The Next Web

» OLPC: Nigerian Scam, Intel Outside & CTO leaves…

   

OLPC: Nigerian Scam, Intel Outside & CTO leaves…

Boris Written on January 4, 2008 – 11:18 am
Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten,

OLPCThis has been a rough week for the OLPC (One Laptop Per Child) program. In Nigeria OLPC got sued by LANCOR, a Nigerian Keyboard maker, for patent infringement. If they pay $20 million though they get permission to sell their laptop anyway. Sounds like a Nigerian scam? Judge for yourself.

Earlier this week Mary Lou Jepsen, OLPC CTO announced she was going to start her own company to sell some of the hot screen technologies she developed while working for OLPC. The world jumped all over her and OLPC. In reality Mary Lou Jepsen asigned all her patents to OLPC and is in fgact licensing them back. But the harm was already done.

Today Intel announced that it will drop out of the One Laptop Per Child project and resign from the board after the project’s board demanded the chipmaker stop supporting other efforts in emerging markets.

Conclusion: having a good idea and implementing it is just theory. Dealing with business partners, unexpected events and people leaving is reality. Sometimes, reality sucks.

I hope you like that post!

The Next Web Blog covers start-up news from all over the world (not just the Valley), exciting new technologies and inspiring entrepreneurs. If you're new here, you may want to read our 'About' page and subscribe to our RSS feed.

Do you have a start-up that we should write about? Contact us! Thanks for visiting and hope you come back again!
Add to Google Add to netvibes Subscribe in Bloglines
About the author: Serial entrepreneur and founder of several companies. Current activities include TwitterCounter.com and The Next Web Conference & Blog.

2 trackbacks to “OLPC: Nigerian Scam, Intel Outside & CTO leaves…”

  1. Jan 4, 2008: OLPC at Liberdade na era tecnológica?

    [...] A semana corre mal ao projecto OLPC. [...]

  2. Jun 10, 2008: OLPC Pilot in Nigeria: No XOs! « Feeding the Penguins

    [...] its replacement, the hardware was withdrawn in December 2007. However, at that point, there was a lawsuit filed against OLPC by a Nigerian keyboard maker, claiming infringement of layout and something about [...]

Post a Comment

Subscribe to:

 RSS feed   Comments  Email update Email

Add to Google   Add to netvibes   Subscribe in Bloglines
Sign up for The Next Web Update (example) & get invited to ALL our events!





Accenture Innovation Awards
Netlog

Wakoopa


This blog is currently sponsored by Accenture, Netlog, eBuddy and Wakoopa. Interested in becoming a sponsor too? Check our advertising opportunities for more information.



Mega Sponsors:

myMailMarket email marketing ZayPay
Organizers United Linkedin Group Fleck

Copyright 2006-2008 © The Next Web - Entries (RSS) / Comments (RSS)