Playstation, Dreamcast And The 3rd World 119
NaturePhotog writes: "CNN has an intriguing article on using Playstations running Linux to give people in developing nations access to information on health issues such as AIDS, clean water, etc. Playstations are cheap compared with PCs, hook up to a TV set, they're rugged, and could be hooked up via satellites using Globalstar phones.
Ship along some of those low-cost solar panels discussed earlier on /., and you'd have a pretty sweet setup you can use almost anywhere. For serious research, of course..." And as neema points out, Sony isn't the only choice here: "Using the modem port, students from Nagoya University hooked up a homemade IDE board and installed a hard drive. The Dreamcast is running NetBSD for the Dreamcast." Here are the instructions (with schematics) on how to add a hard drive to your Dreamcast.
My Dreamcast... (Score:1)
Sheesh... (Score:4)
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AIDS. (Score:2)
Re:My Dreamcast... (Score:1)
Come, son, it's time to fetch water from the stream and hunt a wildebeest!
Sorry, dad, but I've almost killed the Cyber-Demon...
They'll all end up starving to death. Way to go, Western Civilization!
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Information about health issues (Score:2)
The ICT and the WEF could also develop a portable version - like a Gameboy running Linux - that gives information about AIDS (and also herpes syphillis, ...) on the spot. The device could come in a handy pouch that doubles as a condom.
I would think something like this could be useful in many developed countries as well.
Added benefit (Score:2)
Teaching people about UNIX to learn about AIDS? (Score:2)
Loss Leader... can't work forever. (Score:3)
And why is this exactly? It's because the PS2 hardware device is a loss-leader, or at least a very-thin-profit-margin leader. They are basically sold only so that people will go out and buy Sony Playstation games, which, at $50+ for a DVDROM, are certainly sold at quite a profit.
So, I'm certainly not saying it's morally wrong to take PS2s, install linux, and ship 'em to the big bad "third world" (which is also getting a lot of solar cells, what's with that place these days?). What I'm saying is, the parade can't go on forever. If sony sells 10M of these things and only 2M people are using them for gaming, the price could increase significantly. Then, at the very least, the low-cost benefit would be gone. Worst case, Sony would discontinue the platform altogether.
What I'd rather see is some stripped-down hardware (like P2's with 64M and 4G) shipped over for this kind of use. This kind of thing could probably be gotten as donations from corporations that are surplussing it (ie, throwing it away), and they could even claim it as a tax write-off. Everyone wins.
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Re:what about.... (Score:2)
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Marketer's Drivel (Score:4)
No, rather I'd say that this is a contrived wet dream of a story, packaged by the Sony Entertainment US marketing department, bundled up and handed off to AOL/Time Warner's news division glorifying certain corporate interests that run contrary to certain looming threats [xbox.com] from other quarters. Besides, there's not a lot of money in refurbished P90's sold to developing nations, but there sure is a lot of money in convincing armchair philanthropists to buy a playstation 2 that they may sooth their aching conscience in this land of plenty. Don't believe the hype!
Digital divide, etc. (Score:1)
Anyone think these three CEOs might do better to spend their time fixing their companies than working on this interesting but not very important project? For the same reason that if I lived in a village without clean water, I would prefer clean water to a PS2, I would prefer my CEOs focus on shareholder value!
here's a pic... (Score:1)
Heh. (Score:2)
So it brings a smile to my face when I see someone actually doing it. Right on, guys!
Worthy cause (Score:2)
Re:here's a pic... (Score:2)
uhh... (Score:1)
Re:Added benefit (Score:2)
"Boyfiend and Girlfriend, traditional view" - Sitting on a couch together, girlfriend is thinking "Love", boyfriend is thinking "Lust".
"Boyfriend and Girlfriend, modern view" - Sitting on couch, girlfriend is thinking "Lust", boyfriend is thinking "Television".
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PSX instead of PS2 (Score:1)
I hope Sony isn't lame enough to count however many thousand PS2's they sell out of this deal as part of their installed base.
Schnapple
Electricity (Score:2)
Sure, you say, solar electricity. But hand-cranking (discreet cough) builds character.
Re:Sheesh... (Score:2)
okay, but what if the local political head honcho poo-poos environmental regulations, saying they'll cut into your farm profits? I spent some time in Kenya, and the farmers love heavy chemical fertilizers and pesticides: they make the plants grow big and healthy! Regulations require popular support, and to make the right choice, the populace must be informed.
High levels of toxins in the soil? How are farmers to know that this is the problem? Do they run chemical analyses themselves? No. Again, the information has to come from somewhere. I agree that maybe installing Playstations everywhere might be a slightly fanciful method of accomplishing this, but you can't really argue that those other things take priority over better information transfer -- the information is a prerequisite for improvement in a lot of cases.
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Re:Digital divide, etc. (Score:1)
There's only so much that a CEO can do to "fix" a company in a collapsing tech market. Being on a committee such as that is a good thing for a tech CEO to do in their spare time. But I'm going to stop short of flaming you...
For the same reason that if I lived in a village without clean water, I would prefer clean water to a PS2,
The idea is for the PS2 to help educate about clean water -- they probably don't even know the water is unsafe.
-rt-
Re:I don't think it's working (Score:1)
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Re:Sheesh... (Score:2)
As the saying goes, "it's all good." Clean water etc. doesn't have to come before third-world representation on-line, in fact the latter could help support the former.
More Slashdot posts from the third-world would lead to a more whole understanding of things here. Even the posts from (apparent) first-worlders who had lived in the Dominican Republic helped the solar panel conversation [slashdot.org] this way. And better understanding can lead to better action.
Give a man a fish... (Score:1)
Uh... (Score:2)
Wouldn't it be cheaper to send a whole slew of TV/VCR combo units (what are they, like maybe $50 in quantity?) with some video tapes?
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Re:Sheesh... (Score:2)
Re:Sheesh... (Score:1)
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Subtle satire (Score:1)
"I can plug in a 80 gigabyte disk and store 16 hours of video on it or up to 500 hours of audio. Now we attach it to a free satellite, slow, trickle charge. We can put anything on the disk you want to know about clean water, latrines and do it in whatever language," Gage said.
The clues are right there. Where in the world are they gonna find 100,000 playstations? What will be used to power them?
Re:Sheesh... (Score:1)
Water purifiers aren't cheap. And I bet it would help just as much if someone gave them a purifier and teached them how to use it rather than letting them see one on the internett, but not getting one. In the western world illness' are cured by medicine. Medisine costs money, and telling them about medicines won't raise their sallaries. (In addition I think they know how to cook)
Re:Sheesh... (Score:1)
.
I'm *half* serious here. You increase the discourse, you increase the exposure that people have to ideas like these. I understand that there are impediments, like training the people to use the things, but
______
Before you start shipping Playstation to Africa (Score:4)
I give a short quote:
Re:Sheesh... (Score:1)
I can see how getting knowledge to them is a Good Thing. However, and let's be honest here folks, how is posting to Slashdot going to help the average citizen of a Third World country? I'm sure that they have more pressing things on their minds...
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Re:Teaching people about UNIX to learn about AIDS? (Score:1)
I'm with ya man, them outdated machines still work (Score:1)
-- .sig are belong to us!
All your
Isn't this a bit too optimistic? (Score:1)
A few additional problems: You have got a hard time to get any supplies (for example, laser printer toner; some university is asking visiting professors to bring some toner with them for their one and only laser printer) and replacements for broken parts, high-tech devices are usually not designed to be repaired, and it's unlikely that they can be repaired in the same country. Furthermore, a lot of developping countries have quite an extreme climate, which doesn't increase the lifetime of electronic equipment either.
No, I don't think game consoles are a silver bullet in the struggle of educating people in the developping countries.
Language? (Score:1)
cute... (Score:1)
Re:Sheesh... (Score:1)
the populace must be informed.
Read what you're saying. They must be informed. Not just given the means to gather the information. I doubt the populace will look for information on chemical fertilizers. Maybe they'll just look for some information on clean water and then just leave it or do as the rest of the world; use it for useless stuff.
Wow, people really are dumb (Score:5)
Damnit, people! Can't journalists and policymakers consult with a geek before they spout of ignorantly on technical matters?
Someone forgot..... (Score:2)
Re:Sheesh... (Score:1)
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Not too well informed... (Score:2)
On a side note, the BSD Dreamcast looked pretty friggin' cool.
Re:Sheesh... (Score:1)
Maybe we should solve all the problems in the world before we start trying to solve all the other problems in the world. Sound silly? Well that is what you're saying.
Not all third world countries are as backward as you seem to think. A lot of countries are looking to find cheap ways of bridging the digital divide. A lot of the people that this program is targeted towards have "decent" water and food production systems, but could use vast improvements.
I don't think that anyone is thinking that plopping a PS2 in front of kid bloated from hunger is going to make him happier. But the entire third world isn't this bad.
This is the dumbest idea (Score:2)
Re:Wow, people really are dumb (Score:1)
Of course, they do. Read your PS2 devkit docs ...
As we all know, Sony sells these things at a loss in order to make money on game licensing
This is a myth. They sell at a slight profit, whose margin increases monthly.
it runs x86 software
And do you want the third world to be using closed-source proprietory binary-only software?
Much of the PS2 cost goes into ultra-high performance graphics acceleration
And yet it still comes in as a whole system - new - for less than the cost of a decent graphics card for a PC. Cost counts; sometimes a cheap sledgehammer is better than an expensive nutcracker.
Can't journalists and policymakers consult with a geek before they spout of ignorantly on technical matters?
Oh, the irony of this comment.
Makes sense to me. (Score:1)
Hacking the PS2 is very neat, don't get me wrong. It just doesn't seem to be the obvious choice in this case for cheap and easy computing power.
Interested in weather forecasting?
Not this bullshit again...[African's Response] (Score:4)
Disclaimer: I'm African and the last time I was back home was 2 months ago.
It is true that most African's live in the kind of abject poverty that most Westerners can't even imagine let alone endure. It is also true that basic infrastructure like regular power supply, potable water, health care services, etc. but this doesn't mean that this should somehow preclude African's from the fruits of the 21st century. Instead of being like most Westerners whose only thoughts of Africa occur when they guiltily switch the channel whenever one of those commercials asking for money to feed starving children who can be fed for less than $1 a day shows up, thesre are people who are trying to help out in some way or the other. It is in extremely poor taste for you to bash them for donating their time and resources to a society desperately in need.
Frankly I'm glad they're doing this, with the advent of the Net I've kept in touch with friends I left behind via ICQ and email whom I thought I'd never talk to again due to the prohibitive costs of calling or locating them after they moved. Anyone who is helping with the proliferation of technology and the Net in Africa has my thanks and undying appreciation. Oh by the way, for all the other people who are bashing them for sending "toys" to Africa. What the fuck are you doing for the poor and starving of the Earth?
PS: The last time I went home I asked my friends what they wanted and one of them asked for Java programming books. I am constantly in touch with another friend who just switched jobs and does ADO and Access database programming who used to write VBA applications in the past. My mom just bought a PC and complains about how she always ends up browsing for hours when all she wanted to do was spend 5 minutes checking her email. Hope that makes some you guys think before you rate this kind of jingoistic claptrap up.
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Re:Sheesh... (Score:1)
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Just start small (Score:1)
Misinformed (Score:1)
Dreamcast DVD Player (Score:1)
If anyone has the Apex AD800 DVD player, take it apart, you will notice it uses a standard ide dvdrom. Pretty cool eh.
Re:Not this bullshit again...[African's Response] (Score:1)
If you really feel that this will be helpful, then that's great. However, some of your points just don't make sense. First, you say things aren't as bad as we make them out to be. You then say that it's in "poor taste" because the society is desparately in need. Since when does having access to the Web count as "desparately in need"? You say things aren't that bad, and then attempt to prey on people's emotions by telling them how bad the situation is. Just out of curiosity, which is it?
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Better idea (Score:2)
Re:Just start small (Score:1)
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Things to do today....fold protiens (Score:1)
Re:Just start small (Score:1)
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Re:Sheesh... (Score:1)
This may scan well for readers of Wired, but I'm not sure it has anything to do with reality.
Knowing how to keep your water clean or rotate your fields is of no use whatsoever if the government (or the rebels, or the multinational representatives, whatever the local power blocs are) won't allow seed, farming equipment, medicine, or any other materially useful items into your village.
90% of the knowledge we can give them is just so much noise until the people themselves are empowered to act upon that knowledge.
It sounds "too nice" ... (Score:2)
"The people that make above a dollar a day, under three dollars a day, generally have some electricity. They've got television sets that run on car batteries, or they will have a little generator."
Where did he get this info from?
* Some one making $30 to $90 a month barelly can survive. So this guy has money to buy batteries (or take somewhere to recharge), or even worse, in the middle of a Petroleum crisis which the whole world is (gas price here in Brazil is going to the stars) this guy with $30~$90 still have enougth to buy gas to his genarator in order to wathc TV!
"Each part of the community has to do some different part of it. You would not come to Sun for good taste in designing attractive programs. We can make sure the networking works. All of our partners, meaning all of the high-tech companies in the world, ought to contribute their engineering knowledge,"
Gage said he has discussed the plan with the chairman of Sony and the president of the World Bank and decided that at least 100,000 modified consoles should be installed in schools and people's homes in poor country's
At what cost???
The only kind of money the World bank "borrows" to poor countries is charged in an interest rate that can never be paid back.
Sorry if I sound down. But it sounds too nice to be true.
Of course, if something like that ever happen I would feel really good knowing it. And Linux would grow with it.
Now on the other side, this is already happening in some places.
For example, The Linux distibution company Conectiva [conectiva.com] already gives parts of its profits selling the Conectiva Linux Box to CDI.
CDI is a non profit organization to help the democratization of tecnology among poor people/schools.
Good to see that some one at least is doing something.
Re:Someone forgot..... (Score:1)
Re:Someone forgot..... (Score:2)
x86 maybe (Score:1)
Gamecube and Linux (Score:1)
Such a common sentiment (Score:2)
Of course they were wrong. If Stallman had to wait until the advent of commodity sub-$1000 PC's to develop any GNU project, then where would we be today? More hopelessly dependant upon IBM, Sun and Microsoft no doubt.
Forcing a "Third World" country develop their infrastructure to depend expensive proprietary software is hurtful, especially since they can start with no legacy depandancies to break.
No one claims the Free software will solve all of societies problems- but when they are ready to start solving those, Free software can certainly help them to do it.
The CNN artcle and Simputer (Score:1)
Did you read my post? (Score:5)
Where did I say things aren't as bad as people make them out to be? I said which in my opinion clearly states that things are bad but doesn't mean that we shouldn't be allowed to use the Internet and computers until we are as advanced as the Western world was in the 20th century.
You then say that it's in "poor taste" because the society is desparately in need.
I said meaning that it is in poor taste to bash the people who are trying to find cheaper alternatives to getting Africans access to PCs.
Since when does having access to the Web count as "desparately in need"?
Lacking access to information does count as desperately in need. For instance, ignorance has caused AIDS in Africa to reach epidemic proportions [washingtonpost.com]. If a lot of these people had access to information just a few years earlier the devastation would not be as widespread as it is today. The same goes for a large number of diseases as well.
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Re:This is the dumbest idea (Score:1)
Me thinks you are pretty uniformed as to what is going on in the world.
Trust every man to have a basic knowledge about being able to use simple information for his betterment. That is how we have progressed from the stone ages to now, and will continue doing so.
So its not that only some people (like yourself as you deem) will appreacite the benefits of computing. Its not so really. Theres a far bigger better world out there than you know, or even care to know.
Re:Someone forgot..... (Score:2)
Re:Someone forgot..... (Score:1)
Mod this as troll (Score:1)
Just a suggestion.
Re:Isn't this a bit too optimistic? (Score:1)
Not insane (Score:2)
My first reaction was "Why don't we just send books?" Then I read it again. They want to educate illiterate people with video and animations.
Note also that there was a quote saying any of the modern consoles would be good, it's just that the others cost more than the PSX2. (Is $225 really a good estimate for how much it costs to make a PSX2? I had heard that the $300 price was under Sony's cost of goods, but maybe they have cut costs by now.)
Even the dirt-poor need information. They need to know how to set up the latrines so they don't contaminate the water supply. They need to know basic public health so they won't give themselves food poisoning all the time. And it might be cool if they could learn how to read; that's one more thing you actually could do on a PSX2.
In a perfect world, you would make a special Africa Computer. It would be mil-spec rugged, have the graphics capability for video and animations, etc. etc. In reality, you would spend a lot developing this, and the game consoles are probably good enough and very inexpensive.
Note that not everyone is illiterate. They will probably also want simple cheap web terminals like the NIC [thinknic.com].
steveha
Re:Not insane (Score:1)
Your observations about the original article are very good. Its just that somehow there is a misinterpretation in peoples mind the moment they read about third-world countries.
I think "pervasive computing" meant excatlt this - taking computing to everybody - literate or illeterate. And illiteracy doent stop a person from understanding. Illeteracy is only his inability to represnt in writen or spoken words what he UNDERSTANDS.
Re:Not insane (Score:2)
Hmm. Make a PSX Linux system that can play Flash animations, and include Flash animations with the Ogg Vorbis video, and you might have something pretty cool.
steveha
Re:Information about health issues (Score:1)
You need to understand that in some parts in Africa it's customary for the woman to 'dry' her vaginal area before sex. It shows that they haven't been unfaithful to their men. Sometimes this causes bleeding which makes her [and him] more likely to pass or recieve the virus.
Ethnocentric!
While the Internet could share the information, and help spread the word, you can't make someone change their ways.
So here is a problem. I don't really think it's right to tell someone to change their custom. On the other hand I'm weiry of anyone who tells a third world country to wear protection; sometimes their intentions are not what they say they are.
But the Internet would work very well for other things. Building drainage to keep dirty water away from the clean water. You could instantly talk to any college professor. The town could learn that using the same water to bath in that they drink in is causing "river blindness".
Maybe we have a P2P network idea here. MP3's of info - text files - video for the right bandwidth. We all know using Linux will only help with the TCP/IP. Sleek kernels - no unneeded overhead.
They really could use existing networks - gnutella wouldn't be to bad, except their ability to relay searches would be limited [right?]. Something like a web spider that searches the text would be nice, but lets stay away from that idea - plain text would be a great, quick way to find information.
I doubt we will actually see this, but if we do, I'd like to go and help set up solar panels and the like.
Re:I assuming this is a typo but.... (Score:1)
Re:Misinformed (Score:1)
Just think about it for a moment (Score:1)
In contrast to which, PS2s are all alike, you only have to design the system once, and you can support them all in a consistent way. Far easier to train volunteers, and there'd be simple and consistent cookbook support.
What you're suggesting sounds economical until you factor in the phenomenal quantities of sweat.
information doesn't need high res graphics (Score:1)
besides all that, if I lived in a third world country and someone gave me a PS2 without and games, I'd be pissed off!!!
Re:Heh. (Score:1)
What really happens (Score:2)
They probably don't realize its unsafe because the corrupt kleptocrat-for-life that runs their country has been dumping tech company hazardous waste in the river while lining his Swiss bank account on the profits.
Meanwhile those PS/2s that got "donated" for this worthy education project that worked and weren't diverted to the families of the kleptocrat's supporters were sold to the duty free store at the airport so that the government could generate even more hard currency.
Wake up and smell the coffee. You need to give these people something their government can't steal from them and that they won't immediately turn around and sell for cash, like clean water, innoculation from Polio and other things that materially improve their life. Justifying the technojackoff fantasy of running Linux on the PS/2 by thinking it helps people living in the stone age would be funny if it wasn't pathetic.
Wrong. (Score:3)
It is interesting that ignorant. ACs always make posts like this that insinuate that the only way an African can be a geek is if he is a White South African.
Sorry to dissappoint you but I'm a Black Nigerian [gatech.edu]. Thanks for playing.
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NetBSD/dreamcast (Score:1)
Here [netbsd.org] and there [netbsd.org]. Oh, looks like there are no dreamcast-specific snapshots just yet, but you can use an hpcsh snap [netbsd.org], as it is binary-compatible with the dreamcast (becuse the dreamcast runs off a Hitachi Super-H chip).
(I believe this port will be included in the 1.5.1 release [netbsd.org] when it becomes available, but don't quote me on that.)
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Re:My Dreamcast... (Score:1)
Yeah sure, playstations (Score:1)
that's not the goal (Score:2)
The PS2's are not for "surfing the web" in the way we necessarily understand it. They are for downloading and displaying multimedia content. The idea is to get information to the people about how to prevent AIDS, TB, and malaria, how to build better sanitation systems, how to prevent malnutrition, etc. For that, a PS2 showing videos and images may work a lot better than written materials (illiteracy is high). You may even be able to provide language and literacy courses with it. Unlike other IT projects, it should require little maintenance or instruction: just put in the right disk and turn it on. And unlike a DVD player, it has the ability to get and store content from satellites and radio transmissions, at nearly the same price.
Furthermore, unlike other kinds of IT projects, if it doesn't work, there is little harm done: people aren't arranging their life around this device; it's just an optional, potentially useful source of information. It promises to give people what Marshall says empowers them: skills.
Low-cost information yes! ps2 no. (Score:1)
Just for the record, there are people in the developing world both interested in low-cost computing [google.com] and open source. They understand the hardware limitations and the realities of the cost infrastructure.
And as far as I can tell, they're not in it for the money.
Tell me sending a ps2 doesn't seem ridiculously inappropriate compared to this.
Re:Isn't this a bit too optimistic? (Score:2)
That's not clear at all. It's much easier to grow if you are the first kid on the block. The thirld world countries have to deal with lots of difficulties that the growing first world wasn't exposed to:
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Re:My Dreamcast... (Score:1)
Now THAT makes no sense. (Score:1)
Sure, recycle all the XTs, 286s, 386s, and the low end 486s... Anything better than that can be used for SOMETHING.
A 486DX2-66 w/16Megs of RAM can be a whole hell of a lot more useful than a PS2 "workstation". How many NICs can you stick on a PS2? Can it be used as a router, or a firewall? How much memory can you stick in a PS2? How about SCSI peripherals?
It makes no sense for anyone to quickly dismiss our "garbage" as viable computing hardware.
Interested in weather forecasting?
Re:Someone forgot..... (Score:1)
In the early 80's they had visual training programs for cashiers. It used a lot of tree spanning and pretty much evaled and adopted itself to the learning styles of the person using it.
The idea is you can now mix interactivity and images together, to provide more information than a written word. Computers are powerful enough to do these sort of things now, and the PS2 would be perfect for such a thing. Cheap, and able to do some real graphics (so people can figure out what it is they are looking at). You get the power of the information age without forcing everyone to have learn a written language.
Re:Developing Nations? (Score:1)
Now, why did that get modded down? It's actually quite logical!
Come on, people...
Interested in weather forecasting?
Re:Not insane (Score:2)
To make a bootable PSX CD legally don't you need to license some kind of code from Sony?
Re:Someone forgot..... (Score:2)
Re:Subtle satire (Score:1)
Saddam Hussein's private jet?
Re:Sheesh... (Score:1)
First, I don't mean to be an ass, but there should be a '4th (or 2nd) world'. I'm on a 3rd world country, and I have 5 computers on my home. And we are not 'drug lords' or anything.. I'm just a geek.
That said, the most inportant thing in our society (by that I mean the society where I live) is freedom, and knowledge. The only way to 'get out' is by learning, and doing something important (that or corruption). I know a computer will not give food to people, but knowledge is the most important tool this people could have.
Interesting fact: before ~1995, the programers here were _very_ incompetent. There was no (good) commercial software being produced here, and all the the attempts were just lame. All that change after the arrival of the internet to every home. seriously
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Re:Wow, people really are dumb (Score:1)
Let's see some figures proving this, eh? It's a well-known fact that the gaming console market is all about loss-leaders. Sell the razors below cost, make the money on the blades. Yes, Sony may make a profit on the PSOne hardware now, but that's been out for what, 6 years? 7 years? The PS2 is still a loss for them, and they're going to be forced to take even more of a loss to be able to compete price-wise with the GameCube.
Instead, let's have the third-world run closed, proprietary, one-vendor hardware. That sounds like a much better alternative! And while we're at it, let's not leverage the existing HUGE library of x86 code (open and closed), and rewrite everything for the PS2 architecture.
This must be that "new math" I keep hearing about. The current state-of-the-art consumer-grade video accelerator, the GeForce 3, is retailing below $400, now (check pricewatch. $350 is the average price for a reference board). So, the PS2 is still selling at $400, which means $400 - $350 = the PS2 is cheaper? What? Not to mention the fact that you qualified your statement with "decent graphics card", which means you'd consider a GeForce2 MX, Radeon, or Kyro II board, which go for between $100 and $200. $400 - $200 = Damn, the PS2 is even cheaper now!. I'm sorry, but no. "New Math" doesn't work, and the PS2 is not cheaper than a decent PC graphics accelerator (it's by far more expensive!).
Re:Not insane (Score:2)
steveha
Excellent for data-entry sweatshops on the cheap (Score:2)
Or am I just paranoid?
Re:Added benefit (Score:2)
Re:Not this bullshit again...[African's Response] (Score:2)
Really?
"Fruits of the 21st Century?"
How about if Africa gets itself out of the 6th century by producing something the world wants?
And this time, try not to make it slaves [uwec.edu], terrorists [ict.org.il], virus [cdc.gov] es [aegis.com], endangered [seaworld.org] species [fws.gov], or diamonds [guardian.co.uk] to raise money to hack [amnesty.it] people [fas.org] to [smh.com.au] death [mg.co.za].
--Blair
"You are only as free, happy, smart, and rich as you think you are."