CNET is reporting that Cubans are lining up for the opportunity of purchasing their own PC's for the very first time.Late last month, President Raul Castro's government lifted the ban on ordinary citizens from owning a cell phone
and getting cell service, a right previously limited to executives
working for foreign companies or high communist party officials. DVD
players, motorbikes, and plug-in pressure cookers also went on sale for
the first time.
Now, citizens of the communist-controlled country can for the
first time be the proud legal owners of a desktop computer, according
to an Associated Press report.
More than a dozen prospective buyers were lined up Friday outside
Havana's state-run Carlos III shopping center for a chance to buy the
tower-style Qtech PC and CRT monitor for $780, according to the report.
However, like the 50-year-old cars that roam Cuba's streets, the PCs
are near relics of yesteryear, boasting Intel Celeron processors with a
80GB hard drive and 512MB of RAM and running Microsoft's Windows XP
operating system. (However, I know a few people who would call the
Cubans lucky for not being subjected to Windows Vista.) The report
notes that buyers in the U.S. can buy a computer with twice the memory,
a 80GB SATA hard drive, and 22-inch LCD flat-screen monitor for less
money.
But don't expect to start surfing Cubans' blogs about what it's
like to collect a state monthly salary of about $20 anytime soon; most
of these PCs will not be allowed connections to the Internet, according
to the report. Only trusted officials and state journalists are allowed
access to the Web.
However, like many things forbidden by the state, computers and
even e-mail services have been available to Cubans on the black market,
according to the report.
Posted at 05:01AM May 05, 2008
by Kevin P McAuliffe in Astound |