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The non-profit organization One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) on Tuesday said that it will hardly be able to deliver its laptops to the U.S. and Canada due to production delays. As a result, participants of the Give 1 Get 1 program from the well-developed countries will hardly see their pre-ordered gadgets this year.

The XO laptops from OLPC were projected to enter production in October, in time to manufacture tens of thousands of laptops for Peru and Uruguay, the first two countries to order the systems from the non-profit group, as well as for those in Canada and the U.S., who bought two laptops under the Give 1 Get 1 program and were eligible to get one with one going away to a child from the developing country.

“[The production] is now slated to begin by November 12. […]We had some last-minute bugs. We’ve resolved them,” said Mary Lou Jepsen, chief technology officer for the OLPC organization, Reuters news-agency reports.

Due to production setbacks, it would now be tough to get those laptops to South America by December, in time for kids to use them over their summer vacation, and also meet orders for the foundation’s Give 1 Get 1 scheme for people in the United States and Canada, the technology chief of OLPC is reported to have said.

Starting November 12, the non-profit org planned to start offering a Give 1 Get 1 Program for a brief window of time. For $399, end-users in the U.S. or Canada will be purchasing two XO laptops – one that will be sent to empower a child to learn in a developing nation, and one that will be sent to them. In addition, end-users will be able to donate $200 or more to the organization in order to get a laptop or two to children in developing countries. Although the reasons why some would participate in the “G1G1” program are far from getting a laptop, production delay once again raises questions regarding feasibility of the whole OLPC project.

Current OLPC XO laptop features AMD Geode LX-700 processor with 433MHz clock-speed and built-in graphics controller, 256MB of PC-2100 (DDR 266MHz) memory, 1GB NAND flash that substitutes hard disk drive, 7.5” screen with 1200x900 resolution, wireless and wired network adapters as well as integrated webcam, microphone, speakers and so on.

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Comments currently: 2
Discussion started: 10/24/07 12:35:46 PM
Latest comment: 01/15/08 07:23:29 PM

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1. 
lol who'd want one of those laptops? 433MHZ? Oh boy watch out lol! By the time it even loads into windows the battery will be about dead =D (does it even have a battery?)

256mb of ram? Can that thing even run Windows XP? My mom has a destop with 256mb, P4, and it can barely run XP (very very very slow)....

Rich people here in the USA pay $400, they get 1 of these crappy laptops, and some kid in another country gets the other.... But who would want one of these in the USA? Especially if it is an American who can afford to donate like this, then they could probably afford much nicer laptops then this ancient tech...

And the people who receive these laptops..... Many of them will probably sell them to get money to buy food\drugs or something lol... Any guarantee these laptops will actually be used by the children they get sent to? And how exactly do these laptops make these kids smarter? I haven't seen many studies that show kids with computers are wildly smarter then kids without.... Sure, they'll be better prepared for a technology booming world, but I think basic math skills would be better then knowing how to rip music....

Call me an A-HOLE, but I hate charities and donation groups.... People donate with good intentions, not realizing that the programs don't work as intended, and in the end they aren't really making the world a better place at all.....
Especially a program that charges you $400... You get a piece of sh%$ laptop, and some kid in some 3rd world country gets the other piece of sh*$.

yeah.... Great program =\

Skip this crap, and just donate $400 to some starving child instead. I think that would go a lot further for them, then a laptop that will become a doormat (is it even good for that?)

No profit for the organization? Don't believe it.... Eventually they will be able to make these laptops for less and less money.... Do you think they'll lower the price constantly to match that? There will be profit here. Humans are greedy seedy little evil creatures, don't forget it =D

It is wonderful that some people want to help, but THIS IS THE WRONG WAY TO DO IT!
[Posted by: gamebro | Date: 10/24/07 12:35:46 PM]

2. 
I made the mistake of ordering one laptop in November 15, 2007 which was supposed to arrive by Christmas. Two months later I'm still waiting. After 4 emails and a couple of phone calls all I got is 2 emails saying that my laptop will arrive by January 15, 2008, well today is the 15th and right now is 10:10 pm ET. So I don't expect, I will be getting the laptop in the next couple of hours. I would like to have my money back and forget about those people who run that not for profit "business".
Josue Castillo
jc299@msn.com
[Posted by: Josue Castillo | Date: 01/15/08 07:23:29 PM]

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