>> ASIAONE / DIGITAL / NEWS / STORY
Price of MIT professor's 'US$100 laptop' hits US$200
Tue, Oct 30, 2007
Reuters

BOSTON - A COMPUTER developed for the world's poor children, dubbed 'the US$100 (S$146) laptop,' has reached a milestone: It is now selling for US$200.

The One Laptop per Child Foundation, founded by MIT Professor Nicholas Negroponte, has started offering the lime-green-and-white machines in lots of 10,000 or more for US$200 apiece on its Web site (http: laptopfoundation.org/participate/givemany.shtml).

Those laptops are for purchase by donors who designate where they are to be sent through a program recently launched by the foundation to help finance the product's launch.

Two weeks ago, a foundation executive reiterated recent statements that it cost US$188 to build the computer, up from its US$150 price tag in February and an original US$100 price.

It was unclear why the price of the machines in the donor program described on the OLPC Web site was above that US$188 cost, and the foundation declined to elaborate.

The laptops are scheduled to go into production next month at a factory in China, behind their original schedule and in quantities that are a fraction of Negroponte's earlier projections.

It is unclear when the machines will be ready for customers, as the Web site said version 1.0 of the software that runs the machine will not be ready until Dec 7.

When Prof Negroponte said he could produce the laptops for US$100, industry analysts said it had the potential to shake up the PC industry, ushering in an era of low-cost computing.

He hoped to keep the price down by achieving unprecedented economies of scale for a start-up manufacturer, and in April, he told Reuters he expected to have orders for 2.5 million laptops by May, with production targeted to begin in September.

But that has not panned out. So far the foundation has disclosed orders to three countries - Uruguay, Peru and Mongolia. It has not said how many machines they have ordered.

Wayan Vota, an expert on using technology to promote economic development who publishes olpcnews.com, a blog that monitors the group's activities, estimates orders at no more than 200,000 laptops.

'One-hundred dollars was never a realistic price. By starting with an unrealistic price, he reduced his credibility selling the laptop,' Mr Vota said. -- REUTERS

 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  Ear wax feast a YouTube hit
   
 
  Massive pirate site walks the plank
   
 
  Aurea: Seduction by light
   
 
  Internet rape - are you safe?
   
 
  Non profits turn to YouTube to raise awareness, funds
   
 
  Internet to head to outer space
   
 
  Japan's KDDI unveils world's thinnest folding phones
   
 
  Nissan's aerial view technology makes parking a cinch
   
 
  The Coming: Online TV
   
 
  Universal considers free music partnership-source
   
>> RELATED STORY
Price of MIT professor's 'US$100 laptop' hits US$200
HP Pavilion TX1000
Ultra-compact notebooks strut their stuff
Toshiba Portege M500 notebook
Fujitsu Lifebook P7230

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

Motoring: Notebook PC critical to F1 racing

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
Search: