the Internet" isn't installed.
Re:Are You People Kidding Me??? (Score:3, Insightful)
Yet the B120 still sells well enough for Dell to keep it in its lineup. Which means that there's a market for cheap PCs,
IBM said nobody would want a PC (Score:3, Funny)
Later he was overheard saying.. (Score:3, Funny)
20 mins per windup should be.... (Score:2)
Re:Later he was overheard saying.. (Score:4, Interesting)
That is what you say. However, there was an mpeg of him saying it readily available from most OS/2 BBSes. I am sure someone has a copy.
Don't forget, when he said that, no one, not even Bill, could afford 640k. Early PCs shipped with 64k.
Before the PC, we bought computers with 4k! (Yeah, OK, that was words, because bytes were not invented, so 8K really.) I dont mean home computers, I mean machines like the PDP8, DG Nova, TI 990, HP 1000 and their many competitors. Really - the standard programming environment was "4k Fortran". AND the software that ran on those machines could PAY FOR THE MACHINE IN A WEEK!
Slightly later than the above senario (approx 1980), My mother (also a programmer) bought a house with 8 bedrooms in Islington (Where Tony Blair lives) for the same money my employers paid for a PDP11/60 with 1/2 MB of RAM, and two 40MB disk drives. (About the same power as a 386, but still able to support 12 users well.)
Good News (Score:3, Interesting)
Jealousy (Score:2)
Re:Jealousy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Jealousy (Score:2)
When was the last time you checked, 5 years ago?
Re:Jealousy (Score:2, Informative)
Laptops are give and take, depending on the core and speeds. I used to own a Sony VAIO laptop that had been upgraded with a 25W Athlon XP-M, and it had decent battery life and never ran hot. I hear some of the newer mobile Athlon64 processors are down to 29W or less, which isn't too
Re:Jealousy (Score:2)
The Prescott (newest P4) is a monster (nuclear reactor is an apt term), the older P4s are better but not by much. The Athlon 64 is cooler (as in heat production), faster and (if you don't go dual core) cheaper. The Pentium M used to beat everything in terms of performance/watt, how
Re:Jealousy (Score:3, Informative)
The newer processes make smaller chips, and hence you get more per wafer. No foundry is going to crank up an old process for one customer.
If the chip is not one in current volume production, it must still use current technology to be economic.
Underdog project (Score:3, Interesting)
Intel is just... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Intel is just... (Score:2)
Re:Intel is just... (Score:5, Funny)
Undesired if you used a Pentium 4 (Score:5, Funny)
missing the point (Score:5, Insightful)
you're dead on (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:you're dead on (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, on a machine of that class Doom will run just fine. It started being playable on a mid-end 486, and this $100 box is a lot better than that.
Actually (Score:2)
I'll buy one. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I'll buy one. (Score:2)
stupid for whom? (Score:2)
Re:I'll buy one. (Score:2)
Hell, I live in an expensive area of the US. I spend over a 100 bucks anytime I go to the supermarket and pick up a few things for next week for me and my family.
Re:I'll buy one. (Score:3, Insightful)
limited range of programs (Score:5, Funny)
Re:limited range of programs (Score:2)
Duh, of course... (Score:5, Insightful)
Quite obviously, when you are going to be selling an entire computer at the price of their processors and motherboards, they're going to be pissed.
Sure, I could use a dual athlon if I'm running the latest game or doing some serious number crunching - but for a user in an developing country with limited funds, the choice is definitely beneficial.
Today's computers have a lot of crap that most users don't use - but they have them anyway. The idea of a computer is to be a tool - give those people a simple, straightforward system that a user can truly use in doing their job, and you'd have gone far.
Of course, given the choice, companies like Intel would sell a $500 processor to a poor man who'd have no use for it. But that doesn't mean the idea itself is flawed. If anything, it's a nice way to help bring technology to the needy, and give them a chance.
I've seen the use of some of these technologies (MIT's Michael Best does some work on e-development -- they've some really nice work) - and they truly are helpful. Just because it doesn't help Intel's bottom penny doesn't mean it's useless. Given time, I'm fairly certain that it would be proven so.
Re:Duh, of course... (Score:2)
Oh really? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Oh really? (Score:2)
A crank-powered laptop? (Score:2)
I'd buy it for $200. (Score:2)
This is a reversal...the $200 price to the General First-World Public. Negroponte was talking about not even offering this to developed countries. I guess he knows that there is a secon
Re:I'd buy it for $200. (Score:2, Funny)
What's the use surfing with hands tired!
That Depends... (Score:2)
Because if it does, then any application can be added. If they design it with hacking in mind, then there will be a myriad of uses for them, and economies of scale will drive the cost down, and the value up.
Re:That Depends... (Score:2)
The real acid test will be Henrico, VA (Score:3, Funny)
What people want (Score:2, Insightful)
"It turns out what people are looking for is something is something that has the full functionality of a PC," he said. "Reprogrammable to run all the applications of a grown up PC... not dependent on servers in the sky to deliver content and capability to them, not dependent for[sic] hand cranks for power"
Uhm, as opposed to be dependant on a power grid infrastructure, centralized power plants, money to pay for the power, and whatnot? Truly an ugly piece of competition diss.
For the hand crank alone (Score:2)
I don't even need to think much about it at $200.
I'm drooling over this computer.
Sure, it won't do what my 700 dollar p4 3.0 with 600 gigs & a 6800OC card will but it is useful in several cases where my p4 isn't.
Look into my eyes! You are getting sleepy... (Score:2, Funny)
You will not be satisfied with an economical competetitor.
You must pay $3600 for the latest and greatest Dell XPS laptop or you will never be happy.
Intel is your ONLY friend.
Intel is your ONLY friend.
Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.
Racism? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Racism? (Score:2)
She looked at me quite blankly at the time.
Much like you just did.
Re:Racism? (Score:2)
Re:Racism? (Score:3, Interesting)
On a serious note, he's Greek in origin - and Negropont [wikipedia.org] (or Euboea) is one of the bigger islands around the Greek archipelago. It was called that by the Venetians after the bridge which connected them with mainland Greece.
I think the term, "negro" is common around that area - there is also a place in the Balkans called Montenegro [wikipedia.org].
These are not the laptops you're looking for... (Score:2)
Well -- the Jedi Mind Trick seems to work for Micro$oft; why not Intel, too?
Intel makes ARMs too. (Score:2)
But selling Pe
From the FAQ (Score:5, Informative)
WiFi-enabled
"USB ports galore".
Its current specifications are: 500MHz, 1GB, 1 Megapixel.
Re:From the FAQ (Score:3, Interesting)
Christ! And Intel is calling it an underpowered "gadget" capable of a "limited range of programs"? Someone is smoking crack!
I set up a family member with an old hand-me-down system...
No WiFi, just a dialup modem.
Zero USB ports.
350 MHz
0.125 GB (128 MB)
Capable of a megapixel, but set at a default of 0.5 megapixel (800x600) to keep all of the fonts and icons larger.
Sure it's an "old klunker", but for your average non-geek it's more than powerful enough
Re:From the FAQ (Score:3, Informative)
the 500MHz AMD processor is a custom building, using something like
the 1 GB is for flash memory, used in place of a harddrive for nonvolatile storage. There will be 128 MB of RAM for the actual running system. 4 USB ports, which may change. Wi-fi, and some form of cell phone wireless connection, i believe. They support some customized ad hoc wireless mesh networkin
Stupid (Score:2)
Also, standardised and limited hardware actually make development on the babies a whole lot easier than for a PC, provided there are good development tools.
US Market (Score:2)
Ever see the fake laptops they are pushing this season?
For 200 you get a *real* laptop, and arent tied to batteries? Sign me up..
What an ass (Score:2)
no surprise (Score:2)
Of course they are going to say this.
What the hell are they supposed to say? "Damn! sucks to be us! I guess we can kiss that market goodbye, cause there is no way we can compete with that price."
That statement would be followed by the swirling vortexy sound of their stock price going down the toilet.
What similar schemes? (Score:2)
You mean like eMachines? I still have one of those chugging away out in the garage. What similar scheme would that be, Mr. Barrett?
I'm pretty happy with the range of programs available for my Linux machine. Not going to do much video editing on a $200.00 hand crank computer anyway. If they were available today, I'd buy one today. I could th
$100 Per child? Yes, but how many times? (Score:2, Funny)
Sign me up (Score:2, Insightful)
Did I mention you can put me on the waiting list?
I know what the first mod will be. (Score:2)
Yeah right... (Score:2)
Undesired gadgets? Limited capabilities? (Score:2, Insightful)
How could one find these laptops to be underpowered? Either:
1. You know you paid $100 for it, so you couldn't expect much anyway! (Even if you paid $200 because you live in a western country)
2. You never had access to a computer before - let alone a (n extremely) portable one - and you'll astounded at how much stuff you can do.
Even disregarding this, these things should be impressive machines for what they're worth; they run
The Single Biggest Step Up (Score:5, Insightful)
(P.S. The same thing applies with printers.)
Limited functionality... (Score:3, Insightful)
He's right! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:There's probably some truth to this (Score:2, Insightful)
You can give them all the food in the world but if you don't educate them what's te point?
You know "give a man a fish, feed for a day, teach a man to fish..." which is odd because the USA is the largest pro-jesus country in the world and they totally ignore the positive teachings. They're all cool with frying people on an electric chair. I mean that's justice. But teach some wetback how to add or multipl
Re:There's probably some truth to this (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously - stop and think for a moment. Technology has definite uses. And it's what's keeping us the edge over one another.
Even if you are a farmer, being able to predict the rains, know about prices, fertilizers and the like helps. In the past (late 70s/80s, I think), in some parts of the south, India had a programme to help fishermen be informed about storms and the like by having a special radio channel that broadcast such information. They gave all the fishermen free transistor radios and told them to use it - and guess what? Several lives were saved, productivity increased and people in general were happy. And some started using their system for other purposes, like listening to alternate channels - because it's enough if there is one fisherman who knew what was going on. A whole system was developed within the community to this end, and everything improved as a whole - people were coordinating the whole process, resulting in much better productivity. It had benefits that the original creators did not even see.
There are always more pressing needs, and the only way you are going to take care of those needs is by making them self sufficient. This is a tool to that end.
You cannot forsee or predict how these tools will be used. But the only way to find out is to develop the tool and see how far it goes. Sure, it might be an absolute failure - but you would have tried, and you would have learnt.
Better than not doing anything, IMHO.
Re:There's probably some truth to this (Score:3, Interesting)
That it can also be used for other purposes is secondary.
I'm not a seer who can tell you what this can bring to the table, but how about giving it a chance and seeing what it does?
But then again, this place is full of arm-chair critics who would much rather criticize a tool without knowing what it's for rather than do something proactive.
As another poster remarked, MIT woul
Re:There's probably some truth to this (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, MIT doesn't grow corn. They don't research AIDS cures. Other people are doing these things. MIT is helping the best way MIT can. MIT helps by building you a computer.
Amazing...MIT would be drawing 100% less criticism right now if they'd simply sat on their hands and done *nothing*. Why is it to get rotten egged off the podium in this world, all you have to do is volunteer to help?
Re:There's probably some truth to this (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:There's probably some truth to this (Score:4, Informative)
"Why is it to get rotten egged off the podium in this world, all you have to do is volunteer to help?"
Amen to that. As someone who works full time in a place that has been designated by the UN as a Least Developed Country, I have to say that this absurd, simplistic logic which decrees that food shortages can only be addressed by food makes me grind my teeth with frustration.
Scenario: A child has a boil in his nostril that's gone septic and is spreading into his sinuses and putting pressure on the brain, there are no doctors within 80 miles. How does the poorly trained but well-intentioned nurse get a proper diagnosis, and if necessary the authorisation to fly the child to the district hospital if communications and resource materials are not available?
Answer: She doesn't, and the child dies. From a boil. This really happened; that child was the eldest boy of a friend of mine.
The country where I work is limited in its development for three major reasons: Education, Health and Infrastructure. In terms of communications, there are some villages here that have waited for over 23 years to get phone service. The national telecom infrastructure relies on microwave transmission equipment so old that replacement parts are no longer available. Introducing simple devices capable of creating ad hoc mesh networks automatically would be an absolute godsend.
Just in case anyone has missed the message here: Improved communications, through low-cost devices such as this, save lives. They do so more effectively than any bag of flour or rice could do.
Re:There's probably some truth to this (Score:3, Interesting)
As your story left a lump in my throat, I recalled other stories from other places. In fact, every time I see a documentary on underdeveloped countries, or read about humanitarian efforts in foreign lands, these same factors come up again and again. Even amongst the ghettos and wastes of America (and I've waded in them hip-deep!), you have the same problem: you could literally go down skid
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Intel says so... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:what does it really DO? (Score:2)
"Furthermore, there are many reasons it is important for a child to "own" something--like a football, doll, or book--not the least of which being that these belongings will be well-maintained through love and care."
Of course, the assumption that a child will maintain something because it's there is an idealistic idea brought to us by people who don't have and practic
Re:what does it really DO? (Score:5, Insightful)
It has been well proven that constructionist learning goes a long way towards building analytical and engineering related skills - while it may not be the only thing towards that end, it definitely helps.
Now, for a constructionist learning environment, you need tools that they can experiment with. What better way to do this than computers? However, a $2000 computer for a kid is quite obviously not a good idea, so MIT went ahead and developed a cheaper alternative.
Do you know why they can be networked? Because one of the fundamental needs behind education is to have some means of collaboration and team work. Do you know why they have tonnes of USB ports? So that they can be extended upon - a lot of MIT's toys (such as Flow Blocks) are toys that interface with the computers. It's important for folks to be able to add on to these computers, and build new things - whether it's for a farmer in a developing nation using it for weather prediction or whether it's a kid who's adding stuff for class.
Simply because you are ignorant and cannot comprehend the need for this does not mean it's useless. But go ahead, though - am sure you know a whole lot more about educational technology than all those fine folks who've spent years doing this stuff for a living.
Re:what does it really DO? (Score:2)
From TFFAQ: [it] will be able to do most everything except store huge amounts of data
Isn't "most everything" clear enough? Jeez!
Heh, I agree with the "GNU Zealots" (Score:2)
Do not lock them in. Let them be free.
Re:Well if they accepted Apple's OS ... (Score:5, Insightful)
My linux distro all that and an office suite, educational software, graphics editing (vector and raster), desktop publishing, and a great compiler suite that just happens to be the same one as above, except newer. Oh yes, and the source code to every single program on the box. Were the programs "first tier"? Well, some less than others -- but they were at least there to use.
It's truly baffling that you can buy a $2000 Mac and not even end up with a basic word processing program or spreadsheet on it -- especially when that software can be had for free. Owning a Mac is like a owning a Jeep -- pay once to own it, then pay continuously to use it.
Apple's OS has no business anywhere near this project -- it's a gloriously decorated desktop operating system designed for people that can justify paying thousands of dollars for a photo editing program. Id est no one outside of California. I certainly can't afford it -- I had to fink my way to a fully functional desktop box since the missus wouldn't switch from Linux without the equivalent of Open Office, Scribus, The GIMP and Inkscape. The "first tier" commercial equivalents of those programs would have cost me significantly more than the computer itself.
Re:Well if they accepted Apple's OS ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Well if they accepted Apple's OS ... (Score:3, Insightful)
If Apple can't install an application with a great interface in their base install, I don't think they'd want to add it at all.
If the user wants to add it themselves later, fine. It's easy, but they probably think it's better than folks