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Preston Gralla's picture
Preston Gralla

Seeing Through Windows

Cubans' first PCs: Windows XP, Not Mac or Vista

The first legal home PCs just went up for sale in Cuba, and it should be no surprise that they're Windows XP-based, not Macs. Macs or Mac-alikes would be far too pricy for cash-starved Cubans, who pay just under $800 for the machines. No Vista, either: The hardware required to run it costs too much money.

Cubans have only one choice of computer. It's Celeron-based, with an 80GB hard drive, 512MB of RAM, Windows XP, a CRT monitor, and a DVD drive. It costs just under $800, which is a tough purchase in a country whose average wage, according to the BBC, is under $20.

The computers can be purchased only in state-run stores. Internet access is restricted to a limited number of workplaces, schools and universities, the BBC says, so the PCs won't necessarily be a window onto the world for information-starved Cubans.

The PCs aren't brand names; according to the Irish Times, they are assembled by Cuban companies with parts imported from China.

One reason the PCs aren't brand names, of course, is that there's a U.S. trade embargo against Cuba. The Cuban government also claims the embargo is the reason that Internet access on Cuba is slow, expensive, and hard to get, because it prevents Cuba from linking to underseas fiber-optic cables.

Venezuala, though, is laying a new cable under the Carribean, and Cuba will be allowed to connect to it. But don't be surprised if Internet access is still limited in Cuba after the connection is made. Authoritarian governments all over the world fear the Internet, and Cuba is no different.

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What People Are Saying

Prefiero XP

Hola

Mi nombre es Javier Polo Pérez y soy Ingeniero, y desde hace varios años me dedico a la Informática de Gestión. He desarrollado varias soluciones informáticas que en el Mundo Hispano han obtenido una buena acogida debido a sus prestaciones y fácil manejo, muchos ya las conocerán sus nombres son: Clinicas @Clinic @OdontoClinic @PsicoClinic @PodoClinic @FisioClinic Inmobiliarias InmoServer Facturacion ProServer @GesPYME Comunidades AdmiCom Veterinarias @VetGes Promocion GesProm Prevencion PrevGes Almacen @GeSTOCK Personal @GesRRHH Turismo @GesTUR

Me gustaría comentar que tras un año de pelea con Windows Vista intentando adaptar mis programas a dicho sistema operativo, lo cual he conseguido con mucho esfuerzo, finalmente he vuelto con mi Windosw XP, por tanto si lo que desean es un sistema operativo estable que no de ni un solo problema lo recomiendo.

Si desean ver mi trabajo y descargarse mis programas en forma gratuita pueden acceder a la web del Club ReM su dirección es www.clubrem.es o en www.e-rem.net

Un Saludo

Javier Polo

Hey, Preston?

What exactly is an "information-started" Cuban? Just wondering, Yo.

If the U.S. trade embargo

If the U.S. trade embargo blocks Cuba from buying PC's and or PC parts from the U.S., then how are they getting Windows XP? Would that also not be allowed under the embargo, or does Microsoft have a branch in China that is licensing it?

Cuban embargo

Cuba has access to everything anyone else has access to. There are companies in Canada and Venezuela that specialize in reselling American merchandise in Cuba--you just have to pay for the middle man. The whole claim about the US picking on poor little Cuba is a propaganda cover story for the fact that Castro has devastated the economy. The few million Cubans in the US have a GDP per capita many times that of the 11 million Cubans in Cuba--nothing is wrong with the Cubans themselves. Poverty created by Castro and not the embargo prevent Cubans from purchasing computers. The bright spot here is that Raul is making very small improvements. Best of luck, Cuba!

Answer - Software Piracy

And there's nothing that can be done about it.