Quite some years ago (2006-08), we brought the #OLPC AKA the 100$ laptop to Ethiopia as pilot.
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DJGummikuhreplied to Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange: on last edited by
@jwildeboer yeah I also remember there was a huge outcry that it would destroy the mobile devices market and people should rather pay hundreds of Euros for Hardware they don't need to "not upset the market" 🤮
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Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:replied to Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange: on last edited by
Going through my archives, I notice I might have been confused. This goes back even further. This happened 2006-08 in the pilot in Ethiopia. Rwanda was 2014. At that time the LED was already long gone. My apologies. I have corrected the original toot. 5/8
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Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:replied to Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange: on last edited by
(Thank you all for being kind and respectful in the comments thus far. The OLPC was (and is) a defining part of my private and professional life. I was only involved on the sidelines but I met people that were so deeply invested into the ideas. Developers. Children. Teachers. But also aggressive opponents, lobbyists that did everything possible to kill the project. It teached me a lot. And I still feel sad it never lived up to its potential. Maybe it will. I'm still a believer) Me, 2007 6/8
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@DJGummikuh @jwildeboer I remember back then there was a huge demand from people in Europe saying "Give me one as well! I'm paying 200$ and you can give one child one for free." I always wondered, why this never happened.
I guess, your stories of pressure explain this nicely. Thanks for sharing!
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@haraldgeyer this actually happened. There was a "buy one, give one" program and I bought 4 back then.
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@eliasp Thanks for sharing. It's strange: Somebody (probably @DJGummikuh or @jwildeboer ) wrote the same back when I posted this originally, but it's gone now and my reply dropped from the thread.
Anyways, here is my reply from back then: https://mastodon.social/@haraldgeyer/113143036090113982
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Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:replied to Harald Geyer last edited by
@haraldgeyer And IIRC, I posted the links to https://wiki.laptop.org/go/XO_Giving and the discussion page at https://wiki.laptop.org/go/Talk:XO_Giving @eliasp @DJGummikuh
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Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:replied to Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange: last edited by
@haraldgeyer The TL;DR, the first G1G1 (Give One, Get One) campaign was a big success but getting the logistics sorted turned out to be far more complex than expected. The second G1G1 couldn't get close to the success of the first one and it was decided that this concept isn't the right way. @eliasp @DJGummikuh
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Harald Geyerreplied to Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange: last edited by
@jwildeboer Yes exactly. I remember now reading these links. Any idea, why your post disappeared?
I now some people have automatically disappearing posts, but all your others are still present. It seems like a strange #mastodon issue.
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Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:replied to Harald Geyer last edited by [email protected]
@haraldgeyer My instance deletes my posts after 7 days UNLESS they are bookmarked by me or get more than 5 favs or boosts. I guess this one didn't make the cut
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Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:replied to Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange: last edited by
@haraldgeyer It also doesn't happen that often that a thread suddenly comes back to life after 3 months I am pleasantly surprised and apologise for the holes in the replies due to my setup.
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Harald Geyerreplied to Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange: last edited by
@jwildeboer Yes, this explains this nicely.
I wonder, why you do this? In my experience many replies in very interesting technical threads or other deep discussions between a small group of people won't make it. But random opinion bits will stay around forever. That seems to introduce quite the bias.
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Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:replied to Harald Geyer last edited by
@haraldgeyer It's mainly a cost problem My little instance only has limited resources available so I can't keep everything I ever did here since 2018 around. I also like to think of my posts as being ephemeral and not a record of history. Threads that I find important will end up as a blog entry on my blog. Most other posts can safely be deleted after a while. Sometimes this causes bad moments, but rare enough to still be acceptable to me.
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Chris [list of emoji]replied to Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange: last edited by
How does that work?!?!? Does the mesh subsystem have its own processor with access to the keyboard and screen?
(Yes, *this* is the part I'm fixating on.)
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Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:replied to Chris [list of emoji] last edited by
@suetanvil Yes, the Marvell chip has its own SOC to keep the network up and running. And no, it is not connected to screen/keyboard. It "just" operates as a mesh node, receiving and forwarding traffic.
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Chromebook hardware is *very* cheap these days and can be reflashed into a functioning Linux system pretty easily. So it wouldn't be *impossible* to maintain the software stack for something like this as a FOSS project.
(I occasionally see bulk lots of out-of-support Chromebooks on EBay for ~$40 per computer and I keep thinking that there's potential there.)
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socketwenchreplied to Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange: last edited by
@jwildeboer Was the keyboard light like the old thinkpads? A single LED that shown down on the keyboard?
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Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:replied to socketwench last edited by
@socketwench Two, actually
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socketwenchreplied to Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange: last edited by
@jwildeboer Oh, neat. I didn't know that.
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Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:replied to socketwench last edited by
@socketwench I have one of the B2 prototypes that has the LEDs. And a later version without. I asked at the time why they were removed and got this long story about what happened in Ethiopia as a reply