Notes From The Corner

Ian.R.Sandy

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  • Recent Books


    The Dilbert Future by Scott Adams
    Third time and still way too funny, as well as being almost too true       

    1421 by Gavin Menzies

    Possibly a bit over imaginative, but a good read       

    A Short History of Nearly Everything, by Bill Bryson

    A great airport book - huge concepts boiled down into two minutesnapshots - a good read       

    Guns, Germs and Steel, by Jared Diamond

    One of the better books I've read recently that tries to explain why it is some areas of the world became dominant and others didn't. As good a set of explanations as any.

    Lords of the Horizons, by Jason Goodwin

    A history of the Ottoman Empire - a good read !

    One Billion Customers: Lessons From the Front Lines of Doing Business in China, by James  L. McGregor

    For anyone interested in modern China, and more specifically doing business in China, this is an interesting introduction which will leave you with as many questions as it answers !

    Riding the Waves of Culture, by Fons Trompenaars and Charles Hampden-Turner

    Excellent !

    The Art of War, by Sun Tzu

    Translated by Samuel Griffith - a good read.

    The Secrets of Consulting, by Gerald Weinberg

    Still a useful reference

    The Singularity is Near, by Ray Kurzweil

    This may be a bit far fetched in some areas, but otherwise is an amazing book and well recommended to anyone with even a half ounce of curiousity !

    The Stories of English, by Davis Crystal

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    The Untied States of America, by Juan Enriquez

    An excellent read - highly recommended !

    Who Says Elephants Can't Dance, by Loius Gerstner

    A great read !!

And She Said It Was “Cute”

Posted by Ian R. Sandy on June 2, 2008

I have been tracking the MID (mobile internet device) space for some time now, and have tested several devices just to get some real world experience using them. These devices supercede the UMPC devices that were all the talk of the town a couple of years ago such as the Samsung Q1 device. I had one of those for awhile, and although it is brilliant, it just doesn’t work for me without a keyboard. What I want is something that is light, has a keyboard and a decent screen but that will also very nearly fit in my pocket – and when I say ‘very nearly’ what I am looking for is something that you can use in the economy section of an airplane and actually be able to do some work. I’m OK if it is about the size of a small hard cover book

A host of small form factor ultra small laptops have appeared in the past year – anything from the OLPC device through to the over priced OQO – the one that really caught my eye though was the eee PC by ASUS. This originally appeared with a 7 inch screen which was OK, but just in the last short while they released one with a 9 inch screen, and it is gorgeous. So I bought one. It is a LINUX based device, weighs next to nothing, has 4 GB of ram, a 16 GB SSD, wifi built in, Open Office preloaded (so I can open and edit all my Microsoft documents), FireFox for internet access and very good support for Google Apps which is nice as I had been testing them for another project I was working on and starting to use it more and more for general document creation.

All in all, I was very pleased with myself in a Dilbert sort of way, and had an opportunity to show it off to a few friends the other night, Everyone said that they wanted one, but I was slightly disappointed that the must common comment was not that it was a technically amazing device (which it is) at a very affordable price (which it also is) , but that it was ‘cute’ . It sort of took the wind out of my sails and initially left me vaguely dissatisfied. But I got over it – after all, I can live with ‘cute’ if it can do useful work – and this can. I’m using now to generate this blog entry – I’m in a hotel room with wifi, and the Linux OS configuration has no trouble connecting me to it, the keyboard is small, but adequate with good key travel, the performance is more than good enough and the screen is easy to read even using my graduated bi-focals !

The only niggles so far are the fan noise and the battery life – but they are minor. It is a form factor we could have used at work and which folks would have lined up to get – back when I was working that is. This is my third day retired, and I think I’m starting to get the hang of it !

eee PC – recomended.

3 Responses to “And She Said It Was “Cute””

  1. [...] the file smaller than the 2 mb that it started as). The other requirement was that it runs on his eeePC which is the linux [...]

  2. Graham said

    I have been thinking about getting one of these too. What did you pay for your in Canada?? They are about $450 Aus here. We are off to Singapore later this year and I plan to look again then.

    Graham

  3. [...] in the longer term as the growth area for user compute devices globally is the ultra mobility (the ASUS eee PC for example) and the hand held platform space. The growth of wireless handsets in places like China [...]

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