In what might be the most expensive game of Minesweeper ever funded by public money, a former mayor in the Philippines is under fire for allegedly spending ₱10 million (~$175,000 USD) on 16 generic PCs, keyboards, monitors, and a single server. That’s not a typo. That’s the whole invoice.
The current mayor, Sally A. Lopez, called out the purchase on Facebook, saying the price was “too high and not tested.” And based on the breakdown? She’s not wrong.
According to the post and follow-up documents:
Even with generous pricing, the total hardware value lands somewhere around $12,000–$15,000. So where did the other $160K go? That’s the million-peso question.
Tom’s Hardware ran a rough estimate using Newegg pricing:
Even accounting for inflation, shipping, and local markup, the numbers don’t come close to ₱10 million. Unless those machines came with gold-plated SATA cables and a lifetime subscription to Photoshop for every barangay.
In a silver-lining twist, Carlo Ople—CEO of Unbox, a Philippines-based tech shop—announced a “tech care package” initiative to help offset the damage. It’s unlikely to cover the full discrepancy, but it’s a start. And it’s a reminder that the tech community doesn’t just build rigs—we call out bad deals when we see them.
Whether it was negligence, corruption, or just someone Googling “best PC” and clicking the first link, this deal is a disaster. And it’s a reminder that public tech procurement needs transparency, oversight, and someone who knows what a Jedel G17 actually costs.
Because $175K for 16 generic desktops? Yeah, that’s one really, really bad deal right there!
More must-reads:
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!