Tuesday, May 6, 2008

New Cuban "Freedoms" Now Extend to Computer Ownership

Add being able to own a computer to the list of freedoms Cubans now have under Raul Castro. Last Friday, The island's communist government put desktop computers on sale to the public for the first time.
A tower-style QTECH PC and monitor costs nearly US$780 (euro505). While few Cubans can afford that, dozens still gawked outside a tiny Havana electronics store, crowding every inch of its large glass windows and leaving finger and nose prints behind. The Cuban PCs have Intel Celeron processors with 80 gigabytes of memory and 512 RAM and are equipped with Microsoft's Windows XP operating system. Both could be violations of a U.S. trade embargo, but not something Washington can do anything about in the absence of diplomatic relations with Havana.
What has not been lifted however, is the ban on internet access from Cuban homes.
Some people buy limited e-mail access on the black market, usually sharing an account with the authorized holder, who usually works for the state. Even if they could access the Web, Cubans can't shop on line because they don't have credit cards.

Source : NYT,
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Image Source : Huffington Post

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