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Story URL: http://hardware.silicon.com/desktops/0,39024645,39154227,00.htm
Free Mac OS X spurned by $100 laptop creators
As Bill Gates mulls getting involved...
By Jo Best
Published: Tuesday 15 November 2005
The organisation behind the creation of a $100 laptop for the developing world has refused an offer of free software from Apple.
According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, Apple boss Steve Jobs offered to equip each of the machines with a gratis copy of Mac OS X.
Seymour Papert, a professor emeritus at MIT and one of the project's founders, said the scheme had refused Jobs' offer on the grounds that Mac OS X is a proprietary system.
Papert told the WSJ: "We declined because it's not open source," adding the $100 laptop creators will only choose an operating system where the source code is open and can be altered.
Apple did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Software behemoth Microsoft has also yet to determine its involvement in the $100 laptop scheme, although at present the use of open source software will preclude it from contributing a Windows operating system.
However, Bill Gates met with Nicholas Negroponte, founder of MIT's Media Lab, who is involved with the $100 laptop project, to discuss Microsoft's participation in the scheme, the WSJ reported.
A Microsoft spokeswoman said: "While we can confirm that we are currently in discussions with Mr Negroponte regarding OLPC [one laptop per child], we cannot comment on the specifics of these discussions."
She added: "Negroponte's effort is ambitious and will take collaboration with hardware, software, government and NGO partners to achieve it. We've been engaged with him and his people to help overcome some of the technology challenges they face."
Negroponte will demonstrate a working prototype of the wind-up laptop at the World Summit on the Information Society on Tuesday.
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