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Sony is afraid

February 27th, 2008 by Chris

AsusEEECNet has a news story this morning about a Sony admitting they’re scared of the the potential for the subnotebook market to take off with great success.  Senior VP of Sony’s IT Product Division, Mike Abary, admits that low-priced laptops could be “trouble” for sales of higher-priced, larger laptops.

Being an owner now of a subnotebook myself, they should have fear.  So should Apple, Dell, Lenovo, and any other manufacturer of notebooks that command prices above $1000 (in some cases well above $3000, and not worth it).  Take a look at our economy lately…it’s not doing all that well.  The mortgage industry is in bad shape, housing prices are dropping, gas is extremely high priced lately.  People are going to be moving towards spending less on electronics.  No one wants to spend $3000 for a laptop that is highly portable, just to use it for daily tasks like email, web browsing, documents, and an occasional Skype call.

At the price point this new breed of ultra-mobile PC’s or subnotebooks are starting out at…it’s definitely a lot less of a risk to spend $299 on an Asus Eee which will get you the basics of every-day computing.  Combine that with the ultra mobility of the Asus Eee / Cloudbook, and I think the days of big sales in huge SUV-sized laptops are numbered.

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Cloudbook HD Stats

February 25th, 2008 by Chris

CloudbookHow about some hard drive stats on the Cloudbook under Windows XP. I used an application called HDTach to guage this. Both of these graphs are using the normal test (not the quickie one). I’d put the internal HD of the Cloudbook on par with any basic external USB hard drive on a full system. 18-20GB /second is the going rate, I get that from my USB-based Drobo drive array on an HP server, and an 120GB external USB drive I use on my PC’s occasionally.

Note: I didn’t see any major performance increase in running the HD in 32-bit mode (setting change from the BIOS).   The stats are about the same no matter what option you choose in the BIOS.

Cloudbook Hard Drive performance
Cloudbook HD

Cloudbook Hard Drive performance in 32-bit mode (setting from BIOS)
Cloudbook HD - 32 bit mode

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Cloudbook does Google Earth

February 25th, 2008 by Chris

Cloudbook

Ok, this’ll be the last post for tonight that I bombard my blog with. How about a video of the Cloudbook running Google Earth? This is at the native 800×480 mode, which Google Earth warns isn’t optimal. It suggests 1024×768 for the dialog boxes and interface to be usable. It’s right actually, most of the controls on the left of the application are unusable at this low of a resolution.

I started it out in normal mode, and then switched to full screen. The choppiness you see at the start when the Earth starts to load and move is due to disk activity. Once that completes, you can see that it’s very smooth. Enjoy!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrAMmzYXfaA

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Cloudbook does HalfLife

February 24th, 2008 by Chris

CloudbookHow about this one…I just loaded up a copy of HalfLife Blue Shift on the Cloudbook. Now, granted I couldn’t run it in the native 800×480 mode (just isn’t an option to do this on the list), it’s still pretty decent even at this low resolution. Frame rate seemed to be good, gameplay was smooth, and I’d say this one’s a winner on the Cloudbook as well.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0sDQxpmwoA 

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Cloudbook - Day 3 and 4

February 24th, 2008 by Chris

CloudbookSo I’m combining a post here from day 3 and 4 of my experiences with the Coudbook. I have to admit I did something really bad. I couldn’t resist really. I tried to have my cake and eat it too, but after a few hours of repartitioning and installing off of a couple of super slow USB thumb drives, I decided to put Windows XP on the Cloudbook to see what it could do in that arena. There were a few requests on the cloudbooker.com forums to get some games running. I happened to have a copy of Grand Theft Auto:Vice City here, so I loaded it up. Here’s a few videos of the results of that:








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Cloudbook Day 2

February 22nd, 2008 by Chris

CloudbookWell, I had to head to the day job today, so I didn’t get much of a chance to toy around with the Cloudbook. Brought it with me though. Coworker was somewhat impressed mostly at the size and what it had in the small package…but it’s not a gaming machine so useless to Levvy.

I tried to hook it up to a fullsized keyboard, mouse, and DVI monitor at work today. Mouse and keyboard functionality are fantastic. External monitor leaves a lot to be desired. First of all, the screen switch button on the keyboard (Fn-F3) doesn’t seem to have any response. I’d hit it, and the Cloudbook wouldn’t switch. Only after I rebooted did the external monitor suddenly come to life. It works, but the other problem is that it’s also showing 800×480, which looks horrible on a 19″ external monitor. I didn’t see any easy way through the GUI to change this…seems to be hardcoded at this resolution (there’s no other choices available). I know I could tweak xorg.conf and make it work, but I gave up for a while to do real work at the day job. One last thing, I never got it to see both screens separately (again, probably some tweaking would fix). I have a feeling the VESA driver it’s using will make this pretty difficult, if not impossible to accomplish.

Last night I updated the kernel and header files with what the Cloudbook was popping up showing me as a necessary update. What’s strange is I was getting this notice even before I first had the Cloudbook on the Internet. It’s like the kernel update was shipped with the Cloudbook. Odd things have started to occur with my wireless connection it seems now after this update. I’m getting some really bad transfer rates, and twice it seems wireless just went off to “la-la land”. Not sure what the updated kernel could possibly be doing to the wireless, but I want the old one back now.

I ran into a few more apps and windows that don’t fit too well on the screen. Really I think this theme that’s in use is partially to blame. The buttons are all HUGE. Big jelly-bean buttons are nice looking but really don’t utilize the screen real estate well. Alt-click-drag once again saves the day.

Looks like the Cloudbook is using a 2GB swap partition, which makes Linux think it has a total of 2.5 GB of RAM to play with. Honestly, that’s probably overkill. I probably would’ve made it more like 512MB myself.

Other than that, this thing is performing beautifully. I was editing some Google docs tonight, and really enjoyed sitting on the couch with an almost weightless laptop to use to just update a few cells in a spreadsheet, or check the latest news feeds in Google Reader. Brought it over to the kitchen table (this thing is super easy to carry around) and plugged in a wireless mouse which came up instantly. After adjusting the sensitivity on the mouse, it was very enjoyable to use at the table.

Laptopmag mentioned the keyboard gets really hot. I disagree, sortof. It does get warm, but not what I would call hot. My Latitude D620 gets hot. To the point that it feels like it’s going to burn me. I wouldn’t say the Cloudbook gets that hot at all.

The screen on the Cloudbook is easily MUCH brighter than my Dell Latitude. I’m a believer in LED backlighting now.

And finally…I’m going to keep toying around with gOS for a while, but I have a copy of Gparted, Windows XP Home, drivers from Everex, and some USB thumb drives here. If I can figure out how to get the Cloudbook’s internal drive repartitioned, and install XP from a thumbdrive…I’ll try out the Cloudbook with a different OS and see how it is. Later…

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