Archives For February 2011

This is a repost of a review I wrote for the 8bit ChurchCo.de website last week:

8BIT Reviews a Chrome Netbook

I’d like to thank those guys for the opportunity to do a guest post.

——————————————————–

A mysterious box showed up on my doorstep a few weeks ago.

Inside?

A CR-48 Google Chrome netbook.

Little excited?  You bet.

Here are a few observations after giving it a work-out.

Hardware

  • The CR-48 is just the right size.  It’s very lightweight and sleek.  It feels cool.  The black matte finish shows every greasy fingerprint, but that’s OK.
  • Google took some liberties with the keyboard.  There are no Fn, Home, Delete, PgUp and PgDn keys.  It wasn’t real apparent right out of the box what all of the keyboard shortcuts were.  Here is the best list I found.  Ctrl-Alt-/ is your friend.
  • The clickable touchpad is a real bummer.  Two-finger scrolling is often slow and the sensitivity gets wonky some times.  Right and middle clicking required some Googling to figure out. (Ctrl-Click/Tap is middle click and Alt-Click/Tap is right click if you’re curious)
  • Other than the touchpad, the only moving part is a small cooling fan.  I’ve only heard it once.
  • This bad-boy boots in under 20 seconds.  There’s no real “shutting down” either.  It‘s more of a log-out-and-go-to-sleep deal.
  • The battery life is amazing.  It will last a full 8 hours of continuous use.
  • There’s a webcam for Google Chat.  There’s also a light sensor that will adjust the screen brightness depending on the ambient light in the room.  Slick.
  • I did hook it up to a large LCD TV and it handled it surprisingly well.  Seemed to be mirror mode only.
  • If you’re wondering about the processor, memory, etc, here’s a good summary of all the technical specs.

Software

  • The New Tab window is the desktop.  That’s it.  There are some windows that float up from the bottom of the page.  Other than that, it’s all Chrome tabs and web apps.
  • There is some media browsing functionality.  The media browser window appears as a window from the bottom of the screen when you insert a device or hit Ctrl-O. It allows you to view certain media files in local storage, on some USB flash drives and SD cards.  You can attach or upload files from all of those places.
  • There are two OS update channels available: Beta and Development.  The Development channel is the sandbox for the bleeding-edge new stuff.  It’s pretty slow and unstable and gets updated frequently. The Beta channel is more refined and definitely faster.  It has been updated once since I’ve had the device.  The release included a slew of noticeable improvements.
  • Yes, you can install Ubuntu on the CR-48 and make it into a traditional machine if you want.  It’s complicated, but nicely documented by the Chromium folks.

Options for doing web development

Hitting Ctrl-Alt-T will get you to the limited command-line interface called “crosh”.  From there you can use ssh to connect to another box.  If you’re comfortable coding from command-line with vim or emacs, this will work.

However, if you need the brawn of an IDE, some FTP tools, etc, then things get a little more complicated and tedious.  There are a some cloud-based IDEs/editors like ShiftEdit, PHPAnywhere.net and SourceKit that will work…if you can massage your workflow into them.

If you need more options, then flipping the developer switch switch is the way to go.  The switch is behind a sticker inside the battery compartment.   Enabling developer mode will provide more unrestricted shell access.  This is the starting point for installing another OS on the machine, if you decide to go that route.

I did switch to the Chrome OS Development channel and flip the developer switch. I ran it like that for about a week.  Eventually, I restored it back to the Beta channel with an image on a flash drive.  It was just a little too unstable for the simple browsing and note-taking that I was doing.

Conclusions

  • The CR-48 is really more like an iPad (minus the touchscreen, plus a keyboard) than it is a traditional netbook.
  • How the ChromeOS works with files in local storage is definitely a work in progress.  Video is mostly slow and choppy.  I don’t see Chrome OS making a lot of mainstream headway until these two things get ironed out.
  • If ChromeOS and Android converge as Google’s Eric Schmidt suggested then I guess I’ll install Ubuntu on it.
  • The CR-48 is a nice and uncomfortably simple device.  It’s made me think a lot about how reliant I am on local storage.
  • I’m still excited and humbled that I even have one of these devices.  Thank you, Google.

Helpful Links

 

Dear Annoying Worship Leader,

Please don’t order me around. I’m capable of participating in the corporate worship of my Savior without you micro-managing me from the stage. I’ll raise my hands when I want and I’ll keep them in my pockets when I want. I’m not going to sing louder or give God a hand unless He compels me. I am singing with all my heart, just not for you. My spirit? You don’t have to tell me to sing with that either. If I feel like clapping, I’ll clap. I would be still and listen to the Lord like you said, but your lips are still flapping.

I can read, too. You don’t have to tell me the next line from the song right before we sing it.

You say it’s not about the show, the loud music, the lights and the band. Oh, but it is. Quite obviously, actually.

And one last thing, stop interrupting.

Angrily Yours,

Adam

P.S. Nice jeans, but your hair…well….

(h/t bryanallain.com)

Yay for Ray

2/11/2011 — Leave a comment


Class act.

As you all probably know, I use Standard Theme (affiliate link) here on my blog.  I’m a big fan.

I’m a developer by profession.  I’ve hacked and customized this theme a lot.   I’ve been behind the scenes.

It’s a work of art and I appreciate the craftsmanship very much.

The 8bit team is offering a 20% discount on all of there stuff now through February 15th.

It’s a sweet deal.

Purchase once, upgrade forever.

Be awesome.  Do it.

(And get to know the guys that make it happen.)

Before

After

Dear Adam,

Yoo-hoo.  Spriggs.  Hellooo?

  1. That guy that called you a poser…  Well, he was actually right.  You won’t care about freestyle bikes in a few years.  At all.
  2. Stick with that computer stuff.  It’ll bring home the bacon.
  3. Get to know your dad.  He’s got a softer side.
  4. Stop trying so hard to follow all the church rules.  They won’t get you there.
  5. Be a good friend.
  6. Get off your butt and work…until you’re sweating.  Get your work ethic on.
  7. You are allergic to peanuts and pine trees.
  8. So you think you have people figured out?  Just stop it.
  9. You can’t fix some things.  Take a few steps in to reality, will ya?
  10. 95% of the things you think are needs…yeah, they aren’t.
  11. Don’t be scared of failing.  Take a risk. You have what it takes.
  12. People will still snicker a little when you say you like Stryper.

Sincerely,

You

Your turn.

(h/t kevin keigley)