Countries obligations to MS ?
Countries obligations to MS ?
Posted Jan 10, 2009 0:28 UTC (Sat) by dlang (guest, #313)In reply to: Countries obligations to MS ? by Alterego
Parent article: Changes at OLPC
feel free to disagree, but recognize that others thing that there is far more value in teaching all the kids a bit rather then concentrating on the universities where you only get the ones who have already gotten out of the worst areas (or they wouldn't be in the universities)
non-standard hardware
what you don't recognize is that all laptops are non-standard, as are most of the brand-name desktops and servers. in all these cases you need parts from the manufacturer to fix the machine (or another machine for pieces)
OLPC has elected to send the pieces in the form of complete working systems rather than in separate boxes for each part. there are advantages and disadvantages to this approach (parts inventories are harder to do, you end up with more of some parts than you need, but it takes _far_ less space and you know that all the parts work)
unknown software
while I am not a fan of Sugar (far from it, look at my posts) Sugar is open is linux under the covers and nowdays you can run several other linux distros on the machines (and the ease and ability to run the other distros is improving rapidly)
doing things not asked for by the countries
this applies to every charity organization in history. Every single one has their own agenda and approach to the problems (and in many cases different definitions of what the problems are)
using huge resources
charity work is not a zero-sum game. while it is defiantly true that some of the money that went to OLPC would have gone to other charities, it's also defiantly true that much of the money and time that went to OLPC would not have gone to other charities
closed system now
I am not seeing a close system. I see cases where it could have gone that way, and the reaction from everyone except some PR people (and especially the reaction from the people actually making things work) gives me no reason to believe your doomsday scenerio
I do acknowledge that some of the early deployments are going to have windows on them, but I don't see it that OLPC is pushing windows, I see it as a failure of Sugar being ready. the good news is that software is replaceable. it has improved significantly in the last year, and will improve more going forward. every system shipped with windows can be converted to linux in the future at no cost (the labor of doing the switch is about the same as the labor of doing an upgrade to windows)
I may be a wild-eyed optimist, but I am accused of being a naysayer and cynic far more frequently.
