Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Fri 27th Apr 2007 07:10 UTC
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Member since:
2006-10-11
If I remember correctly, the OLPC was specifically designed to really stick out, so that anybody seeing this machine knew that it was an OLPC. Together with social engineering -- spreading the word that only official bodies can buy this device for educational use only -- they hope to cement the image that anybody using a OLPC who is not a child should probably not have the OLPC in the first place.
While I understand your concerns, I want to point out that the idea of the OLPC was to open up the IT world to children whose countries mostly havn't an established IT infrastructure. It should be of no concern if the OLPC can run MS Windows, this target audience lives in a world where MS Windows is not synonymous with Home-PC. Even if the GNU/Linux based OS wouldn't do all they can hope to do with the OLPC, they won't necessarily see MS Windows as an alternative.
It is an AMD Geode, which certainly is a quirky X86 but it also is one of the least power-hungry CPUs out there. The LX700, which is used in the OLPC runs at 433MHz and uses about 0.8 W/h under load. The whole platform, which includes a VESA compatible graphics adapter, is somewhere around 2.0 W/h.