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Amazon will sell the low-cost OLPC XO

One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) will sell its low-cost XO notebook to interested consumers through Amazon.com, an OLPC official announced.  The original plan behind the XO was to make the laptop available to children in developing nations and not to interested parties in developed countries, but changed its mind with last year's Give One Get One (G1G1) initiative.

Similar to the program last year, a consumer can pay $399 for two laptops, with one being shipped to the purchaser and the other one given to a child in a developing nation.  OLPC officials hope to build each second-generation device for $80 per XO, but analysts are still doubtful they'll be able to drop the manufacturing costs that much.  China-based Quanta is expected to continue to manufacture the XO for the OLPC.

An important change is that the OLPC foundation has signed an agreement with Microsoft, allowing XP to be installed on the laptops if the user doesn't want the Sugar Linux operating system.  Microsoft will reportedly charge a $3 licensing fee per notebook shipping with XP.  Many developing nations reportedly were hesitant in purchasing the XO unless it had a Windows OS on it.

Manufacturing and distribution problems hindered the last G1G1 program and working with Amazon will give the non-profit organization an organized process and countless resources that OLPC didn't have last time around.  OLPC officially has around 25 workers.  An official press release will be available once the offer goes live on the Amazon web site, which is typically how Amazon handles its major press announcements.  

In May, Nicholas Negroponte, OLPC Chairman, said the second generation OLPC will focus on countries that had post-war trauma, including Iraq and Afghanistan, but customers will be able to select a nation in which the second XO will be donated.

The latest G1G1 program will be available through the 2008 holiday season.



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pwned
By Samus on 9/8/2008 2:30:23 AM , Rating: 2
quote:
Many developing nations reportedly were hesitant in purchasing the XO unless it had a Windows OS on it.


That pretty much sums up what these things are going to need. I wouldn't buy a notebook with a goof-ass linux install, that's why I held off the Eee for so long. I'm glad I did, there's a lot more choices now and I still don't know which netbook I'll end up with...




RE: pwned
By mforce on 9/8/08, Rating: -1
RE: pwned
By KaiserCSS on 9/8/2008 6:58:06 AM , Rating: 5
I'm going to say this before anyone else get's a chance to have a semi-logical debate with you: SHUT UP.

I swear to the Good Lord Almighty, when I read your post I raged so hard I think I blew a blood vessel.

I cannot stand this. As a user of Ubuntu, Red Hat, and DOS/Windows 3.1 and up, I have by far had the most fun and experience with Windows. Ignorance and computer illiteracy are the main causes of all these spyware and viral complaints, and when Microsoft attempts to help the majority of the computer world by holding their hand like a child (UAC), everyone goes into an uproar that Vista is bloated and bothersome.

It's simple, people, it really is. I have never, and I repeat, NEVER had an issue with a virus. Sure, I've had my share of spyware, which used to be almost unavoidable, but nowadays I have nary even a tracking cookie. All you have to is use your brain, if only a tiny bit (maybe that's why pure Linux users feel so superior). Don't download questionable content without a quick background check, don't click on suspicious links or flashy ads, etc.


RE: pwned
By anonymo on 9/8/2008 7:50:10 AM , Rating: 2
I couldn't agree with you more, KaiserCSS.

+1


RE: pwned
By omnicronx on 9/8/2008 1:17:53 PM , Rating: 2
Thank you!

I always find it funny how people bash the basic windows ui, when in reality it is the easiest OS to learn. Press start->>go to programs-->pick what I want to do. For basic users it really does not get much easier.

The advantage that OSX has over Windows is that it is on a closed system, so everything should work out of the box regardless of who you bought your computer from. But that too can be easily avoided by getting your PC from a known manufacturer like dell, hp, etc.. Just because you bought a PC from an unknown OEM manufacturer who didnt even bother to install all of your drivers, does not make windows a hard OS to learn.


RE: pwned
By Funk Phenomena on 9/8/08, Rating: 0
Whats the point?
By PMB917 on 9/8/2008 7:45:09 AM , Rating: 2
I'll never understand why anyone would buy these crippled half laptops when you can buy fully functional laptops for $500 at newegg or wherever.




RE: Whats the point?
By SilthDraeth on 9/8/2008 9:56:49 AM , Rating: 2
The size.

And in this case, you can say you are donating to charity by purchasing one for yourself and one for a kid in the middle of Africa.


RE: Whats the point?
By Gul Westfale on 9/8/2008 10:55:32 AM , Rating: 1
they have electricity now in the middle of africa??


RE: Whats the point?
By HakonPCA on 9/8/2008 11:26:42 AM , Rating: 2
ummmm....all these OLPC have power cranks, did you not realize that?


RE: Whats the point?
By Trippytiger on 9/9/2008 5:38:20 PM , Rating: 2
No, no they don't. That feature got dropped, at least for all of the first generation models.


For $80
By dflynchimp on 9/8/2008 11:15:46 AM , Rating: 2
The targeted people would rather have rations for a year




RE: For $80
By Suntan on 9/8/2008 1:35:48 PM , Rating: 2
I would go with less food in my stomach if it meant an education for my son. Easily.

I thank the good Lord I don’t have to make those tradeoffs though.

-Suntan


RE: For $80
By dever on 9/8/2008 3:19:28 PM , Rating: 2
If only more people felt that way. Unfortunately, even the vast majority of citizens in the richest country in the world send their children to government run schools.


Proof positive
By greenchasch on 9/8/2008 11:21:48 AM , Rating: 2
quote:
a consumer can pay $399 for two laptops, with one being shipped to the purchaser and the other one given to a child in a developing nation.
More proof they're targetting people with a guilty conscience, rather than offering a real product that can stand on its own.




RE: Proof positive
By murphyslabrat on 9/8/2008 1:17:19 PM , Rating: 2
You don't need a guilty conscience to engage in an act called "charity."

This is not a product intended for people who can afford to purchase a different laptop. The b1g1 program is not a feature, it's a distribution tool to help get more of these into the intended recipient's hand.


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