Peru Orders 260K OLPCs, Mexico to Get 50K 271
eldavojohn writes "Perhaps in response to recent news that the lawsuit against the OLPC may be a scam, Peru's government has announced they want 260,000 OLPCs and a Mexican billionaire by the name of Carlos Slim has also asked for 50,000 that he wishes to distribute in Mexico. Things are looking good for the OLPC."
CompUSA (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:CompUSA (Score:5, Interesting)
Except that the OLPC systems run Linux. What are the chances of finding someone at CompUSA who would know anything about them? Might as well take it to 7/11.
And I don't think that the OLPC systems have much need for the $20 CompUSA printer cables [compusa.com], either*.
*I know from having previously worked at CompUSA (#787, Minnetonka, MN) that the markup was at least 10-fold on printer cables, which far, far, exceeded the margin on the printers - or just about anything else in the store except for CD jewel cases.
Re:CompUSA (Score:5, Funny)
And if a computer tech from a major store can't figure out GUI linux, how can we expect it to make inroads into mass market?
I have some hope...if we can incorporate texting into the command line, we may be able to hook an entire generation of kids:
user@ubuntubox:~$ what r u
Description: Ubuntu 6.10
user@ubuntubox:~$ sup
top - 14:36:37 up 39 days, 4:21, 2 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
Tasks: 70 total, 2 running, 68 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie
Cpu(s): 0.0%us, 0.0%sy, 0.0%ni,100.0%id, 0.0%wa, 0.0%hi, 0.0%si, 0.0%st
user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu
This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
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user@ubuntubox:~$ sup
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*I know from having previously worked at CompUSA (#787, Minnetonka, MN) that the markup was at least 10-fold on printer cables, which far, far, exceeded the margin on the printers - or just about anything else in the store except for CD jewel cases.
Cables have always been a high markup item. CompUSA doesn't own the monopoly on this concept.
As for a 10-fold increase $1.99 [compusa.com] for the belkin non IEEE 1284 certified bi-directional cable would suggest that's an accurate statement. I don't know how different these two cables are, other than the text suggesting that you get twisted pairs and extra shielding.
My experience with printer cables is limited to that $20 I bought in the 1980s, a ribbon cable with crimp on connectors, and others picked up 2nd hand in
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I thought the point of an open and hackable OS is so you can teach yourself some things. I doubt someone who is very clever is going to be happy working in a shit franchise for 5 dollars an hour spending his time explaining do you what "sudo" is. You should be teaching that yourself.
>that the markup was at least 10-fold on printer cables, which far, far, exceeded the margin on the printers - or just about anything
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http://consumerist.com/consumer/'002/verizon-customer-gets-full-refund-220726.php [consumerist.com]
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Or do you know a different definition for 10 fold?
[OT]Re:CompUSA (Score:2)
And how much ? (Score:2)
How much, do you really think that the raw materials and the cheap underpaid, overworking employee cost the Chinese manufacturer ?
I really doubt that such cable could any way cost more than 1$ to the factory, and I think that I'm still grossly over-estimating the price.
A couple of cents may be a very close to reality figure.
I mean, Chinese companies can make whole DVD players which ar
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not when if I buy 250 or more (or buy any number at university discount) I can get them for £2.20 each (ex VAT).
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Since Slim controls Telmex, Telcel, and America Movil, and since telecoms tend to have big IT needs, maybe he's creating new workers.
Or, maybe, given his history of philanthropy (including offers to match donations to certain charities in Mexico dollar for dollar without limit in 2006), his interest aren't as narrowly selfish.
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If you had read the other article... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:If you had read the other article... (Score:5, Funny)
This is Slashdot. Not even the editors read the articles. There are only 10 people here who read the articles. First is the submitter and the other is you.
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Re:If you had read the other article... (Score:5, Funny)
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This is slashdot. We're not even going to read THIS article.
not quite a scam (Score:2, Insightful)
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It's a patent troll lawsuit. Bad enough for me.
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What is even more amusing is that the keyboard layouts are not even the same!
I mean, they do have similar characters, but this [laptop.org] is clearly not this [konyin.com].
Effect (Score:2, Interesting)
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Colombia (Score:3, Funny)
Peru's government has announced they want 260,000 OLCPs [CC] and a Mexican billionaire by the name of Carlos Slim has also asked for 50,000 that he wishes to distribute in Mexico.
In other news Colombia has proposed to help the OLPC organisation respond to the increased demand by manufacturing hundreds of thousands of OLPC laptops and shipping them to the USA, thereby only letting the non-profit organisation take care of the worldwide distribution of the laptops.
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Who, AFAIK, currently holds the title of the richest man in the world.
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Oh I get it... because Columbia is the cocaine distributing capital of the World and will hide 1/5Kilo of drugs in the laptop? Am I right?
Yes, that's the joke.. :-/
Sorry.
Wha?! (Score:2)
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Because his PC has all Open Source software on it. I remember when I learning about computers as a kid running Windows. There was this brick wall I just hit one day because I was not allowed to learn any more. It was a really frustrating feeling.
Also it seems like Intel is getting in to the game because they are out to make a buck not to help. So once they are the only game in town they are likely to just have the price jump up.
FYI:
Re:Wha?! (Score:5, Insightful)
He's mad about the Classmate PC because making a "low-end, affordable laptop" is most emphatically not the point. The point is to make a tool for learning, which places the emphasis on the software and the collaboration that the system (as a combination of hardware and software) allows.
In other words, he's mad because the Classmate PC is merely an attempt to indoctrinate a new set of kids into the Intel/Microsoft closed-source and commercial hegemony, while his goal is to give the kids a tool they can modify themselves as they see fit.
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The plan from day one has been for countries to buy the laptops to distribute to children through the school system.
Try to keep up.
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Re:Wha?! (Score:5, Informative)
No, in fact, the whole point of the project from the outset was the main market was going to be direct, bulk sales to governments (specifically, national ministries of education) who would distribute them on a one-per-child basis in their educational systems, the reasoning being that only by selling in that manner would (1) they get big enough orders, and (2) the laptops being fully integrated into the educational system to give the most advantage to students and educators.
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Re:Wha?! (Score:4, Insightful)
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Richest man not just "some Mexican billionaire" (Score:5, Informative)
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If I had $59+ billion like Slim, I probably wouldn't care if people neglected to call me the richest person in the world when talking about me on Slashdot.
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Re:Richest man not just "some Mexican billionaire" (Score:4, Interesting)
The title "Earl of Northumberland" is, per Wikipedia at least, a subsidiary title of the Dukes of Northumberland since Hugh Percy, 2nd Earl of Northumberland, was created Duke of Northumberland in 1766 and his heirs to this day retain that title; the present Duke had, as of sometime in 2005, an estimated wealth on the order of 300 million GBP, which is something like two orders of magnitude less than Carlos Slim's fortune.
(As for the City of London, I was under the impression that it had been a corporate city for many centuries, and not "owned", even the sense that a purely titular feudal holding might be said to be "owned", by anyone, save, in the sense that this is true of all land in England, the Crown.)
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Now, your Rothschild family - they are incalculably loaded.
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2) Carlos Slim *is* "just some billionaire". Slim got rich by getting the government to hand him a telecom monopoly that allowed him to hold Mexicans by the balls and thereby extract monopoly rents. Bill Gates, on the other hand, legitimately gained market dominance by offering a superior product and THEN locked people in and extraced monopoly rents.
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Microsoft got handed a near-monopoly on business computers by IBM. The only way you can get to call Microsoft's product "superior" is in the trivial, circular fashion, where you point at its almost complete dominance in the market as proof.
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The telephone service was crappy when Carlos Slim took the company. It has made A LOT of improvements since then and has made A LOT for enabling Mexicans to get on the Internet. Not to mention his altruism.
I would welcome more "monopolies" like that if it were one, but he's actually competing with new companies that obviously have a disadvantage for b
OLPC Language Suite (Score:5, Insightful)
Mass adoption of English as a second language could give Mexico the enormous economic boost that India has enjoyed in recent years. Can the OLPC fill this gap in Mexican education? Will Mexicans care to learn English? I doubt it. There may soon be a time when large numbers of Indians stop immigrating to the US because there are plenty of good jobs in India. It would be nice to think that Mexico could get to that point too.
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The ironic thing is that would help quite a bit with the illegal alien situation too. While there are other reasons to not like the situation, the thing I dislike the most is that I see a great many of the illegal aliens and coming in and not integrating. That's why we have Spanish on all sorts of menus and signs here in the middle of the country where there is no good reason: for people who aren't integrating. If more illegal aliens knew English, they could integrate better, get better jobs, and not stand
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The rates of English adoption by immigrants and their children in the USA are at all-time highs. What the hell are you talking about?
The reason there's all that much Spanish language stuff isn't because immigrants aren't learning En
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I'm talking absolute numbers, not relative. It doesn't matter if only .5% of illegal aliens don't learn English if that make the number 20,000,000 people (I know those figures are wrong, just hyperbole to make my point).
I realize the Spanish signs are for people who haven't learned English, almost always first generation. I'm also aware that it provides a competitive advantage for companies to do that. I'm saying I think it's wrong because it makes it easier to slide along and not integrate.
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What point? In any case, its relative numbers, not absolute, that matter, though relative to what other measure might be a matter of debate. But, that aside...
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I think many african countries are in a better position in that way actu
"many Indians are willing to learn English"??? (Score:2)
Hello? They have been speaking English in India for a very long time. And installing a language tutor isn't going to instantly create a population of fluent English speakers. Extensive fluency in a population requires a that they converse in that language.
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Its like the #40 first language in India with only a pretty small number of people speaking it first. Its the most popular second language, IIRC, though, with something like a third of billion Indians fluent in it.
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Both India and China are cheaper-labor countries than Mexico, and insofar as they are more attractive, that's the reason for both, not just China. Mexico also has a higher per capita GDP than either, though, so I'm not re
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So now we will have.....
"Hello thank you for calling Dell tech support, This is Jesus, how can I help you?"
That's gonna completely freak out every southerner in the bible belt.
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260k? Get the 1 Meg version dammit (Score:4, Funny)
Good For Peru! (Score:5, Interesting)
In Cuzco begging is rife, and the kids usually try to sell something to justify giving them money. Postcards are pretty popular. These kids are smart too, learning enough English to have a conversation and show their sense of humour. I think that giving them an opportunity to learn valuable skills can only be a good thing for them and for their country.
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Makes me wonder if some unscrupulous geek traveling in Peru soon might not get the kids to sell him their XO laptops for $20US each.
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... the kids usually try to sell something to justify giving them money.
Makes me wonder if some unscrupulous geek traveling in Peru soon might not get the kids to sell him their XO laptops for $20US each.
Assuming Peru chooses to implement it, the XO laptop's anti-theft [laptop.org] protections should be pretty effective at preventing much of that. The kids can sell the laptops, sure, but they'll soon shut themselves down and lock the new owner out unless they're regularly in contact with the school's server. So the unscrupulous geeks won't get much for their $20.
Intel should be ashamed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Intel should be ashamed (Score:5, Insightful)
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And in some ways I'd have to agree. There is this strangely pervasive belief that if these people were only better educated, they'd miraculously pop out of poverty. There always feels like a twinge of latent racism in the "educate these people and they'll be fine" argument. This ignore
Re:Intel should be ashamed (Score:4, Insightful)
Add to that the western obsession with silver bullet solutions. There has to be one thing that we can do that will eliminate poverty. We have to summarize the problem otherwise it can't be solved. So when people look at the OLPC they immediately come to the conclusion that it won't solve the problem. They ignore all the things that it does do and focus entirely on what it doesn't do. So you get people asking how an education program is going to help provide food or clean water or sanitary drainage or stable government or any of the many other, unrelated, problems in the third world. What's especially annoying is that some people feel the need to answer these accusations with silver bullet answers. "Education will solve all those problems!" and when they are pressed to explain how, they fail, and the issue becomes somehow about whether or not education is the silver bullet or not and whether some other competing silver bullet solution is better. And in all the debate, nothing gets done.
A mexican Billionaire... (Score:3, Funny)
Uh, just the richest man in the world. Funny how no one ever hears people refer to Bill Gates as "An American Billionaire by the name of Bill Gates". [wikipedia.org]
Dear eldavojohn... you must be very ignorant.
Mexican billionaire (Score:2)
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tobadsosadms (Score:2)
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Meanwhile, the actual topic of this story is one of the greatest things that will be attempted this century.
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Re:OLPC Needs Appropriate Softare (Score:5, Interesting)
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"The Eee PC is not a competitor to the OLPC XO-1, another inexpensive laptop computer..."
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASUS_Eee_PC [wikipedia.org]
Re:OLPC Needs Appropriate Softare (Score:4, Interesting)
The EeePC is a very inexpensive and small notebook computer.
they are entirely different beasts.
The Eee has ha UMPC screen (480x800) while the XO has much higher resolution one designed to consume less power and to be readable under direct sunlight. It also sports a next to indestructible design and mesh networking hardware. The Eee is just a low-power (and underpowered) notebook.
Not to say I don't like it. In fact, I would like to have both.
But the EeePC's technology points towards the present - there is nothing new in it except the price. The XO points towards the future. And we all know the future is a much cooler place.
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I don't think so. If anything its the software that teaches, not the hardware. The XO is much better for book reading, outdoor use and such as the Eee, but that doesn't make it a teaching tool, it simply makes it the better hardware for such environments.
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In that sense, it has as much in common to the notebook I am typing this as this notebook has with the Playstation downstairs.
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Re:So... orders make it less of a scam? (Score:5, Informative)
The OLPC is a (non-profit) response to the need to educate children in developing countries. Intel's Classmate is a (for-profit) response to an inexpensive PC that doesn't use Intel's CPUs. Microsoft's $30 Windows/Office package is a (for-profit) response to a free operating system that is "making the news". Can you see the difference? Neither Intel or Microsoft would have created their responses if OLPC did not exist. Why would they?
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Yeah, of course! why should any child in the world learn on a system which is transparent, and can be explored, when they can be brought up thinking that computers ARE Windows, and that a computer system is something that will ALWAYS be purchased from a single American company and never to be shared, discussed, or cracked open to learn from?
Oh wait, but that will give thir
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I thought it was Knieu/Lunitzz ?
Re:Mexico is only ordering 50K? (Score:5, Informative)
Er...
The article didn't mention Mexico ordering any. Someone ordered them to be distributed in Mexico.
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Carlos Slim (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Carlos Slim (Score:4, Funny)
[badum-ching]
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Re:who really gets these laptops? (Score:4, Informative)
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I think the OP has a reasonable concern. Just the chat and camera functions of these little widgets could make them very valuable to adults in certain very poor communities. Even worse, some of those who can most easily buy off (or threaten) the children and/or their parents, and who might want to use these widgets to conduct business, are the
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Just because you don't know something, doesn't give you the right to assume that the worst thing you
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