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Litl Webook Hands on Video: I’m Intrigued, but Still Confused [NetBooks]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

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In case you missed it, the Litl Webbook is a unique “cloud-based netbook” with only 2GB of local storage, a presumably Linux-based custom OS, and a 12-inch display that bends over into “easel mode.” Here’s what it looks like action:

This video from CrunchGear shows that the operating system is all about simplicity. From the cloud-based storage and OS updates, to the “Web Card” home screen tiles used to represent Websites. On that screen, there’s no menus, no folders, no resizable windows—just Websites and a search box at the top.

Sounds like a great first laptop for kids until you see the $700 price tag. Litl points out it offers extras like a one year service plan, maintenance free OS, photo-centric features, a money back guarantee, HDMI output, and that unique screen. But I still don’t know. What do you think? [Litl and CrunchGear]



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Win7 Laptop Battlemodo: Thin and Lights For Under $800 [Battlemodo]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

A group of 13-inch laptops priced around $800 have been hitting the gym hard, like that Russian guy Rocky fought, in order to shed the pounds and learn to run for hours. But one is the best.

Why Not a Netbook?

In this battle, we’re talking about a whole new class of notebooks that fall somewhere between Atom netbooks and full-blown Core 2 Duo machines.

There is no doubt that if you spend $400 more than the average netbook on one of these 13-inch travel friendly notebooks—the Acer Aspire Timeline AS3810T-8737, ASUS UL30A-A1, HP Pavilion dm3, and Toshiba Satellite T135–-you’ll be purchasing the comfort of a real notebook, the endurance of a netbook and a bit of the thin-n-light enticement of premium devices like the MacBook Air.

And instead of Intel’s underpowered Atom processors, each is equipped with 1.3GHz Intel ultra low voltage (ULV) processor and Windows 7 Home Premium. Handling your everyday computing tasks (running a browser, productivity suite, iTunes, TweetDeck, etc.) and 1080p high definition video (each of them have HDMI out) isn’t a problem for the CPU.

Meanwhile, your average Atom netbook can’t play a 1080p clip without stuttering, not can it multitask as smoothly. However, no UL system can reach the performance of a Core 2 Duo with discrete graphics. By way of comparison a 15.4 inch Acer Aspire with a 2.0 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor and discrete ATI graphics has about double the performance in Geekbench, but it pays in battery life.

The assumption with all of these thin and lights is that we all live so far up in the Cloud that we can see that there really is no boy in the balloon.

The Results

Even if most of the 13-inch thin and light notebooks out there have identical specs with ULV processors, hard drives and memory, they aren’t created equal.

Design, ergonomics and battery life matter most, which is why ASUS takes the crown.

The Winner: ASUS UL30A-A1


Price: $800
The ASUS UL30A-A1 isn’t an Eee PC, but its design reminds me of the company’s chic netbook line. The metal lid looks slightly Macbook-like and it is the thinnest-feeling system of them all at less than an inch thick all around.

ASUS fares quite well on ergonomics. The keyboard is island-style (meaning that the keys are isolated from one another, like on the MacBook) and quite comfortable. However, there is a bit of flex to the overall panel. As for the touchpad, it happens to be the best of the entire group. While all the rest are technically capable of multitouch gestures, the UL30-AL’s actually works (especially two-finger scrolling which I cannot live without)!

But ASUS really rises to the top in battery life. The UL30A-A1 is the only one of the bunch to come with an eight cell battery. On our battery test (with Wi-Fi on and screen brightness set at 65 percent) a movie played back non-stop for 6 hours and 25 minutes, the longest of any of the systems in this Battlemodo. That’s even longer than the HP Mini 5101 (with a six cell battery) netbook’s 5:45. In real-world circumstances, that battery life can only get better since our testing is processor-intensive. For $800 flat it packs the best all around performance, endurance and ergonomics.

The Runners-Up

Acer Aspire Timeline AS3810T-8737
Price: $800Acer kicked off the thin and light trend last spring with the Timeline series. And while ASUS has caught up, Acer still pulls the silver medal. The AS3810T is noticeably lighter than the rest. The design is more corporate looking than the HP or the ASUS, but if you are the buttoned up type that won’t be a bother.

The island-style keyboard is just a pleasure, though the keys themselves are a bit slippery at first. The touchpad is kinda small and the single button a bit stiff, but navigating the desktop is still a decent experience. Acer’s six cell battery doesn’t last as long as HP’s, but still makes out with more than five hours of runtime. If you can score a great deal on this system, it shouldn’t be beyond consideration.

HP Pavilion dm3
Price: $740 (as configured) The HP Pavilion dm3’s aluminum lid looks great and feels really solid, but it isn’t the trimmest of systems measuring 1.23 inches at its thickest point (or almost a quarter thicker than our winner).

Under the lid, the island keyboard (you seeing the trend?!) is by far my favorite of all. The keys are firm and the manufacturing quality is superb. If only I could give the same props to the touchpad. The mirrored pad, besides being custom-tailored for narcissists, is rough making it hard to push the cursor along. And if you have sweaty fingers forget about it! The Pavilion’s battery life was second to ASUS’, and really we can’t say 5.5 hours is all that shabby!

Toshiba Satellite T135
Price: $710 (as configured) Toshiba killed it with its NB205 netbook, but the T135 can’t destroy the competition in the ULV space. Though the notebook is pretty thin (.87 inches at its thinnest point) it just doesn’t look or feel as slender as some of the others. And the same goes for the Satellite’s design and coated lid (available in black, white and red); it just isn’t as attractive as the rest.

It doesn’t have an island-style keyboard, but I actually typed pretty darn fast on the smooth black keys. But damn you mouse button! I wish you were chopped in half to make two buttons so I knew which one I was clicking on. The T135’s battery was the weakest of the bunch, lasting just a bit more than 5 hours on our intensive video run down. Again, though that is pretty darn long.

Feature Comparison

Verdict

The ASUS UL30A-A1 is our number one pick for a 13-inch ULV based system. It is thin, light, and comfortable to use for its over 6 and a half hours of juice. The Acer keeps a close second to the ASUS with its long run time and sleek bod. The HP Pavillion dm3 and the Toshiba T135, while still affordable and adequate performers, simply aren’t the best.



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How To: Bake Your Own Chrome OS, Right Now [How To]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

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Nobody knows exactly what Google’s forthcoming Chrome OS will look or act like, but we’ve got a pretty good idea of what they’re going for. Here’s how to live out Google’s online-only OS vision, right now

Before we dive in, it’s worth talking about exactly what we’re going for here. What “theory of Chrome” are we planning to adhere to? Or perhaps more to the point, what the hell is Chrome? From Google:

Google Chrome OS is an open source, lightweight operating system that will initially be targeted at netbooks” and “most of the user experience takes place on the web.” That is, it’s “Google Chrome running within a new windowing system on top of a Linux kernel” with the web as the platform. It runs on x86 processors (like your standard Core 2 Duo) and ARM processors (like inside every mobile smartphone). Underneath lies security architecture that’s completely redesigned to be virus-resistant and easy to update.

From our own Matt Buchanan:

If I had to guess, I’d say Chrome OS is somewhere in between an entirely browser-based OS and a generic Linux distro, though leaning toward the former.

In other words, Chrome, as we understand it, and as Google describes it, is a Linux OS that lives on the web, depending almost entirely on Google’s suite of services, which are served through a special, Google-designed interface. We have no way of knowing what this mysterious window manager, menu system or desktop environment will look like, so we can’t replicate that. The web half of Chrome OS, though, is already in place, and ready for us to clumsily unify. So, we’ll make our own stripped-down operating system. Here’s how:

Get Yourself Some Linux
Before embarking on this goofy afternoon software project, we need a launchpad. Specifically: Linux. You could go with almost any distro and accomplish the same effect, but this guide will be focused on a distribution called Xubuntu. Why Xubuntu? Because it strike a perfect balance between being extremely compatible and easy to install—on both counts, it really is—and, since it’s essentially just a version of the uber-popular Ubuntu Linux distro with a stripped-down, super-fast desktop environment called XFCE, it’s quick, and lightweight. Anyway, head over the the Xubuntu website and start downloading. (Go with 9.04 the latest stable version.)

There are a few ways to handle this. If you’re planning to install Xubuntu on a netbook—Chrome’s first and most natural target—you’re probably going to need to create a bootable flash drive. Ubuntu provides some fairly fantastic instructions for doing this on Windows, Linux and Mac OS X. If you’re trying to do this on a regular laptop or desktop, or you have an external optical drive, you’re going to want to burn your downloaded ISO to a CD and install from there. Alternately, you can order a free install disc from Xubuntu. Lastly, if you’re like me, and you just want to test this out in a free virtual machine like VirtualBox, all you need to do is boot a new system from your downloaded ISO. At any rate:

During the installation, you’ll be prompted with a number of options. Make sure to check the “Log In Automatically” radio box—it’ll make your boot-to-browser experience a little smoother later on.

Once you’ve finished the installation—this should take no more than a half-hour, really—you’ll find yourself with a pretty, fresh new Xubuntu desktop. It’s really nice! But now, it’s time to start replacing it.

Choose Your Browser
So obviously, you’ll need a browser. This is the center of the Chrome experience—the window through which you’ll access Google’s suite of services, and which you may never leave. It needs to have support for all the web’s various technologies, be it Google Gears—a plugin that lets Google services store data offline, so they can load faster and function offline—or Flash, which makes the internet significantly less boring. Chrome OS will ship with Google’s Chrome browser, obviously, but the Linux port is a little sickly right now. Gears, for example, doesn’t really work right now, and Flash, though technically available, crashes constantly. But if you really want to stay as Googly as possible on this project, you can get Chrome for Linux (Chromium, it’s called) by adding these lines to the “Sources” list in a program called Synaptic, which manages Linux applications through one, unified interface, and is accessible in your System menu.

deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/chromium-daily/ppa/ubuntu jaunty main
deb-src http://ppa.launchpad.net/chromium-daily/ppa/ubuntu jaunty main

You can find out how to enable Flash here. Pro tip: don’t bother with this.

Counterintuitively, the best way to get the Google experience on Linux is with Firefox. Xubuntu comes with Firefox, but you’re going to need to spruce it up a little. Ok, a lot.

Make That Browser Work
First, you’ll need Flash. Open Synaptic—mentioned above—from your Applications>System menu, and search for an item called “Flashplugin,” (it’s Flash Player 10) or navigate to the item as shown in the below screenshot.
Click “Apply” and let the installer run its course. Now, Firefox should support sites like YouTube, Pandora, et al.

Now, you’ll need Google Gears. This is a simple Firefox extension, which you can download here. This’ll help make living online feel a little less like, you know, living online—think offline archived email. Most of Google services can use Gears, so you’ll want to go through each site’s settings page to enable as many “Gears” or “Offline Access” options as possible. Docs and Mail are where you’ll see the biggest differences, since Gears turns them from web services into full-fledged offline apps, transparently. Pretty amazing stuff, and one of the few features we know will be in Chrome OS.

Next, you’ll need the Google Toolbar. This, in absence of whatever interface voodoo Google is sitting on, will serve as a sort of constant dashboard for Google services in the meantime. Along with providing shortcuts and notifiers for services like Gmail and Googel Caldner, it’s got a few little tricks that’ll make your browser feel more like a proper OS. For example: in the Google Toolbar preferences, you can check options that enable both automatic Gmail-ing or Mailto: links, and automatic opening of many document formats in Google Docs. You’ll want to enable these, since we’re trying to create the illusion that the rest of the OS doesn’t exist, which an errant OpenOffice window or email client could shatter, God forbid.

Lastly, grab yourself a copy of an extension called Speed Dial, which will give you a Grid-based homepage of favorites which you can populate with all the core Google Services you’re going to need—Gmail, Reader, Google Docs, Google News, etc—and which will be the first thing you see when you open your browser, and eventually, your OS. Set the initial configuration as I have on the left.

And if you’re really into this idea for some reason, you can download a Firefox skin that looks like Google Chrome here.

Getting Rid of Everything Else
Now that you’ve got everything you need to live wholly within Google’s ecosystem, a la Chrome OS, you need to remove everything else—that means excess browser clutter, system menus, and pretty much anything else that stands between you and your Google suite.

The first step will be to strip out your Firefox interface, which is probably looking a bit bloated by now. I’ve posted my small-screened solution below, which you can replicate by dragging and dropping icons however you please in Firefox’s View>Toolbars>Customize menu. The above configuration lets you totally remove the Bookmarks and Navigation bars, which saves a good deal of space. Feel free to play with this for a while—you might find that you don’t need one input box or the other, or that you can get away with much less of an interface than I have.

After grinding down Firefox’s interface to an acceptable size, you’ll need to go to work on your desktop. Before you can kill all the menu bars and shortcuts you don’t need, you’ll need to make sure Firefox automatically loads at startup, so you’re basically booting into the browser. You can do this by navigating to Applications>Settings>Session and Startup, and adding a new startup item with the values seen below. (The last one if the only one you can’t change—it’s the one that launches Firefox).

Now, it’s time to murder everything else. Right-click on either the top or bottom system panels—the Start Menu-like things on the top and bottom of your desktop—and click “Customize Panel.” From here, you can remove the top panel, and set the bottom panel to “autohide.” Once you’re done, restart. Upon boot-up, this is about all you should see:
Welcome to Chrome! Kind of!

See What You Think
As I said before, what you’ve just slapped together here is not Chrome, and Google’s final product will probably look nothing like this, superficially. But this little web-savvy Frankenstein OS does, I think, capture something of Google long-term vision, in which everything we store, use and experience on our computer is based online—preferably on their servers—and native applications are nothing more than a small, necessary evil. This experiment is less about guessing the specifics of Chrome OSes interface, under-the-hood workings or usage model (three things which I’m fairly sure this fails at) than it is about deciding whether or not the the idea of Chrome OS suits you, and how you use your computer. That, at least, you can get a taste of. So, how do you like it?

So that’s about it! Please add in your experiences in the comments-your feedback is a huge benefit to our Saturday guides. Good luck with your OS impersonation, and have a great weekend!


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Dell Inspiron Z Sorta Thin, Sorta Lights [Dell]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

Can’t tell you much about the Inspiron Z series, either, except that like Studio Z, it’s the “thin and light” take on Dell’s budget Inspiron line using Intel ULV chips.

The 14z and 15z seem a lot like Acer’s Timeline series, actually. The 11z, as you can tell by the way it’s designed, looks more like a follow-up to Dell’s Inspiron Mini netbooks, on the other hand. Gotta love that super-wide trackpad on it.


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Dell Inspiron Z Sorta Thin, Sorta Lights [Dell]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

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Can’t tell you much about the Inspiron Z series, either, except that like Studio Z, it’s the “thin and light” take on Dell’s budget Inspiron line using Intel ULV chips.

The 14z and 15z seem a lot like Acer’s Timeline series, actually. The 11z, as you can tell by the way it’s designed, looks more like a follow-up to Dell’s Inspiron Mini netbooks, on the other hand. Gotta love that super-wide trackpad on it.


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Dell Inspiron Z Sorta Thin, Sorta Lights [Dell]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

Can’t tell you much about the Inspiron Z series, either, except that like Studio Z, it’s the “thin and light” take on Dell’s budget Inspiron line using Intel ULV chips.

The 14z and 15z seem a lot like Acer’s Timeline series, actually. The 11z, as you can tell by the way it’s designed, looks more like a follow-up to Dell’s Inspiron Mini netbooks, on the other hand. Gotta love that super-wide trackpad on it.


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Dell Inspiron Z Sorta Thin, Sorta Lights [Dell]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

Can’t tell you much about the Inspiron Z series, either, except that like Studio Z, it’s the “thin and light” take on Dell’s budget Inspiron line using Intel ULV chips.

The 14z and 15z seem a lot like Acer’s Timeline series, actually. The 11z, as you can tell by the way it’s designed, looks more like a follow-up to Dell’s Inspiron Mini netbooks, on the other hand. Gotta love that super-wide trackpad on it.


Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Dell Inspiron Z Sorta Thin, Sorta Lights [Dell]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

Can’t tell you much about the Inspiron Z series, either, except that like Studio Z, it’s the “thin and light” take on Dell’s budget Inspiron line using Intel ULV chips.

The 14z and 15z seem a lot like Acer’s Timeline series, actually. The 11z, as you can tell by the way it’s designed, looks more like a follow-up to Dell’s Inspiron Mini netbooks, on the other hand. Gotta love that super-wide trackpad on it.


Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Dell Inspiron Z Sorta Thin, Sorta Lights [Dell]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

Can’t tell you much about the Inspiron Z series, either, except that like Studio Z, it’s the “thin and light” take on Dell’s budget Inspiron line using Intel ULV chips.

The 14z and 15z seem a lot like Acer’s Timeline series, actually. The 11z, as you can tell by the way it’s designed, looks more like a follow-up to Dell’s Inspiron Mini netbooks, on the other hand. Gotta love that super-wide trackpad on it.


Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Dell Inspiron Z Sorta Thin, Sorta Lights [Dell]

Posted by: Zuneitman  /  Category: Gadgets

Can’t tell you much about the Inspiron Z series, either, except that like Studio Z, it’s the “thin and light” take on Dell’s budget Inspiron line using Intel ULV chips.

The 14z and 15z seem a lot like Acer’s Timeline series, actually. The 11z, as you can tell by the way it’s designed, looks more like a follow-up to Dell’s Inspiron Mini netbooks, on the other hand. Gotta love that super-wide trackpad on it.


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