As expected, OLPC embraces Windows

No surprise here, unless you actually believed people don't "want" Windows:

Microsoft and the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) initiative announced Thursday that the Windows operating system would soon be available on the so-called XO, also known as the "$100 laptop." In interviews, executives made it clear that this could be a catalytic shift in perception and market success for the innovative but up-to-now aberrant laptop intended for the poor children of the world.

The Windows version of the XO will go on sale by September. Like the regular, Linux-based version, it will at first actually cost closer to $200, because the project has not yet achieved the volumes that could drive costs down.

Making Windows available on the XO could make it far more palatable for developing-world governments to make the huge investment necessary to purchase large numbers of XOs for their children. "It's a very big deal," said OLPC chairman Nicholas Negroponte in an interview.

To get Windows working on the XO took time, because it has a number of unique hardware features, like an e-book reading mode. Microsoft will include its super-cheap $3 version of Windows and Office called the Student Innovation Suite with the Windows XO, which will thus be a full-fledged Windows NT computer.

With Microsoft applying its entire ecosystem to the task, the XO is far more likely to get traction in countries around the world. The company will recruit its system integrator partners, its own consulting unit, and involve the XO in its teacher training programs, among other efforts.

Negroponte says when he made the rounds in Egypt trying to interest the government in buying XOs, four ministers he met all asked "by the second sentence" whether they ran Windows.

Yep. I bet they did.

Frankly, the built-in software in today's XO is horrific. Assuming it runs OK, XP will be a huge improvement.

Related: Microsoft and One Laptop per Child Partner to Deliver Affordable Computing to Students Worldwide (press release)

Discuss this Article 10

weedmonk
on May 15, 2008
I feel bad for the Linux guys who're bolshevik like in their Zeal. They continously harass XP user on Eeeuser.com and other sites and take offence when people prefer XP to the crippled Xandros. Good for the OLPC project...if they aren't a complete joke they are now.
jeffhex
on May 15, 2008
OLPC = One License Per Child Perhaps it should be renamed the OWLPC One Windows License Per Child.
clindhartsen
on May 15, 2008
Seems like an interesting move for the OLPC project, though you can be assured a good amount of pro-Linux'ers are probably going to go to bed crying over this. While I haven't used one, my question would be how much will be included to provide the kids with the basics. While the Linux one wasn't wonderful probably, I wonder if they'll provide good basics for Windows.
drylight
on May 15, 2008
Oh God! Poor poor children. Why turn them off computers by making them suffer with Windows?
dstrack
on May 16, 2008
I bought the XO as the buy one give one program... I think its a neat little machine. Sugar is a very strange UI. I like the whole "mesh" idea but the UI is not user friendly at all. Windows would be much better... are we going to be able to run Windows on our XO if we already bought one? Seems like there's going to be slight hardware upgrades/changes...
Waethorn
on May 16, 2008
Sorry, but if it can't run Windows Vista Starter, it's just not a good deal. I don't see how a 3rd-world country that's starting out with computer systems can feel good about purchasing something, knowing that free vendor support will expire in less than a year, and they'd never be able to afford an extended support contract.
beaker
on May 16, 2008
I thought Vista was the future? Shouldn't that be the goal?
subzerohitman721
on May 16, 2008
I tend to view this as a positive, since OLPC tried to go the Linux route. Just like the other attempts to go mass market with Linux, it has failed yet again to gain any true traction. Counting the two Wal-Mart attempts, is this not 0 for 3 for Linux variants attempting to mass market? Like the blog states, "Negroponte says when he made the rounds in Egypt trying to interest the government in buying XOs, four ministers he met all asked "by the second sentence" whether they ran Windows." Just like in the United States, the rest of the real world uses Windows. This could have been a place where Steve Jobs could have stepped up and offered OS-X. This could have been very positve press and a chance to prove that Jobs is all about the consumer. Even the smallest of consumers are in his view. It would have been a smash opportunity to get the world's youth started as Apple customers on the OS side. But he passed on this opportunity and this will simply enlarge the Windows community. Spin it like you can, the truth is that 15 years after Windows 3.0, its still a Windows World. I do hope that Microsoft will offer in the near future, a special support for OLPC running XP. Perhaps a future version will support Vista, but in the long run this is a win-win for Windows and Microsoft. We get a world wide audience of children who will embrace XP and gain valuable lifetime skills. Those who are truely gifted will do remarkable things.
Turbulence
on May 18, 2008
The OLPC doesn't even "seem" capable of running Windows.
peterkirn
on May 19, 2008
I think commenters are missing the point. I agree with Paul that the software result was problematic. But the whole idea of the XO laptop was *supposed* to be using it as a learning tool. There's an excellent criticism here: http://radian.org/notebook/sic-transit-gloria-laptopi Saying this is Linux vs. Windows is a massive oversimplification. I think the question is, what would a mass implementation of a laptop *for learning* need in the way of software? Which OS you use is only a small component of that question. And as Ivan observes, even the question of free software may be a secondary element. But saying this is a blow for mainstream Linux adoption is just ridiculous ... it assumes that the OLPC has any kind of mass appeal to begin with, and with the project unraveling, I think that's an open question. Lifetime skills in XP? You have to be joking. Education, and even computer education, is about more than any OS -- Windows included.

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