Posts Tagged HP

Netbooks Are Going To Fly This Christmas Season

The real question in my mind is if these small laptop devices really have a future. As I sit down at my grandparent’s kitchen table, I type on keys that are 92% of the normal size keyboard. I hardly notice a difference in the quality, boot time, and options. My HP Mini 311-1000NR has a 1.6 GHz Atom Processor, 1 GB of RAM, and a surprisingly large 160 GB HDD.

I’ve sold my MacBook, and until I splurge on some sort of powerful desktop or laptop, I’ve got this brand new netbook. My expectations are quite high and I need everything to work. I keep saying in mind, I have papers to write and things to do – it all just needs to work.

Picking up the 3.2 lbs Mini, I know that I have a powerful and sturdy device in hand. The keys are responsive and the QWERTY part of the keyboard is well sized and perfect for my keystrokes. The start time is a little slower compared to other netbooks, but I hardly notice it because I’m constantly having it hibernate.

I start up and log in to Windows XP Home, the computer is slow to allow any start to applications, but I get something open soon enough. It has a convenient on/off button for the WLAN card inside that has b/g wireless capabilities. Which begs me to ask the rhetorical question, “Are you kidding me?” There’s a child-like card inside what’s supposed to be an ultra-portable netbook. At least throw in Wireless-N. But the switch is effective and nice to have either way.


Connecting to a network, I realize the potential power behind a device like this; I’m connected! Connected anywhere and everywhere these days; internet and open Wi-Fi spots seem to pop up constantly. And I have an on-the-go device that can effortlessly slip into my backpack and go unnoticed because of its svelte weight and dimensions.

But here’s where I run into trouble. The device is essentially incapable of running Flash videos. This cracks me up, we’re in the tech age right now – how the hell can’t these laptops play Flash video? I’m not the only one. Comment after comment on a number of different netbooks talk about “performance.” It’s not real performance that’s an issue – I can multitask relatively well. It’s video that’s essentially unplayable and intolerable.

Downloading the latest episode of the Totally Rad Show in HD, I find that the video plays back, and gets better as the video goes along, but it’s still stuttering and the frames per second are barely cutting it. The HP Mini 311, featuring an HD-resolution screen can’t even playback quality HD content! Seamless playback was never an issue on my MacBook. How does a 1.6 GHz processor and Nvidia Ion graphics card fail so miserably?

The answer is complicated, but the basic idea is that Flash media is processor and memory intensive. In future updates there’s hope that it’ll be reduced. It needs to be reduced before it’ll run on devices like the Motorola Droid in early 2010. There’s actually an update coming later this year or next for Flash 10.1, which can be downloaded in prerelease form here. Playback is mildly improved and analysts say that the HP Mini’s enhanced GPU (Graphics Processor Unit) will help assist Flash to deliver even better videos.

The bottom line is that I love the simplicity and portability of netbooks. There’s tremendous potential behind them and a growing market. People will be buying more of these, and makers of Flash and other HD content will become better producers of content for these devices. Now after a little less than a week of owning the device, I looked at Amazon.com to see the latest prices on my device and comparable ones; I’m shocked, Amazon.com is offering the bigger brother HP Mini 311-1025NR for $479.99 (probably for a limited time). It comes with an added boost in hard disk capacity, RAM, and is fit with Windows 7 Home Premium.

If you need something that can handle video whatsoever, I’d recommend the HP Mini 311-1025NR. But if you’re looking at pure portability, look at some of the latest Eee PC’s.

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Droid Does Tethering: How-To Guide (Free!)

Missing my iPhone is a long lost phenomena. I shudder to think about how cut off I was before the Droid. The Motorola Droid with Verizon Wireless service has been incredible. Where AT&T’s service was consistently inconsistent, Verizon’s is always on. Recently, I went on a road trip from Colorado to California and was amazed at the consistency of service across the desolate landscape of Nevada and Utah. I decided to get creative and really test my device’s capabilities.

The Droid has been advertised as the king of devices and the multi-tasker of the powerful. I naturally said, “Let’s see what you’re made of.” I had long known about a little company called PDAnet. PDAnet is an app maker for devices like the iPhone or Android software. I had always been tempted to use it with my iPhone, but was unfortunately dissuaded by horror stories and awful reception. The iPhone would require a jailbrake and then the app download; not that big a deal, but much harder then I would soon find out on my Droid.

The Android market and software system is incredibly powerful, but it’s taken me a few weeks to understand all of its potential. The market is very open, with few apps being removed because of the open market – users vote to remove an application. The market is so open that PDAnet, maker of the tethering app for my Droid, has a nice little home. Just do a simple search and you’re off. Download the app and it’ll be on your phone within seconds.

As a previous iPhone owner, this is where I say, “That’s too easy, something is bound to fail or block me.” But then I install the software from PDAnet’s website, USB tether my Droid, and plug it into my new HP Mini 311 netbook (review coming soon!).

Connect.

Verify.

On.

That’s it. On the internet and surfing at rates up to 2.4 Mbps, but it’s more like 115 Kb/s average. Regardless, it feels like high-speed DSL, and I’m insanely happy. My netbook can have internet whenever and wherever I want!

I have been reading about tethering for a few weeks now, and have noticed a common theme in forum posts. “Does PDAnet work with the Droid?” Verizon associates have been telling consumers that the Droid “does not tether” and that it will be about “$15 more a month to enable tethering on the Droid [next year].” Verizon is not exactly lying, but it isn’t the whole truth. Verizon will most likely announce tethering software a la Verizon-brand to the market next year. After that, Verizon customers will be able to download the software and tether; albeit at a cost, $15 a month. Why suffer the extra cost burden and wait?

Tethering isn’t illegal; in fact, the Android system encourages this type of open development, which is geared towards internet for all. Go try it out today – let us know how it works or if you have any questions below.

Caution: Remember Verizon still has a cap on the “unlimited data” — it’s still just 5GB of data per month.

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