The One Laptop Per Child charitable
organization hoped to develop a durable and useful laptop for under
$100 and distribute them to children in poor nations. Their $100 laptop
turned into a $200 laptop pretty quick, and for many people who
participated in their "Give One, Get One" program, they've turned into
$200 vaporware.
The Give One, Get One program, launched last
November, allowed let U.S. and Canadian residents to donate $400 to pay
for two XO laptops. One laptop would go to a deserving child in a
developing nation, and the other would go to the donor. The program was
originally intended to last two weeks but was later extended for six.
The offer ended on Dec. 31.
Complaints over delivery noshows,
hour-long hold times on the phone trying to get in touch with the OLPC
"Donor Services," and bungled customer service calls are common on OLPC
message boards and at the independent OLPCNews.com site where XO
customers linger online to commiserate over shipping woes.
Those
who paid for their laptop using a PayPal account seem to be
disproportionately affected. Many complain they've had to verify their
address because--for reasons that are unclear-- their address
information was incomplete. To add insult to injury, those same people
claim that, despite calling OLPC reps to update their shipping address,
they've later discovered the OLPC still has the incomplete address on
file, which they are told is the reason that their shipment is delayed.
Perhaps
an example of the old expression: No good deed goes unpunished. I hope
some needy kids got theirs, at least. How would we know? With the
OLPC's recordkeeping, they could have sent them all to Antarctica by
mistake.