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Negroponte says Linux too 'Fat'

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Sun Apr 09, 2006 03:52 PM
from the not-looking-hard-enough dept.
Cadef writes "According to a story on CNet News.com, Nicholas Negroponte says that Linux has gotten too fat, and will have to be slimmed down before it will be practical for the $100 laptop project. From the article: 'Suddenly it's like a very fat person [who] uses most of the energy to move the fat. And Linux is no exception. Linux has gotten fat, too.'"
+ -
story

Related Stories

[+] Negroponte Responds to $100 Laptop Criticisms 586 comments
teefaf writes "Wired News is running an article on the most recent developments surrounding Nicholas Negroponte's (of MIT) $100 laptop project. The project aims to make 'cheap' computers available to children in developing countries. In the article, Negroponte responds to the inevitable criticism from Intel and Microsoft, "When you have both Intel and Microsoft on your case, you know you're doing something right", and elaborates on his vision for the future of the project, "He also said the display and other specifications could change as enhancements are made. In other words, he seemed to be saying to his critics: Don't get too hung up on how this thing operates now, 'The hundred-dollar laptop is an education project,' he said. 'It's not a laptop project.'". The article also states that the initial production cost of the laptops is expected to be $135; the $100 price-point probably won't be hit until 2008. It's possible that the cost could drop as low as $50 by 2010."
[+] Negroponte's Talk at Emerging Technology Conference 195 comments
xacting writes "The video of Nicholas Negroponte's talk about MIT's One Laptop per Child (OLPC) research initiative was just posted to MIT World. In it, he discusses the challenges of tripling the world's laptop production, dealing with China's policies towards free speech and the problems of grey markets." From the article: "The key to churning out these cheap educational devices is volume -- and the more countries that join the bandwagon, the sleeker and less expensive the computers are likely to be. Negroponte casts a wary eye on the potential grey market appeal of the machines, and is determined to make them so distinctive as a government-distributed, educational tool that taking one would 'be like stealing a post office truck.' Negroponte concludes, 'Changing education on the planet is a monumental challenge,' taking decades. But OLPC will 'seed the change,' and help 'invent the future.'"
[+] Hardware: India Rejects One Laptop per Child Program 374 comments
ex-geek writes "Seems like Negroponte's One Laptop per Child program has been rejected by the Ministry of Human Resource Development of India. Among the objections are concerns about the effect of extensive laptop use on children's health. Better uses for the monies, which would be required to roll out the OLPC project, are also named. Most insightful however is the observation that not one industrial country has so far implemented a similar program for its children, which casts doubt as to what the pedagogical use for notebooks in class really is."
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  • by flyingsquid (813711) on Sunday April 09 2006, @03:54PM (#15096001)
    It's not fat. The architecture is just big-boned.
    • by hackwrench (573697) <hackwrench@hotmail.com> on Sunday April 09 2006, @04:14PM (#15096112) Homepage Journal
      But seriously, it's not fat, it's nerves and muscle, except that the appendages and sensory organs aren't always there to be supported by them.
      • by Lesrahpem (687242) <iadnah AT uplinklounge DOT com> on Sunday April 09 2006, @09:24PM (#15097166) Homepage
        Saying Linux is too fat is like complaining that there are too many pieces in an erector set. You don't have to use what you don't want to.
        • by Crayon Kid (700279) on Monday April 10 2006, @03:21AM (#15097912)
          Saying Linux is too fat is like complaining that there are too many pieces in an erector set. You don't have to use what you don't want to.

          Exactly. Have those people compiled a kernel lately? Did they notice the modular design and the way you can strip out a lot of things you don't want?

          I run Linux on a 206 MHz handheld with 32 megs of RAM, off a 512 MB flash-card. I use Familiar as a distro and Opie for a desktop environment. I have IR, Bluetooth, Ethernet and WiFi connectivity, I have Opera as a browser and a whole lot of software I can't even begin to name (ipkgfind [handhelds.org] counts 35,000+ packages).

          So what's with this complete bullshit about Linux not being fit for a 500 MHz/ 128 MB RAM machine? Negroponte didn't even support his statement in any way, that phrase you see in the Slashdot summary is all he said in the article too (serves me right for RTFA).

          Don't get tricked into thinking about the regular desktop distro and how to slim it down for the 100$ laptop. There are established handheld distro's out there for which the specs of the 100$ laptop would be an upgrade, that's what they should go with. Think bottom up, not the other way around.
        • by woolio (927141) on Monday April 10 2006, @03:09AM (#15097883) Journal
          Who the hell modded you up? Well, I hope those guilt get meta-moderated to smithernes...

          The linux kernel is "versatile", not "fat".

          What is the difference? You can compile the linux kernel without the stuff you on't want. You can easily adjust things like file system buffers, memory management, tcp buffers, etc, etc. A 300lb person can't decide each morning how much fat they want to take with them. But a Linux user can.

          Are you absolutely sure you are making a fair comparison? (The apparent simplicity is not enough justification). Perhaps more recent redhat kernels either compile more things in (instead of modules) or they cause more modules to be autoloaded by default... And what about changes in default memory management policies (e.g. memory mapping, disk cache, etc)??? And you even go as far to compare different Distributions??? Were they using udev, devfs, or a manually configured /dev? Was hotplug used? Was kudzu used? Were they using all the same hardware init scripts and settings??? I highly doubt you even bothered to look that up.

          Also note a lot of "Free Memory" is not very desirable... Memory not being used by applications can used for disk-cache. I've noticed that recent kernels only keep a little memory free, probably to have some "on hand" without incurring the delay of flushing disk cache pages.... This makes a lot of sense. Thus, you cannot simply look at "MemFree:" and draw conclusions. The same applies to the results in "top".

          And I would suspect even Windows does something similar (but Taskmgr.exe is probably rigged to only show memory used by apps).

          Note to moderators: The parent post is truly nothing more than flamebait at best. Shame on you for modding otherwise.
            • by xtracto (837672) on Monday April 10 2006, @06:25AM (#15098213) Journal

              find me a Linux distribution that lets you customer a Linux kernel at install time.
              *Raises hand* Me me! that one is easy!

              Gentoo [gentoo.org], slackware [slackware.com]

              Or what about NeoMagiclux [linuxfromscratch.org]

              Neat uh?

              Look, the problem with the article and almost all the articles is that they try to add labels and properties to "Linux" as an operating system. Linux is not an operating system it is a kernel, Mandriva, Gentoo or whatever you want is an operating system, some of them are Fat, some of them are bloated, some or them are insecure and whatever.

              But you can not say that "Linux is a fat operating system" because linux is not an operating system.
        • Re:Linux is NOT Fat (Score:5, Informative)

          by cgreuter (82182) on Monday April 10 2006, @03:11AM (#15097888)

          cat /proc/meminfo

          I may be wrong about this, but I'm pretty sure that's a bad way to measure memory usage. Modern Linux kernels just continue to keep stuff in memory until something else needs the RAM. The question is not how much RAM the kernel is using right now but how well it can juggle resources when they're limited. You can't figure that out without doing actual experiments on limited hardware.

              • by neonmagic (532879) on Monday April 10 2006, @01:53AM (#15097752) Homepage
                Re-read my previous comments. The memory footprint for running a Linux distribution (and that means kernel, since it's the core part) has grown over time. A larger memory footprint for the kernel is generally related to bloat. There's been several arguments along this line over at kerneltrap.org, I suggest you go read there if you're really interested, otherwise, if you're all interested in doing is creating an argument for an arguments sake, I won't participate further.

                As to being "negative", I admit that yes, I've given up on GNU/Linux [at least for now], and now use Microsoft Windows XP again as my main workstation operating system - it suits my current needs and uses much better than Linux did in all honesty.

                Linux required too many compromises, and too much time wasted due to fiddling to keep it all together and running. Linux has a long way to go before it's suitable for the masses, it has a variety of issues that are not being addressed, and until they are addressed, it'll get nowhere imho. That's just my personal opinion based on near 4 years of having Linux as my sole choice of operating system. I've been there, I've done it, so it's not like I'm just spouting an opinion that's unfounded or unbased.

                Cheers,

                Dave
    • by Skevin (16048) on Sunday April 09 2006, @04:18PM (#15096124) Journal
      Actually, they misspelled Phat.

      Yo listen, every OS be Phat at one time or 'notha. But 'fore you know it, some geek brotha's gonna write some crappy-ass P.O.S. code fo' yo momma's script kiddies to pop a cap through, you dig? Then da top dog homies gotta post patches, like, before security be worse than ma 'hood. When ya got too many security patches to hang with, yo homies start pointin' yo fingas at da mofos what like wrote da Operatin' System ta begin with, accusin' dem of being da Man and shit. Soon "da Man" is gotta atone by releasin' a pimped out kernel and it starts all ova again. Ain't long before all yas be dissin' Linus or Bill or Theo, demandin' dey pay ya yo props before their Operatin' Systems come crawlin' back on yas computas like last month's biatch. Word.

      "'cept in France, it ain't called a 2.6 kernel... They call it Windows."
      (apologies to Samuel L. Jackson)

      Solomon Chang
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 09 2006, @05:04PM (#15096342)
      Linux responded to Negroponte by saying "I may be fat, but you're ugly and I can lose weight!"
      • by zootm (850416) on Sunday April 09 2006, @05:33PM (#15096453)

        - Negroponte discovers that latest kernel not actually meant for a $100 laptop

        -Negroponte blames coders. (we are here)

        I'm not convinced that that was what he was saying at all — he was just stating that Linux, in its current state, is not suitable for the project. We know this. He knows this. He's not blaming anyone (would a "slim" Linux be suitable for a newer system?), he's just saying that this isn't where the crux of development will be, and stating that changes will need to be made for the project.

        I don't think he's assigning blame, I think he's telling people what the challenges of the software side of his project are.

            • Re:Linux is NOT Fat (Score:5, Informative)

              by modecx (130548) on Sunday April 09 2006, @11:37PM (#15097440)
              Yes but a full blown feature rich gui will not run on those kind of resources

              The heck it won't. Back in the day I happily ran Enlightenment--the notoriously graphics intensive Window Manager, versions 0.14, 0.15, with 2 virtual desktops, across two heads of monitors each running 1280x1024... And all of this was done on a Pentium I running at a blazing 133 Mhz, with a whopping 96MB RAM (and 6MB VRAM). It was perfectly suitable for coding, compiling, for checking and writing mail, for browsing the net, and even for experimenting with The Gimp.

              As a matter of fact, that computer was still serving up files at my home, being a web server, mail host, fax server, and small database server for perl apps for a neighborhood association, and companion for my SGI O2 of the same vintage (1996), and it ran up until about two years ago when I retired it; and that was only because when I moved, Qwest started jacking around with my DSL service and myself, and I just decided that it would be easier to put that site on a shared hosting service, dump the commercial DSL service and move to cable internet.

              Maybe it wasn't the fastest computer around, but it worked, and damit, it worked well. It never broke, and it never complained, unlike some modern computers. I learned very much plugging around with that old beast-and well after it was obsoleted by much, much newer technology. Maybe I kept it going out of romance because I had so much fun learning back when I was hacking around with Enlightenment, Linux, Gnome, etc. i.e. Back when I really just could not afford a better computer.

              My P133 also dual booted to Win95 when I first installed RedHat4, and I learned the basics of 3D modeling, raytracing, and if I'm not mistaken, I also ran the very first betas of Rhinoceros 3D on it, too. I had one scene in truespace2 that took several days just to render, and did I have a problem with that? No.

              So, lower spec computers might not play HD porno, run Windows Vista in Glass mode, play Counterstrike: Source, or other things... So what?! Like those things are going to be of great utility to third world children! I would have gladly accepted a 500Mhz notebook with 128MB, way back when. I think such a computer could be a great thing to third world children, because instead of learning how some slick GUI with gobs of eyecandy works, like our current generation, they might actually stand a chance to learn how a computer works.

      • by Otter (3800) on Sunday April 09 2006, @08:24PM (#15097007) Journal
        As a side note: Slashdot duped this story, could well have mentioned the very likely antefacts.

        I believe the chronology was this:

        • Nicholas Negroponte announces the project. Slashbots : "this is stupid. theres no elctricity in africa!"
        • Negroponte issues another fifty press releases, produces a single non-working mockup. Slashbots: "this is stupid. theres no elctricity in africa!"
        • Bill Gates comments "This is a bad idea. First they need decent electricity in Africa." Slashbots: "its a great idea and Bill Gates hates teh poor people!"
        • Negroponte blames the project's lack of progress on Linux. Slashbots: "burn down MIT!"
  • by advocate_one (662832) on Sunday April 09 2006, @03:55PM (#15096006)
    no-one's expecting you to install all of Debian on them, just get the basics on. Sheesh, DSL is great for low powered machines with small hard disks...
    • While DSL is fine for the regular hacker, I dont know if a 10 year old will be confortable with it...

      I guess that what Negroponte was really trying to say is: "KDE an GNOME are too fat for a 500MHz computer with 128MB RAM and only 512MB of storage". And, lets face it, hes right.

      Now, this raises a really good point. If he, or someone else, manages to fit a full desktop environment within this U$100 Notebook specs, Ill be using it on my desktop too!

      Not that I dont like KDE or GNOME, quite the contrary, I found them better than Windows in many ways... But they just have grown fat, I remember being able to run KDE2 on a Pentium 166 MMX with 46MB RAM! And even back then, KDE was pretty capable... much more than Windows95 for example.

      Of course now we have much better computers, and the programmers are just using this extra computer power and memory that otherwise would be wasted... But it wouldn't be cool if we managed to build a full featured desktop environment without depending on so much power? Because if we manage to do so, there will be much more remaining cpu cycles to waste with eye candy :-)

      Just my $0,02
      • by debiansid (881350) on Sunday April 09 2006, @11:11PM (#15097392) Homepage
        I guess that what Negroponte was really trying to say is: "KDE an GNOME are too fat for a 500MHz computer with 128MB RAM and only 512MB of storage". And, lets face it, hes right.

        Use XFCE. XFCE is a very fast desktop environment; I use it on my old system which has the following specs:
        • Celerom 500 MHz
        • 128 MB RAM
        • 10 GB HDD


        Thats around the same specs as the $100 laptop isn't it? The storage is very low but XFCE is barely 40-50 MB so that's ok too.

        Or just put in Blackbox as the window manager for a completely stripped down Gnome or KDE subsystem. The whole point of the $100 laptop is to provide basic computing power for those who cannot afford it. So in that sense if the hardware is tuned down, even the software needs to obviously be tuned down.
    • WTF is DSL? (Score:4, Informative)

      by Chris Pimlott (16212) on Sunday April 09 2006, @10:21PM (#15097293)
      I wouldn't be surprised if he hadn't heard about it; I hadn't heard of it. You could have mentioned that DSL stands for Damn Small Linux [damnsmalllinux.org], a 50 MB desktop Linux distribution intended for use on a business card PCs, flash drives and other small portable media.
  • DSL? (Score:5, Informative)

    by joe 155 (937621) on Sunday April 09 2006, @03:55PM (#15096009) Journal
    Has he not tried Damn Small Linux... it is pretty small, doesn't really seem to be "too fat", it even works on my OLD laptop with its 167MHz processor and nearly no RAM
  • by Azarael (896715) on Sunday April 09 2006, @03:57PM (#15096030) Homepage
    Otherwise, for what the $100 laptop will get used for, probably 80% of the tools and apps can be removed. I'm sure that something like gentoo or one of the other distros with a live cd + X.org, would work just fine.
  • i started hacking on linux around 7 years ago. rh 7.2 was the word. kernel compilation was quite easy, a few items to say N and some to say M to, to get your oracle and apache and modperl running.

      install something now, you'll see 10203 dependancy packages hanging around, and 20406 items in the kernel choices that you have to say N to. and when some packages in your linux distro are broken, well tough luck mofo.

    sure expanding stuff is fun, but it is becoming a burden, one that consumes too much of my time and too much of my network. perhaps it's time to just cut things off into an "internal and external" layer in the kernel ? meaning move optional modules and stuff into other distribution methods ? there's no reason for 99% of users to download and disable the code for amateur radios etc.

      i played around with freebsd for half a year, and it's default install cleanness and the ease of kernel configuration just amazed me.

      i vot for a cleaner linux core and cleaner gnu/linux core packages. do you ?
    • by corrosive_nf (744601) <corrosive23@gmail.com> on Sunday April 09 2006, @04:03PM (#15096056)
      Exactly. There are distros that install 5-6 window managers, 5 different text editors, mutiple multimedia players, and thats insane. Then when anyone says that they shouldnt, all the opensource freaks run around screaming about choice!
    • by EverDense (575518) on Sunday April 09 2006, @05:24PM (#15096416) Homepage
      Redhat 7.2, Luxury!

      In my day, we had to download linux onto floppy disks over a 2400 baud modem connection. We'd start downloading 5 hours before we went to bed, eat a cup of cold gravel, work 32 hours down the mine, and when we got home our fathers would whip us within an inch of our lives, and then if we were lucky, the download was finished.
      • by Mr. Underbridge (666784) on Sunday April 09 2006, @05:28PM (#15096437)
        In my day, we had to download linux onto floppy disks over a 2400 baud modem connection. We'd start downloading 5 hours before we went to bed, eat a cup of cold gravel, work 32 hours down the mine, and when we got home our fathers would whip us within an inch of our lives, and then if we were lucky, the download was finished.

        And it STILL got done before Gentoo.

      • by Kjella (173770) on Sunday April 09 2006, @06:02PM (#15096576) Homepage
        If the kernel devs would just stop being lazy and make a stable API so that modules outside the main kernel tree are not treated as second-class citizens, that would solve a lot of this.

        True, except lazy has nothing to do with it. They've quite repeatedly said they aren't going to make a stable API, because they a) want to be able to break it whenever they feel like and b) they want closed source modules, which is most modules outside the main kernel tree, to be a pain to maintain. Remember when one of the early 2.6 kernels (2.6.4 or thereabouts) broken nVidia's kernel module? Well, if closed source modules were the norm rather than the exception, you'd see that all the time. Unless the kernel devs had to keep old code around for backwards compatibility, which is roughly where Vista is at now. Not to mention they'd get a ton more problems they couldn't debug because it was some closed source module that went freakazoid. Not to mention that many old archs and new arch's like x64 would be crippled because the modules aren't available.

        Yes, on the short-term it would be a gain. But seeing how far they've come with the current policy, I don't think there's any reason to stop now. As far as "system-level" things holding linux back, it's mostly that they can't ship patented stuff like mp3 decoding and DMCA-protected stuff like DVD playback out of the box. That is a much bigger issue to most people that the really odd piece of hardware that doesn't have a driver, I think.
  • by Realistic_Dragon (655151) on Sunday April 09 2006, @03:58PM (#15096036) Homepage
    Just strip out some of the useless crap like foreign language support and make everyone learn English. That should save a few megabytes...

    Now, where were we going to be sending these laptops again?

    (Seriously, I don't see the problem... not only is the code open so you can delete what you want but nearly everything has a multitude of options to disable large chunks of functionality to make it smaller at will, modularity at it's best. There are a few things that it would be fair to level the criticism at (OO.o for example) but on the whole most Linux software is pretty good - good enough to cram the essentials onto a USB drive at least.)
  • on Linux. You can strip it down pretty damn small. Just build a complete custom distro just for the laptop.
  • by narfbot (515956) on Sunday April 09 2006, @04:07PM (#15096072)
    I have slackware-current, yes, CURRENT running on a 486 DX 33 laptop, 12 MB of RAM, 200 MB HD. It even runs X, python, gcc. Kernel version 2.6.14. It supports wireless with native drivers too. This is probably way under powered for what they are considering for the $100 laptop; so I know they can do far more. Trust me, they can really do whatever they want with linux.
  • by suv4x4 (956391) on Sunday April 09 2006, @04:10PM (#15096088)
    .. my friggin ADSL modem runs linux and a web server. My friggin modem!

    I mean, come on, it's like, I don't know, based on Apple II or a pocket calculator processor with, uhmm, like 100-200kb RAM or something? dunno, but it was cheaper than $100 and it's friggin modem.

    A friggin modem... a fri.. a fr..

    Oh ok... I rest my case anyways.

    Linux isn't fat, most popular distros are, but noone forces people to use them.
  • Patently untrue! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kimvette (919543) on Sunday April 09 2006, @04:12PM (#15096096) Homepage
    This is SOOO untrue. Linux is only as fat as you can make it.

    Every time I see someone complaining "Linux is slow" or "Distribution Foo is bloated" I remind them that their system is bloated because they CHOSE to install unnecessary services (You're running MySQL, PostgreSQL, PostFix, Apache, Subversion, DHCPD, BIND. and everything else available in the distro? You have Composite enabled with KDE with ALL eye candy turned on and every SuperKaramba theme you could get your hands on? You're running a non-SMP kernel on that shiny dual core processor?

    Let me tell you something: I still run dual Celeries and dual Pentium II Xeons at my office - and they're going to be wiped soon and be reinstalled with bare KDE installations for use as CSR workstations, probably with build server and 3D rendering daemons to take advantage of spare CPU cycles should we need it (those will be off by default of course). Even with full installations those machines are all mighty responsive. I don't turn on eye candy, Postfix, MySQL, apache, etc. remain turned off unless absolutely needed for testing a web or other application locally, and superkaramba is not installed.

    Now, I've tried complete installations (installing EVERYTHING on Mandriva, SuSE, and other distributions) one weekend out of morbid curiousity and yes, it gets piggish, and composite made it absolutely unbearable, but I wanted to see just how much those boxes could take before Linux became unstable -- plus I wanted to have easy access to all apps because there are many, MANY Linux apps I've never even tried. And wouldn't you know it, the systems did not become unstable, but just painfully slow. That's an extreme case, but obviously it wasn't the fault of Linux that I chose to do something that many newbies do because they think it might be convenient.

    Linux isn't bloated in and of itself. It's used in many embedded devices where CPU cycles, memory, and storage are all scarce. When designing embedded systems the engineers select only the bare essentials to get the job done - check out Snapgear (now Cyberguard SG) routers, some of LinkSys' routers, and Zaurus PDAs. Check out any number of the latest-generation cellular telephones, most notably Nokia's and Motorola's. Check out Tivo.

    Not a lot of CPU power in many of those, and yet they do their jobs very, VERY well.

    My own desktop is a little slow due to the ATI video card (video is a big bottleneck on ATI with Xinerama - I keep sticking with the AiW card in the hope that X.org's integrated Gato drivers will eventually work) but the other desktop boxes in the office are NVidia and they absolutely fly (in terms of responsiveness), despite having more toys enabled than my box, and all having slower CPUs than my system. Heck, even the dual Pentium II Xeon with NVidia card is more responsive than my system. When I switch to a single-head configuration my system is plenty fast. Even with Xinerama, Linux is more responsive than Windows is on my box.

    Linux isn't bloated. It all comes down to configuration, user error, and to a lesser extent, hardware choices (imho, ATI cards should be avoided if you run a dual-head system).

    By your argument, Windows bloated if you base your judgement on an OEM who installed a ton of eye candy, or if you installed something like WinFX, Desktop Sidebar, SpyderBar, or other CPU-sucking toys. Windows by itself with unnecessary services disabled is not bloated, and on the same token neither is Linux.

    Want a nice responsive system? Install what you need, and either disable or don't install what you don't need. Forget about eye candy. SuperKaramba isn't a necessity. Install the right kernel for your processor (in the case of dual core systems, the SMP kernel is the right choice - or for a single-core processor with hyperthreading, an SMT-aware SMP kernel is the right choice).
  • not the subject (Score:5, Insightful)

    by xzvf (924443) on Sunday April 09 2006, @04:13PM (#15096104)
    I was at the speech. The lecture was not about Microsoft not being cheap enough or Linux being too fat. It's about getting an educational tool that is a replacement for textbooks and a suppliment for six grade educated teachers. All the press I've seen on this takes the quips and jokes and makes them the subject for tha articles. How about someone in the press talking about the other 95% of the presentation. The fact the technology can be deployed at a reasonable cost. The need for content development. The mesh networking. The need for the inexpensive village server and internet connectivity. Ways to effencently power the devices..... Something of substance.
    • Re:not the subject (Score:5, Informative)

      by Shankland (876228) on Sunday April 09 2006, @11:02PM (#15097376)
      I'm the author of the CNET News.com story in question. If you read beyond the opening lines about Linux being too bloated--which by the way also was how Negroponte opened his speech and an interesting tidbit, in my opinion--you find information on some of the 95% of the speech you say was missing. You will see other information about mesh networking, $100 servers, pedal power, a launch delay, the initial $135 price, the dual-mode monitor, and other items. Stephen Shankland stephen.shankland at cnet dot com
  • by Erik Hensema (12898) on Sunday April 09 2006, @04:28PM (#15096173) Homepage

    He's wrong.

    Both software and hardware grow. Software grows in terms of functionality, hardware grows in terms of speed, memory size, etc. Software and hardware need to match. Don't run slackware 2.0 on your shiny new dual core athlon 64. Don't run KDE or gnome on that old 486 you found in the basement.

    So Negroponte creates a low cost laptop. Good. Now he tries to fit contemporary software on it. He finds it doesn't work. Does that make the software bloated? No. The software just doesn't match the hardware.

    People tend to forget how slow old hardware really was. Don't you remember visible slowness in scrolling on 8086 hardware in text mode? Don't you remember how long Wordperfect took to start up? Big&bloated Microsoft Word starts in under 2 seconds on modern hardware.

    You probably don't remember. That's why modern software seems so incredibly slow on old hardware. That's just because the hardware is old.

    Of course some software is bloated. Openoffice is extremely slow in comparison to Microsoft Office, while even lacking features (wether you want those features is open to another debate). KDE applicates take too long to start up (while their speed when stated up is good).

    My point is: software is not bloated. Software is designed to run on contemporary software. Which in this day and age is >= 2 Ghz, >= 512 MB ram, >= 200 GB harddisk, fast GPU w/ >= 64 MB ram. That's a lot faster than the $100 laptop.

    • by Sycraft-fu (314770) on Sunday April 09 2006, @05:05PM (#15096345)
      You aren't kidding. I remember back in the 486 days, I had a slower 486 that was RAM starved for a long time and damn with Windows programs. I'd start Works to write a paper and wander off to the kitchen to grab a snack while it loaded. A 2 minute process at least. Now at work I expect it to be up instantly. Even on a cold boot when it's not cached it's like 3 seconds until it's loaded. Printing was even worse, it took forever for the system to get all the data ready for the printer and it was all you could do, you couldn't multitask. I'd start a paper printing and go elsewhere. Now, hell I submit a 40 page job to the copier and it's in the tray before I have time to walk over there.

      I remember screwing around with MP3s not too long after they came out. I had done some upgrades at that point and was tinkering with Windows 95 and it turned out that it ate too much power for me to play MP3s. Mono was ok, but stereo skipped. I had to drop to DOS and use Cubic Player to get full stereo 128k MP3s. It was just all my system could handle. Now I play them in the background when I want, and they use maybe 10 seconds of CPU time per hour on one of my cores, it's just not even significant.

      I could go on and on, but in essence it's changed from me sitting and waiting on my computer to it always waiting on me. There are very, very few tasks I do that take enough time I need to sit and wait, and even then it still multi-tasks fine and I can surf the web while that happens.

      The problem is that Negroponte seems to have billed this thing as a legit replacement to a normal laptop. On the page it says:

      "What can a $1000 laptop do that the $100 version can't?
      Not much. The plan is for the $100 Laptop to do almost everything. What it will not do is store a massive amount of data."

      Ok well that's pretty clearly BS. Store large amounts of data is ONE OF the things the $100 laptop won't do, but there's plenty of others. Run a fancy GUI like KDE would be another one, have 10 apps open multitasking would be another. Now it's perfectly legit to say these things aren't necessary in a cheap laptop, but they ARE things that people expect out of computers these days.

      I figured it was just over-marketing (I mean who doesn't do that) but it's possible that he really thought he could get a full featured Linux distro on his little laptop and is now finding out that's not the case. His statement of "Today's laptops have become obese. Two-thirds of their software is used to manage the other third" just isn't the case. He may be finding that out, to his disappointment.
  • It's an excuse. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ankarbass (882629) on Sunday April 09 2006, @05:23PM (#15096412)
    Microsoft wants in and that's what this is all about. Read the article. He states he's working with microsoft and they're going to make a winCE version for the hardware. Microsoft wants in on it if only just to keep any largescale linux project from being successful.

    I suspect that this is just the preliminary announcement and the real anouncement forthcoming is that Microsoft will be providing the operating system.

  • by Maljin Jolt (746064) on Sunday April 09 2006, @05:48PM (#15096519) Journal
    The weakest two of my 20+ Linux machines are a 486SX/8MB and P166/16MB, both a laboratory notebooks, with X11/fluxbox (640x400x16/grey and 800x600xcolor) and networking and pretty lot of lab equipment on parallel and USB ports, not just some tiny consoleless routers. That's order of 1000 in scale of spec comparision with my hugest desktop. My iPaq runs Linux from 64MB internal flash and my Jornada from a 512 CF card, both supporting a big assortment of CF and PCMCIA stuff and outperforming original WinCE.

    I am rather asking, why is Negroponte saying such nonsense that Linux is fat? $100 project has 128MB RAM/512MB flash. I believe I could seriously run xen with 20 linuxes on it.
  • by dtfinch (661405) * on Sunday April 09 2006, @06:18PM (#15096643) Journal
    Excerpt from http://www.minix3.org/ [minix3.org]
    MINIX 3 is initially targeted at the following areas:

            * Applications where very high reliability is required
            * Single-chip, small-RAM, low-power, $100 laptops for Third-World children
            * Embedded systems (e.g., cameras, DVD recorders, cell phones)
            * Applications where the GPL is too restrictive (MINIX 3 uses a BSD-type license)
            * Education (e.g., operating systems courses at universities)
  • The Problem (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Bob9113 (14996) on Sunday April 09 2006, @07:04PM (#15096795) Homepage
    Here's the problem:

    http://wiki.laptop.org/wiki/One_Laptop_per_Child#T he_software [laptop.org]

    Their software partner is RedHat. I have much respect for RedHat - they have done amazing things for enterprise grade support of our beloved Penguin. But they are not lightweight. RedHat hasn't ever been about lightweight. That's not a condemnation, it's just not their area of expertise. I don't know if it's possible to break that tie to RedHat, or to get RedHat to agree to base the distro on something other than RedHat, but as long as square one is RedHat/Fedora, it is not going to work.
  • biword (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Liam Slider (908600) on Sunday April 09 2006, @07:19PM (#15096834)

    Yes, commercial Linux distributions are fat (although not in comparison to any other mainstream user OS)....if you go with default installs and the most bloated applications avaliable. However for his project it is entirely possible to trim down and remain highly functional. A lightweight, yet attractive and relatively easy to use WM like windowmaker, or icewm, are perfectly capable and work well for what he wants to do.There are lightweight yet capable word processing and other standalone office applications, like Abiword...which can take the place of Open Office in most cases. Email, basic photo viewing and manipulation, web browsing....all have light weight applications avaliable for them that'll do a fair job.

    He's just bitching because his $100 laptop can't use the cool eyecandy filled environments with the exact same application base as most modern expensive computers....and still fit the hardware footprint and budget. He wants the magic GNU Fairy to come and sprinkle pixy dust and wave a magic wand and instantly make Firefox, OO, KDE, and GNOME run on his hardware requirements.

    • by gnud (934243) on Sunday April 09 2006, @04:27PM (#15096167)
      You may be right, peple starving in Africa is not in need of laptops. But you are aware there are millions of people in africa not starving, right?
    • by caffeination (947825) on Sunday April 09 2006, @04:37PM (#15096216)
      Another ignorant prat...

      It's not a project to relieve poverty in the poorest of the poor countries. It's a project to provide an educational laptop to children in developing countries.

      There is a big difference, but Slashdot as a whole (if such a concept is valid) seems not grasp it yet.

            • by r00t (33219) on Sunday April 09 2006, @11:49PM (#15097469) Journal
              Idiot. Look on wikipedia, in the sweatshop article. If you still don't believe it, take up the issue there. Quoting from wikipedia:

              According to a UNICEF study an estimated 5,000 to 7,000 Nepalese children turned to prostitution after the US banned that country's carpet exports in the 1990s. Also, after the Child Labor Deterrence Act was introduced in the US, an estimated 50,000 children were dismissed from their garment industry jobs in Bangladesh, leaving many to resort to jobs such as "stone-crushing, street hustling, and prostitution," - "all of them more hazardous and exploitative than garment production" according to the UNICEF study.

              Reference: http://www.unicef.org/sowc97/ [unicef.org]
    • Your post fails to take note that alot of people seemingly do the same with much less. OpenOffice is the same size as Word2003 on its own.

      A full WinXP install is roughly 3/4th the size of a full Gentoo desktop workstation [with build/edit/programming tools + WM + xmms + mplayer + openoffice + tetex + ...] and yet lacks a proper shell, media player, development tools, office suite, TeX suite, etc.

      MSFT "bloat" is on a whole other level of bloat that most OSS doesn't even approach. The only exception that rings a bell is KDE where they are acting very much like MSFT in terms of doing everything in house, etc, etc, etc. [Gnome fan]

      Fact of the matter is getting sub 2MB kernels is not too hard. Getting larger than 3MB kernels is hard. So Linux on it's own is fairly tight. Now if you put KDE [or even to a certain extent Gnome] on a laptop meant to run a slow processor with little ram ... you're stupid. IceWM for instance would run just fine and take a fraction of the resources.

      Tom