Thoughts on the Amazon App Store, Cloud Drive & Player

I’m so giddy about what Amazon has released this week — the Android App Store, ย Cloud Drive and Cloud Player.

  • There’s little doubt that Amazon’s core competency is selling.
  • A free paid app every day deal is absolutely going get a lot of Amazon Android apps on Android phones. ย Amazon has just inserted themselves as a major player in the Android app marketplace.
  • The installation of the Amazon App Store app was a little on the complicated side, but once it’s pants were on, it made gold records.
  • MP3 purchases from Amazon don’t count toward in your cloud drive space. ย Brilliant.
  • The whole 20G of space for free for a year when you purchase an MP3 album is killer smart. ย Totally impressed. ย I’ll probably buy it when my year is up.
  • The Cloud Player MP3 upload tool is pretty slick and is chugging right along on my computer at home.
  • Weak playlist creation the Cloud Player is my only gripe so far. ย  I like to create my playlists by Artist. ย I have to add them to playlists one by one, which is kind of a pain. ย A little drag -n-drop action would be sweet.
  • The Cloud Player works well on my Google CR-48. ย That thing needs a win right now. ย More about that later.
  • Love the Cloud Player integration with my Android phone. ย Finally a decently priced (free) stream of my own music without having to sync my phone and my computer.
  • If they every develop a cross-platform Cloud Drive desktop synchronization tool, they could give Dropbox (affiliate link)ย a run for their money.

What do you like about what Amazon rolled out this week?

And when’s the Amazon Android tablet coming out?

// Now playing: Heaven by Warrant

My Review of the Google Chrome CR-48 Netbook

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

Inside?

A CR-48 Google Chrome netbook.

Little excited? ย You bet.

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

Hardware

  • The CR-48 is just the right size. ย Itโ€™s very lightweight and sleek. ย It feels cool. ย The black matte finish shows every greasy fingerprint, but thatโ€™s OK.
  • Google took some liberties with the keyboard. ย There are no Fn, Home, Delete, PgUp and PgDn keys. ย It wasnโ€™t really apparent right out of the box what all of the keyboard shortcuts were. ย Here is the best list I found. ย Ctrl-Alt-/ is your friend.
  • The clickable touchpad is a real bummer. ย Two-finger scrolling is often slow and the sensitivity gets wonky some times. ย Right and middle clicking required some Googling to figure out. (Ctrl-Click/Tap is middle click and Alt-Click/Tap is right-click if youโ€™re curious)
  • Other than the touchpad, the only moving part is a small cooling fan. ย Iโ€™ve only heard it once.
  • This bad-boy boots in under 20 seconds. ย Thereโ€™s no real โ€œshutting downโ€ either. ย Itโ€˜s more of a log-out-and-go-to-sleep deal.
  • The battery life is amazing. ย It will last a full 8 hours of continuous use.
  • Thereโ€™s a webcam for Google Chat. ย Thereโ€™s also a light sensor that will adjust the screen brightness depending on the ambient light in the room. ย Slick.
  • I did hook it up to a large LCD TV and it handled it surprisingly well. ย Seemed to be mirror mode only.
  • If youโ€™re wondering about the processor, memory, etc, hereโ€™s a good summary of all the technical specs.

Software

  • The New Tab window is the desktop. ย Thatโ€™s it. ย There are some windows that float up from the bottom of the page. ย Other than that, itโ€™s all Chrome tabs and web apps.
  • There is some media browsing functionality. ย 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. ย You can attach or upload files from all of those places.
  • There are two OS update channels available: Beta and Development. ย The Development channel is the sandbox for the bleeding-edge new stuff. ย Itโ€™s pretty slow and unstable and gets updated frequently. The Beta channel is more refined and definitely faster. ย It has been updated once since Iโ€™ve had the device. ย 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. ย Itโ€™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 โ€œcroshโ€. ย From there you can use ssh to connect to another box. ย If youโ€™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. ย There are some cloud-based IDEs/editors like ShiftEdit, PHPAnywhere.net, and SourceKit that will workโ€ฆif you can massage your workflow into them.

If you need more options, then flipping the developer switch switch is the way to go. ย The switch is behind a sticker inside the battery compartment. ย ย Enabling developer mode will provide more unrestricted shell access. ย 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. ย Eventually, I restored it back to the Beta channel with an image on a flash drive. ย 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. ย The video is mostly slow and choppy. ย I donโ€™t see Chrome OS making a lot of mainstream headway until these two things get ironed out.
  • If ChromeOS and Android converge as Googleโ€™s Eric Schmidt suggested then I guess Iโ€™ll install Ubuntu on it.
  • The CR-48 is a nice and uncomfortably simple device. ย Itโ€™s made me think a lot about how reliant I am on local storage.
  • Iโ€™m still excited and humbled that I even have one of these devices. ย Thank you, Google.

Helpful Links

 

Wenger Giant Swiss Army Knife

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Wenger Giant Swiss Army Knife

Sorry…call me a purist, but if it doesn’t say Victorinox on it, it’s not a real Swiss Army Knife.ย ย  Good ole Wikipedia… Apparently Wenger and Victorinox were competitors until Victorinox acquired Wenger in 2005. Guess that’s the end of my rant, huh? Good thing I check, check and re-check my facts.

I’m a little nostalgic about Swiss Army Knives. I got a really nice one when I was a kid. My grandpa engraved my name on it. Still have it.