basic instinct of diabetics. you start eating a hell of food and you never know when you got diabetics. u pissed off in your bed. the deadly sugar : Failed project in the history of OLPC.
Shame on them who never cared about the feedback that came with heavy criticism just to make things better. All failed because Sugar guys are genius and they no need any shit of suggestions. its a blame game. go and do it. On Apr 24, 5:48 pm, "Bibek Paudel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi all, > While I personally think it is bad for OLPC to switch to Windows XP, > here a few observations that I have made: > > 1. Any development/education project meant for third world countries > is best when it is natively grown. A top down approach where some guy > in Boston teaches us how to change things in our neighbourhood is > never likely to understand and respect our situation and problems. He > has other priorities. A bottom-up approach should be devised where > grassroot organizations from different parts of the world collaborate > to form a mother organization that works in their benefit. Compare > this to Nepal's political situation where every other politician/media > claims to represent the people and be working for them. Things won't > that way in technology too. > > 2. Nicholas Negroponte is a man hungry of some position in history of > business and humanity, both. He thinks increasing the sales of laptops > is more important than the growing impact it is creating. Selling a > qarter of a million of laptops is a success by any means for any > profit-organization. I don't understand how it is not sufficient in > case of a first-of-its-kind project by a non-profit organization. > > 3. Nicholas Negroponte doesn't care. Using Windows in XOs has many > implications. Besides cost and the performance of the laptops, it > means you are forcing a company's products on all children. Compare > that to a government policy whereby it makes every school going > children mandatory to wear dresses from a certain dress-designing > company or study books from a certain publisher (eg. Ekta publishers). > Thats why we have a government book publisher and curriculum designer > in Nepal and government can't recommend any other books. I don't > understand how someone can impose the monopoly of using a > vendor-specific software on all kids. And why governments all over the > world should abide by that. > > 4. The issue of "amorphic" development of XO as said by Negroponte is > at best ridiculous. Having the best of the world's technology, > engineers and money at MIT, it shocks me how he allowed a project of > OLPC's scale fall at the hands of people who neither could have a good > architect for the software or the capacity to develop them > "morphically". Had he never heard of the term "software engineering" > before? Why was the decision taken in first place? > > 5. What are all the people spread all over supposed to make of the > recent developments? At the behest of a single man or a group of such > men, should they be forced to change their working style, philosophy > and way of seeing things? > > 6. I wish someone starts a fork of Sugar and everything OLPC. Why not > Walter Bender? Start a fork. Or else the people at OLPC, if you have > all the democracy and its powers, why don't you remove such people who > are moving away from the OLPC's original principles? I just hope > something of similar nature happens. > > If you agree with me, please forward this message to other mailing > lists of OLPC where people are likely to respond to this issue. > > Cheers ! > Bibek > > > > On Thu, Apr 24, 2008 at 5:50 PM, sarose <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > hey dude! your grandpa is great but you know my uncle Negroponte is > > fool nonsense because he now hate Linux. > > > About Ubuntu, i don't know how to pronounce it. Please teach me as > > well. > > > Try a survey with your friends or co-workers around. The answer > > screams cries utterly. Don't forget to submit back to Uncle > > Negroponte. > > > On Apr 24, 4:12 pm, Zico <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > On Thu, Apr 24, 2008 at 3:42 PM, sarose <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > yes its bad news and a good lesson for the gnome/kde that has not come > > > > up with user friendly UI till this date. > > > > You are very wrong, brother! Don`t you see the *blinking things* of > > > gnome/kde? And, how do you define "friendly user interface"? What more do > > > you expect from Gnome/KDE? Please point out, we will be really glad to > > hear > > > that. > > > > just stop saying linux is ready for desktop. > > > > Why should we do that?? > > > > > neither its ready for my > > > > dad nor its ready for my little brother. > > > > I don`t know about your dad or younger brother, but Ubuntu is ready for > > my > > > grandfather. Now, i am teaching my grandmother to use computer ( in one > > > word, Ubuntu ). > > > > all its ready > > > > > for is server only. > > > > Very wrong. > > > By the way, which distro do you use? > > > > -- > > > Best, > > > Z > > -- > Bibek Paudel.http://blog.bibekpaudel.com.np/ > ============================== --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ FOSS Nepal mailing list: [email protected] http://groups.google.com/group/foss-nepal To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Community website: http://www.fossnepal.org/ -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
