As for the whole profit vs. nonprofit argument: thank the gods that Quanta (which is the largest laptop manufacturer in the world and has built laptops for Apple, HP, Dell, IBM, and just about anyone else that you can think of), AMD, and all the other hardware suppliers are all nonprofit organizations. Oh wait, they're not, so I guess that this OLPC program is legally obligated to maximize profits too.
In this case, Quanta, AMD, and the rest are providing "corporate sponsorship", but are not in control of the project itself. If the relationship between the OLPC program and the hardware suppliers is reason for you to lack faith in the program, I really can't blame you. From this article, though, it seems like most of the corporations involved have simply donated money to the program:
http://tech.monstersandcritics.com/news/article_1212148.php/Taiwans_Quanta_to_make_100-US-dollar_laptops_for_poor_kids (second to last paragraph)
"OLPC is funded by a number of sponsors, including AMD, Brightstar Corp, eBay, Google, Marvell, News Corp, SES Global, Nortel Networks and Red Hat. Each company has donated 2 million US dollars.
Quanta is taking part in the project as a joint designer and sole manufacturer of the laptops."
However, I personally am in college with the goal of becoming a teacher myself, so I place a lot of value on education. I probably wouldn't be as interested in larger-scale infrastructure programs as I am about a program that places emphasis on education. Nonetheless, if you know of a program better than the one laptop per child program, let us know about it!
Room to Read
They've criticized the $100 laptop program as being too expensive. They say that a $2000 library serving 400 people ($5 a head) or a $10,000 school serving 400 people ($25 each) is far more cost effective. I definitely prefer their traditional approach to education over the OLPC program.
The MP3 of the conversation with the head of Room to Read can be found
here for anyone interested.
The idea of building schools and libraries is certainly more traditional. The laptop program, at least to me, is a new idea that hasn't really been tested yet. How well it will work out when tested on a large scale has yet to be seen.
What's really grabbed me about the laptop program are the communications potential of widespread mesh networked laptops and the idea of children in poor commnities having access to modern tools and technology.
Necromancer, in the above conversation that I linked to (that you quoted from about the roomtoread founder's comments on the laptop program), there were some very interesting comments made by the one panel speaker who isn't white -- to the effect that rich countries need to respect the dignity of the poor... and respect the wants and needs of various communities. While some communities may respond to having schools and libraries built, in other cases poor communities may have schools built but kids not attending... and the hi-tech promise of the laptop program might both more appealing and more effective.
Since the laptop program currently is basing its business model on selling computers to governments rather than private citizens, governments will have to make decisions on balancing how much money to put toward building schools and libraries or into the laptop program.
I think it's a great choice for governments to have.
I found this on the wiki: Steve Jobs had offered Mac OS X free of charge for use in the laptop, but according to Seymour Papert, a professor emeritus at MIT who is one of the initiative's founders, the designers want an operating system that can be tinkered with: “We declined because it’s not open source.”[40] Therefore Linux was chosen.
This makes me lose all respect that I had for this project - what little I had, anyway. It makes no sense to turn down a top notch, reliable, and efficient OS because it's not open source. I can't think of any good reasons that they would want to screw with the OS, except for hardware support, which Jobs would surely support.
I still think that this program is dumb, simply because the only reason that anyone in the US would want one of these things is to show how great and caring they are. I'd much rather donate the $400, let them give away both laptops, and buy myself a used Pentium III laptop for less than $100 that will run rings around this look-at-me-machine.
I believe part of the reasion that the laptop program wants the OS to be open-source is to allow the children the opportunity to tinker with the OS and explore it.
I don't know if you've looked at it this way or not, but the idea of opening up open-source-linux development to the poor may result in an explosion of development for linux as a platform... which is underutilized in the richer parts of the world since we're all relatively comfortable with the Windows and Mac OS systems that we are more or less forced to accept.
Why would Steve Jobs refuse to produce an open-source Macintosh OS for the laptop project?
I appreciate your comment about the XO laptop being a "look at me" machine. I really understand what you're saying, and if I get one, I don't want it to be because I want it to be a "look at me" machine. If I get one, I want it to be because I've been thinking of buying a cheap laptop for some time, and this one may be a good one to get because of the buy one get one program. I like the durability aspect of it as well :-" A big part of the reason I've never bought one before is that I don't really trust myself with one. I also liked the multi-language keyboard designs that I saw. I've never looked into getting a laptop with more than one alphabet on the keyboard, but the XO's Arabic/English keyboard is very interesting to me since I would like to learn Arabic.
I didn't know little 3rd world kids were such Linux hacker gurus...
That's because they haven't had large-scale access to Linux computers.
Personally, I've always had access to DOS or Windows machines so I've never fooled around with either Macintosh OS or Linux, even though my Microsoft machines have not always been stable... (usually when my computers have started crashing or not working I've been able to just buy a new one)