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Dvorak Says We Should Send Rice, Not Laptops, To Children

Cranky-Pants Blasts OLPC

In case you haven't been following along with our occasional coverage of John C. Dvorak, we think he could lighten up a bit. This angry man has made a career out of bemoaning everything from Web 2.0 to the iPhone, and now the OLPC XO, the laptop designed for children in developing countries. Dvorak thinks that the OLPC XO is a slap in the face of the developing world. A modern day "let them eat cake," to steal his analogy.

Allow us to boil down Dvorak's arguments for you:
  • Money would be better spent donating $200 worth of rice
  • Millions of people are starving to death
  • Kids will be spammed and see ads
  • There are bomb-making instructions online
  • There are lots of illiterate people
Yes, there are places in the world where people are starving and the money would be better spent on basic necessities. But are they really the intended audience? The laptops are clearly aimed at those where information and education are the biggest concerns. Handing people food is great, but "teach a man to fish" and all that jazz. Not to mention that many countries would be better off without our charitable donations and heavily subsidized agricultural goods. They drive down prices in foreign lands, keeping local farmers from being able to make a living.

We also want to take issue with a particular piece of information that Dvorak takes from a "world hunger website:"

"Nearly one in four people, or 1.3 billion -- a majority of humanity -- live on less than $1 per day."

Wait, what? "one in four" is 25 percent, "1.3 billion" is less than half the population of China, and some how that's a majority? The most recent estimates actually put the population of the Earth at around 6,634,570,959 which would mean one in four would be closer to 1.7 billion. None of those three figures align.

As for his concern that these poor children have to deal withj spam, all we can say is, "oh well." Life is too short to worry about Viagra ads in a child's inbox. Then there are his worries about the type of information available on the internet, such as bomb making instructions. If Dvorak is worried that these children don't even have water, what is the likelihood that they'd have bomb making materials?

And, finally, Dvorak suggests that the OLPC laptop would be useless since there are large populations of illiterate children in Africa. I don't know if he's been paying attention, but the whole purpose of this thing is to get educational materials to children through the laptop so that they won't be illiterate.

Referenced story from PC Magazine

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Does the Media Love Apple Too Much?

Contrary to what the hype would have had you believe, Christ himself did not return to Earth this past Friday to render judgment. Apple simply released a cell phone. Now that the day of days has come and gone and the planet is recovering from its collective hangover, we think it's time to step back and ask ourselves just what the heck happened. What did we all get caught up in?

It's no secret that just about every media outlet on Earth has a crush on Apple and its demigod leader, Steve Jobs. Even we here at Switched can be accused of, perhaps, paying too much attention to the goings on at One Infinite Loop (that's the Cupertino, California street address of Apple HQ. The fact that we can usually list this address with no further explanation only helps illustrate the seriousness of the epidemic we're dealing with here).

Apple, in the eyes of most, is worthy of sainthood. Its products and ethos aren't just good, we seem to think they're somehow good for humanity. The company can do no wrong. And even when it does make mistakes, the media fails to acknowledge them. We're blinded. In denial. that this is an abusive relationship, and which Apple has the upper hand.

Let's see. David Pogue's review of the iPhone was the cover story of The New York Time's Business section, an honor that, as far as we know, has never been given to a cell phone. This isn't to belittle Pogue's coverage. He's usually honest and spot on. He even points out the absurdity of the hype in his opening sentences, noting that the iPhone has "been the subject of 11,000 print articles, and it turns up about 69 million hits on Google... bloggers call it the 'Jesus Phone.'"

Meanwhile, tech blogs (like yours truly) seem to think it's necessary to report on every Apple rumor, no matter how mundane or far-fetched. Any time the Apple store goes down, Engadget will let you know just in case Apple finally releases its long awaited iJobs personal cancer-curing robot. If Apple has a patent filed for something, you can bet the crappy patent filing sketches will turn up on at least a hundred tech blogs along with ridiculous predictions about future Apple products. Even we thought that the iPhone dock, literally a piece of plastic that holds your iPhone, deserved an article of it's own.

Slate has an article up bemoaning the hype that surrounds just about everything Apple does. It takes particular umbrage with the media's coverage of the iPod with Video release, where many media outlets seemed to ignore the fact that Apple was a bit late to the party on that front. The Globe and Mail even had an article titled, "Apple Seeds New Markets With Video Version of iPod," as if no one had ever thought to put videos in the palm of a person's hand before.

Our own iPhone review round up captures the verdicts of several reviewers, but leaves out the flowery language that disguises any of the faults they may discuss. "Sophisticated," "outlook changing," (Pogue) "vivid," (Levy) ... We can't tell if they're talking about a phone or the Sistine Chapel.

Perhaps the biggest sign that the media is a little too head over heels for Apple comes from Pogue's otherwise fair assessment of the most hyped gadget ever. One of his biggest complaints (among many others) is the excruciatingly slow speed of AT&T's EDGE data network. But Pogue lays the blame at AT&T's feet as if Apple had no choice in the matter. Apple could have crammed a 3G radio into the handset at the cost of battery life, but it chose not to. AT&T has a blazing fast HSDPA network that is faster than most DSL lines, and yet Apple passed it up. In fact, the in the days following the release of the Jesus Phone, the only complaints we're hearing are about AT&T. It's not Apple's fault the network is slow. It's not Apple's fault customers had problems activating their phones. And forget about buying the iPhone at an AT&T store, the Apple store is much better. Etc, etc, etc.

Of course, Apple isn't without its haters (we've published a few reasons not to buy the iPhone ourselves). Tech blogger and author David Platt is convinced the iPhone will ultimately flop because its design is "fundamentally flawed." He sees too many features, a complicated interface and a lack of tactile feedback as being deal breakers for most consumers. But tell that to the 700,000 people who bought the iPhone since Friday.

And let's not forget John Dvorak of PC Magazine. He recently published an editorial entitled "Shut Up About the iPhone Already!" He's made it abundantly clear that he is not impressed with the iPhone and complains about the incessant press saying, "Hitler got less coverage when he invaded Poland." Ouch.

But cranky pants Dvorak aside, it's obvious that there is something wrong here. Though the tech site CNET gives Apple's OSX operating system only slightly higher marks than Windows Vista, articles on the site routinely talk about Vista as if it were an STD. Engadget posted a 30 year retrospective of Apple, when doing the same for Dell or HP would be considered absurd. Remember the original iMac? Or iBook? Those candy-colored fashion PCs that were underpowered, overpriced and ran the ridiculously outdated OS 9? When released, they were heralded as a new era for computing.

Think for a minute about what everyone's attitudes toward Apple would be if history had forked in the other direction and made Apple the big dog instead of Microsoft. Everyone complains about how restrictive and oppressive Microsoft is, but take a good hard look at Apple's lock on the iPod and iTunes. Look at its refusal to open up iPhone to third-party applications. Why are these crimes excusable when lesser offenses committed by Microsoft are met with the contempt of just about the entire Internet? We don't want to sound like Microsoft evangelists here, because we're certainly not (see our coverage of the Zune). We just like to wonder what the world would be like if Apple and Microsoft switched places. Imagine how impressed the media would be with Microsoft's underdog operating system that runs on any computer, unlike Apple's locked operating system, which requires the purchase of an Apple computer.

The iPhone is a big moment for Apple, and not just because of all the money and market share it'll earn. This isn't like the Apple TV or Mac Mini where no one cares if it lives or dies. If the iPhone is a long-term success, it'll catapult Apple into a new stratosphere; it'll prove that all of this positive press and public good will is deserved. If it fails, however, we're sensing a backlash the likes of which Apple has never experienced, and from which it may never recover.

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