Archive for the ‘Android’ Category

Then Conundrum Of Desktop Linux

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

by Drew Brumbaugh

I began dabbling with Linux ten years ago and then made the switch to full-time Ubuntu Linux almost four years ago now. During those ten years there always seemed to be the perennial question: “Will this be the year of Desktop Linux?” This of course refers to Linux making significant inroads into the Microsoft Windows dominated desktop/laptop market. I have my doubts as to whether that will ever really happen.

First of all, let me say that I have become an avid fan of Linux. I’ve always been philosophically attracted to Free Open Source Software (FOSS). The altruistic nature of community development and freedom to fork projects is a beautiful thing. In day to day practical use I love: the lack of mal-ware/virus issues, being able to freely download any extra software I want and an update manager that services the OS and your installed software. The list could go on and on, but that isn’t the point of this article.

The conundrum of desktop Linux lies in the fact that the people that would benefit the most from Linux are those that are least likely to know about it, while the people that are most aware and technically adept are the ones required to maintain a presence in MS Windows.

Let’s begin with the average user. These are the people whose computing needs consist mainly of email, web-browsing and various MS Office like applications. Linux offers all of this as well as stuff like Google Earth, Picasa and Skype. These people could easily accomplish everything they need, do it on mediocre/older hardware and not be troubled with spy-ware and viruses. Long gone are the days where Linux required a serious investment of time and a whole bunch of command line skills.

Then we have the power users. These are the people that require a few niche applications for which no suitable open source alternatives yet exist. Non-linear video editing that rivals the capabilities and usability of Final Cut Pro or Adobe Premiere is one such niche in which Linux has been sadly lagging. Additionally, these “power users” may also be tied to Windows through the software choices of their employers.

However, in the meantime, Linux is gradually surrounding us in other areas. The Apache web-server has powered much of the Internet for quite some time, but recently we’ve seen the introduction of things like the Roku digital video player, the Ooma free home phone service, Google Android and Nokia cell phones. By off-loading some of the more processor intensive computing needs to embedded systems like Roku and Ooma, a good smart phone is fully capable of handling the remaining needs that the average user demands from a normal desktop/laptop computer system.

It doesn’t take much imagination to realize that “docking” a smart phone to an external “terminal” (full-size keyboard and monitor with added video card and Ethernet support) could very soon be the norm. The smart phone will be your working computer that you can take with you wherever you go. You’ll just interface with it differently depending upon your circumstances. If you can envision popping your smart phone into some sort of cradle in your car which docks it to an in dash touch screen and the sound system, then you’ll get an idea of where we could be headed.

So in the end, the year of desktop Linux may never arrive as it was once envisioned. In the brave new world to come, Linux still stands a good shot of becoming the dominant operating system. It just may be that most people won’t know it.

Is Apple ‘open enough’ to rule the next decade of mobile?

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

For all the discussion of the importance of transparency and openness on the Web today, it’s very telling that the world’s fastest-growing mobile platform may also be the most proprietary.

Apple wins rave reviews (including from me) on its technology but certainly not for its commitment to sharing its innovations with the world…unless, of course, you fork over $299 and sign a two-year mobile service commitment.

Indeed, Apple has earned the dubious honor of being more closed than Microsoft.

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5 Reasons Android Is Changing The Smartphone Game

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

T-Mobile this week unveiled its second Google Android-powered smartphone, the myTouch 3G. The new offering has a 3.5-inch touch screen along with a 3.5-megapixel camera and a preinstalled 4-GB microSD memory card. Here are five reasons why Android is changing the face of the smartphone market.

1. Android is More Personal
2. Android Provides An Open-Ended Experience
3. Android Is An All-Inclusive Consumer-To-Business Experience
4. Android Means Faster Smartphone Releases
5. It’s The Software, Stupid

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Flash to Brighten Most Smartphones - iPhone, BlackBerry to Stay Dim

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

With the news that its omnipresent-on-the-desktop Flash player will be available in more mobile forms before the end of the year. Adobe is finally following through on its goal of joining the smartphone party — but the two biggest names in that market are still missing from the invitation list.

Apple’s iPhone and Research In Motion’s BlackBerry won’t be getting the beta version of Flash Player 10 at the Adobe Max conference in October. Flash will be making its official debut on the Google Android, Symbian, webOS (Palm) and Windows Mobile operating system platforms.

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10 reasons why open source makes sense on smart phones

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Open source brings a host of benefits to the mobile market, starting with cost savings, better security, more customization options and more prolific application development.

Android and Palm Pre phones will outshine the rest of the market for one simple reason — open source. Why is open source going to help raise these phones above the competition? I have 10 reasons why.

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Unix turns 40: The past, present and future of a revolutionary OS

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

In August 1969, Ken Thompson, a programmer at AT&T subsidiary Bell Laboratories, saw the month-long departure of his wife and young son as an opportunity to put his ideas for a new operating system into practice. He wrote the first version of Unix in assembly language for a wimpy Digital Equipment Corp.

Unix would go on to become a cornerstone of IT, widely deployed to run servers and workstations in universities, government facilities and corporations. And its influence spread even farther than its actual deployments, as the ACM noted in 1983 when it gave Thompson and Ritchie its top prize, the A.M. Turing Award for contributions to IT: “The model of the Unix system has led a generation of software designers to new ways of thinking about programming.”

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Watch Video…without Flash

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Dailymotion is excited to launch a new R&D platform dedicated to open video formats and web standards. You don’t need the Adobe Flash plugin to watch videos on this platform - the only requirement is the latest version of Firefox, 3.5 beta.

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Acer confirms Android netbooks

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

The Taiwanese vendor unveiled the Aspire One netbook, it’s first such device to feature the Android operating system.

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