Posts Tagged ‘ netbook

Wubi – The Ubuntu installer

Guess I had been paying far too much attention to Symbian (the mobile OS) that I haven’t written about anything else for a while now. But yesterday I came across a windows installer for Ubuntu, Wubi.

Wubi is just like any other windows installer, except that it installs a complete OS on your HDD, no partitioning, no geek stuff required. The best part is, when you are done with playing around with your Linux OS, you can uninstall it from your windows menu just like any other application. I always try out my Linux on USB drives fearing compatibility issues. The last time I tried it out, it was my wifi card.

Wubi’s a small executable which should take about a minute or two to download. Run, select the OS you want to install, enter a username/password for your new OS’ local account and Wubi begins downloading the OS.

I set it up to install Ubuntu Netbook Edition and then went to bed. When I got up in the morning, it was ready and waiting for a reboot. One reboot later, UNR starts installing and partitioning. Select Ubuntu at the boot menu and I had it booting up in a few seconds. Enter the username/pw and you are good to go.

The last time I installed UNR, I had a few issues getting it to recognize my wifi connection. But this time, no hassles at all. And the best thing about installing on the HDD is persistence by default! Although it shouldn’t be too hard to get persistence on your USB drive as well.  After using Wubi to install UNR, uninstalling an OS is as easy as uninstalling a program.

The iPad post

This is not exactly another one of those reviews of the iPad, an unboxing photo gallery or even a real iPad mandatory post . And, this is a very boring text only post. Be advised that it is boring to read a text only post. Go here for a more interesting mandatory post on the iPad, atleast it’s got a photo in there!

This is a post for all those people who really don’t need an iPad, or atleast think so. They always say that a product so good that it can develop a need, is sure to be successful.

I really don’t sit at my desk and use my computer anymore. Instead I take the laptop around or my mobile phone’s always around for me to be online 24×7.

I look at the iPad to replace internet access on my mobile phone at home, and on my netbook at home. There are times when I don’t want to boot up my computer just to search for something on Google.  Of course, I use the hibernate mode to minimize time taken to get to my desktop on my netbook, But its still not fast enough when I want to search on wikipedia for a movie I’m watching, or for a book I’m reading or a game I might be playing. Or I just wanted to check that mail I had been waiting for. A Technology so sufficiently disguised that you don’t realize that you are using it. An iPad would fit the bill perfectly. I just pick it up, search for what I was looking for and put it down. An iPad creates/extends the market for tablet devices. Because, if Apple sells something, they create a market for it. Even if noone needs it in the first place.

Why should I get a iPad instead of a  tablet PC?

An iPad is much more closer to a mobile phone than a computer in many ways. By not supporting multitasking,  the iPad actually lets you be more productive and focused on the task at hand. The App store is a big enough reason by itself for wanting to get the iPad. Any device is only powerful as the application that runs on it and you have a huge library of powerful apps at your disposal with the iPad. It is true that other tablet PCs have OSes which actually support millions of applications. These applications are more suited to your computer, not for a mobile phone.

Does an iPad replace the mobile phone?

Its not really replacing your mobile phone. But it’s just replacing your mobile phone at home as an internet device, a gaming device, an email client, a YouTube viewer and lots more. One, its got a big screen which is meant to let you do all without squinting at the tiny screen, or scrolling around for 10 minutes for every 5 lines that you read. The iPad might not let you make phone calls or type out entire documents or work on long excel sheets at work.

Why should it replace your laptop/PC?

The iPad is meant to be used as an device when you really don’t want to boot up your computer or are just plain too lazy to walk up to get to it. One day, the iPad might actually replace your laptop/PC/netbook. Hook up a keyboard and it is ready to do that even sooner. If it can replace your ebook reader, double up as your youtube viewer, check your emails, access social networking sites and much more, then its almost ready to replace a normal internet user. But you still need your PC/netbook/laptop for heavy duty stuff. You’d still need it to write that last bit of code, or touch up on that photo with the full potential of the desktop Photoshop. You cannot access your command line on it, look at files and folders stored on it and its pretty much stuck with the same OS for life (Yes, it would get updates, but the OS is still the same) And as with all Apple products, No Flash! I don’t see it replacing my laptop soon. But I really need the iPad just so that I could use it as….an iPad. But what do I really use flash for? A few rare websites, and of course Youtube. But iPad has a dedicated player for Youtube, so that irons out the “flashy” problem.

Why did I write this post?

Because everybody’s writing about it. Because if I don’t, I might not be allowed to blog anymore. No tech blog is complete without a post on the iPad. It’s the most important invention after personal computers. And it’s been long since I’ve spent so much time typing out such a lengthy post. A post on the iPad most probably needs a photo of it to break the monotony. But I thought I might as well put up a link to do just that!

This post is not really complete. But I had to put it up because there’s another post which needs to come up real fast. Subscribe to the RSS feed, or just keep visiting until the post comes up.

What should you install on a Netbook?

I got myself a new ASUS EEE PC Seashell netbook last week and have been busy setting it up, customizing it and getting software. Considering that a netbook is meant to run more as an secondary system rather than your only laptop, netbooks are not usually as powerful as laptop (why is why they’re called netbooks, duh..)

Even though they’re called netbooks , its not exactly possible to ensure that they’re always connected to the internet. What if the friendly neighborhood cafe did not have free wifi? And Netbooks without the power of the net are well, just books. Or so we have been lead to believe. Until the making this list that is. My list of perfect software had to make sure it fulfilled two primary needs. Firstly, to be able to run on a machine with limited processing abilities. Secondly, the capability to be used even when you did not have internet access.

Browser: Chrome

Chrome had to be the browser of choice. Light, fast and easy to load. I still am a fan of firefox on my laptop but for my netbook I chose the ultra light chrome with the power of Google Gears. That makes sure I can read my feeds offline, my mail offline, my blog and loads of other Gears compatible stuff offline.

Edited on July 17, 2009: Firefox takes over my netbook. Its impossible not to use firefox especially considering that the internet is the center of your netbook. Plus the font rendering on firefox is much more adaptable to netbooks, which means its much more comfortable to browse the web.

Mail: Thunderbird

I couldn’t find a better mail client than this so I had to surrender to the power of Mozilla. Handles multiple inboxes, junk/spam protection, easy to use. Just like all other good Mozilla products you get the power to use extensions just make sure that you are making an application heavier on a netbook. I just have the minimize to tray extension installed.

Chat: Pidgin

This open source chat agent had to take the cake when it came to chat. Lets me run multiple IM services, light and powerful. Though originally designed to run on linux, Pidgin is now available for windows as well. Pidgin is functional, has an interface that’s the least distracting and comes with a multitude of options to customize it. I use gtalk considering that its the lightest around, considering I do not need multiple IM support.

Office applications: Microsoft Works

I still am using the Microsoft works, but this section might update once I install the Open office. Still considering this section, so do leave your choices in the comments section.

Blogging: Blogdesk

For the first time, I’ve considered the use of an offline blogging tool and after trying quite a few of them, I’ve decided that Blogdesk, albeit its limitations is the winner. Blogdesk has support for most common blogging platforms. I would have recommended the use of Scribefire extension if I were using firefox, but since this is a list, Blogdesk is a blogging tool with a functional interface, but lets you write blogs offline, save them and post them later.

Antivirus: AVG

This is really easy. You would want to keep the resource usage to a minimum and still ensure protection. Stick to AVG . Does a good job and is light on the processor as well.

Desktop enhancements: Launchy

Well, just because its a netbook doesn’t mean you shouldn’t dress up your desktop. How about a OSX styled dock? Rocketdock is only of the fastest and lightest docks out there. I would recommend using Launchy , the keyboard based program launcher especially since it works wonders when the super fast chrome is your default browser.