Linux Gazette » Howard Dyckoff http://linuxgazette.net Making Linux a little more fun! Mon, 01 Aug 2011 10:46:52 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.2.1 NewsBytes http://linuxgazette.net/2011/07/newsbytes http://linuxgazette.net/2011/07/newsbytes#comments Sat, 02 Jul 2011 23:20:03 +0000 Howard Dyckoff http://linuxgazette.net/new/?p=353 Continue reading ]]> News Bytes

Contents:

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News in General

lightning boltApacheCon 2011: Open Source Enterprise Solutions, Cloud Computing

28 June 2011 FOREST HILL, MD The Apache Software Foundation (ASF), the all-volunteer developers, stewards, and incubators of nearly 170 Open Source projects and initiatives, today announced “Open Source Enterprise Solutions, Cloud Computing, and Community Leadership” as the theme for ApacheCon North America.

ApacheCon is the ASF’s official conference, trainings, and expo, created to explore key issues in using and developing Open Source solutions “The Apache Way”. This year’s event takes place 7-11 November 2011 at the Westin Bayshore Vancouver, Canada, with early registration incentives available through 2 September 2011.

Apache products power more than 225 million Websites (over half the Internet) and countless mission-critical applications worldwide, from financial services to publishing to radioastronomy to social networking to biomedicine research datastores to mobile medial applications. More than a dozen Apache projects form the foundation of today’s Cloud computing, and five of the top ten Open Source downloads are Apache projects.

lightning boltOracle to Make Hudson an Eclipse Foundation Project

Proposal Designed to Improve Insight, Predictability and Openness of Hudson Project.

Demonstrating its commitment to the developer and open source communities, Oracle has submitted a proposal to the Eclipse Foundation to create a Hudson project in Eclipse and contribute the Hudson core code to that project.

As part of the process, Oracle will transfer the Hudson trademark and the Hudson-ci.org domain name to the Eclipse Foundation.

Hudson is a industry-leading open source “continuous integration” (CI) server that increases productivity by coordinating and monitoring executions of repeated jobs, making it easier for developers to integrate changes to the project and for users to obtain a fresh build.

“Continuous Integration, and Hudson in particular, have become a key pillar of the modern Application Lifecycle Management (ALM) stack,” said Mik Kersten, CEO of Tasktop and founder of Eclipse Mylyn.

Under the new proposal, Oracle will be the project lead with Sonatype, Tasktop, and VMware as initial contributors. Other companies are also listed as project supporters. To help ensure that the proposal is in the best interests of the developer and open source communities, Oracle will solicit feedback from the Hudson community to make sure those opinions are heard before any proposal is finalized.

“This is the best possible outcome for the Hudson community – it gives the project a new path forward that benefits the entire Hudson ecosystem, especially its users. We applaud Oracle for moving Hudson to the Eclipse Foundation,” said Jason van Zyl, founder and CTO of Sonatype.

“By establishing a Hudson project at Eclipse and contributing the code and trademarks to the project, we believe that Oracle is acting in the best interest of Hudson and the community,” said Rod Johnson, senior vice president, Application Platform Strategy, VMware. “It’s important that the Java community has an open source CI solution with a broad-based set of committers.”

For more information, go to Hudson CI website.

lightning boltLexisNexis Announces Open Source Big Data Platform

LexisNexis Risk Solutions announced in June that it will offer its data intensive supercomputing platform under a dual license, open source model, as HPCC Systems. Designed to solve big data problems, the platform is built on top of high performance computing technology and has been proven with customers for the past decade. The same week, LexisNexis also announced it was joining the Linux Foundation. HPCC Systems provides a high performance computing cluster (HPCC) technology with a single architecture and a consistent data centric programming language. HPCC Systems is an alternative to Hadoop.

“We believe that HPCC Systems will take big data computing to the next level,” said James M. Peck, chief executive officer, LexisNexis Risk Solutions. “We’ve been doing this quietly for years for our customers with great success. We are now excited to present it to the community to spur greater adoption. We look forward to leveraging the innovation of the open source community to further the development of the platform,” said Mr. Peck.

To manage, sort, link, and analyze billions of records within seconds, LexisNexis developed a data intensive supercomputer that has been proven for the past ten years with customers who need to process large volumes of data. Customers such as leading banks, insurance companies, utilities, law enforcement and federal government leverage the HPCC platform technology through various LexisNexis® products and services. The HPCC platform specializes in the analysis of structured and unstructured data for enterprise class organizations.

HPCC Systems will initially release a virtual machine for the community to test, in addition to documentation and training. Full binaries will be released in several weeks and the source code will be released in a few more weeks after the binaries. HPCC Systems will have two offerings: the Community Edition which includes free platform software with community support, and the Enterprise Edition, which includes platform software with enterprise class support. Enterprise Edition customers will also have the option to acquire advanced modules and features.

LexisNexis Risk Solutions will not release its data sources, data products, the unique data linking technology, or any of the linking applications that are built into its products. These assets will remain proprietary and will not be released as open source.

HPCC Systems can process, analyze, and find links and associations in high volumes of complex data significantly faster and more accurately than current technology systems. The platform scales linearly from tens to thousands of nodes handling petabytes of data and supporting millions of transactions per minute. HPCC Systems is comprised of a single architecture, a consistent data-centric programming language, and two processing platforms: the Thor Data Refinery Cluster and the Roxie Rapid Data Delivery Cluster.

The core of the technology platform is the Enterprise Control Language (ECL), which is a declarative, data-centric programming language optimized for large-scale data management and query processing. The expressiveness of the language enables data analysts and developers to define “what” they want to do with their data instead of giving the system step-by-step instructions. As a result, developers can express complex queries and transformations with less programming time and fewer lines of code than other conventional programming languages. ECL specifications will be released under a Creative Commons license.

The Thor Data Refinery Cluster is responsible for ingesting vast amounts of data, transforming, linking and indexing that data, with parallel processing power spread across the nodes. The Roxie Rapid Data Delivery Cluster provides scalable, high-performance online query processing and data warehouse capabilities.

For more information, visit HPCCSystems.

lightning boltGartner and Forbes Find Expectations of IT’s Strategic Contribution Will Double for 2012

More boards of directors are expecting high to extremely high strategic contributions from IT in In the midst of tough economic times, according to a Gartner-Forbes 2011 U.S. Board of Directors Survey. The expectations of “high” to “extremely high” strategic contributions of IT climbed from 32 percent of survey respondents for 2010 to 66 percent for 2012.

From October to December, Gartner and Forbes surveyed 96 company directors. The Gartner Forbes 2011 U.S. Board of Directors Survey was designed to gain insight from a group that has low visibility to IT and business leaders, yet is ultimately held accountable for the performance of the corporation. The survey examined the key business issues and priorities of a sample of directors from companies with revenues over $1 billion, their view of what is ahead for their businesses, and their expectations for IT’s strategic contribution to the business.

“The pursuit of higher impact for IT in an environment of budget constraint is one that insists on rewriting the rules for how IT acts,” said Jorge Lopez, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. “…[This is] where the IT organization takes a leadership position to rewrite the rules of competition for the industry. To meet the expectations that have risen will require rethinking about how IT operates,” Mr. Lopez said.

While 73 percent of board directors surveyed believe that the economic situation is tough and will remain so for the foreseeable future, 51 percent said they are still focused on growing revenue. The tension between these two views means that CIOs will need to plan for the systems that will be required for growth but build in flexibility should circumstances change amid high levels of uncertainty.

Additional information is available in the Gartner report “Executive Advisory: Gartner Forbes 2011 U.S. Board of Directors Survey: IT Expectations Rise Dramatically for 2012.” The report is available on Gartner’s website.

lightning boltThe Linux Foundation Announces LinuxCon Program

The Linux Foundation has published the complete LinuxCon program and schedule and has announced that Linux creator Linus Torvalds will participate in an interview-style keynote with Greg Kroah-Hartman. The conference takes place August 17-19, 2011 in Vancouver, B.C. Also included is the co-located MeeGo Mini-Summit which will address MeeGo netbook and tablet applications and device development.

The LinuxCon event will host the formal 20th Anniversary of Linux celebration, which includes the LinuxCon Gala taking place the evening of August 17 at the Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver. It will also host a “20 Years of Linux” panel that will include Linux and open source luminaries Jon “maddog” Hall, FOSS veteran and advocate, and Eben Moglen, Software Freedom Law Center founder. The Linux Foundation’s Executive Director Jim Zemlin will moderate the exclusive panel.

Among many session highlights for this year’s LinuxCon North America program will be “How to Set a Broken ARM,” presented by Grant Likely from Secret Lab, who will explore the current state of ARM and the Linux development community;

Early bird registration ends July 8, 2011. For more information and to register, please visit the LinuxCon Website.

lightning boltOPEN VIRTUALIZATION ALLIANCE Created at OSBC

In a session at the close of the annual Open Source Business Conference (OSBC), a group of virtualization vendors other than VMware formed a consortium to complement and promote the existing open source communities managing the development of the Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM)hypervisor and associated management capabilities.

The consortium will promote examples of customer successes, encourage interoperability and accelerate the expansion of the ecosystem of third party solutions around KVM, providing businesses and government improved choice for in-house virtualization.

The Open Virtualization Alliance will provide education, best practices and technical advice to help businesses understand and evaluate the Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) hypervisor.

In June, Nimbula joined with OVA founding companies BMC, Eucalyptus, HP, IBM, Intel, Red Hat, and SUSE. KVM is built into current versions of Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Nimbula Director will support Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 and Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization 2.2.

The Open Virtualization Alliance’s goals are to:

  • Increase overall awareness and understanding of KVM;
  • Foster the adoption of KVM as an open virtualization alternative to proprietary solutions;
  • Accelerate the emergence of an ecosystem of third-party solutions around KVM;
  • Encourage interoperability, promote best practices, and highlight examples of customer successes.

As a core component in the Linux kernel, KVM leverages hardware virtualization support built into Intel and AMD processors, providing a robust environment for hosting Linux and Windows virtual machines. KVM naturally leverages the rapid innovation of the Linux kernel (to virtualize both Linux and Windows guests), automatically benefiting from scheduler, memory management, power management, device driver and other features being produced by the thousands of developers in the Linux community.

Members of the Open Virtualization Alliance have a common interest in supporting open virtualization, and are involved in the development, distribution, support or use of KVM or offerings which use it. By providing an open virtualization alternative, they are offering their clients choice in virtualization products for their business needs.

“Eucalyptus Systems has a clear focus on enterprise cloud computing, so we are thrilled to be an early member of the Open Virtualization Alliance to advance enterprise-ready open virtualization solutions,” said Rich Wolski, Eucalyptus Systems CTO. “With Eucalyptus, users can transform their hypervisor environments into a powerful private cloud, and there are already thousands of KVM-based Eucalyptus private cloud installations..”

“No matter what virtualization solution is chosen by our customers, the Intel strategy remains the same – to help ensure their choice runs best on Intel architecture,” said Doug Fisher, vice president, Software and Services Group, and general manager, Systems Software Division at Intel. “KVM offers an open source alternative for virtualization that takes immediate advantage of the Linux device driver work Intel does, which helps KVM track the rapid improvements we make in our products.”

“When one company dominates an industry, innovation suffers, and customers pay the price,” said Scott Crenshaw, vice president and general manager, Cloud Business at Red Hat. “Red Hat and the open source community are breaking the stranglehold of closed virtualization, enabling better performance, scalability, security — and better economics. We’re pleased to see momentum continue to build, changing the virtualization market just as we did with closed operating systems and enterprise middleware.”

For more information, visit the Open Virtualization Alliance website.


 

Conferences and Events

 

Cisco Live, U.S.
July 10 – 14, 2011
http://www.ciscolive.com/us/.
Cloud Identity Summit
July 18-21, Keystone, Colo.
http://www.cloudidentitysummit.com/index.cfm.
20th USENIX Security Symposium
August 10-12, 2011, San Francisco, CA
http://www.usenix.org/sec11/.
LinuxCon North America 2011
August 17 – 19, Hyatt Regency, Vancouver, Canada
http://events.linuxfoundation.org/events/linuxcon.
NoSQL NOW!
August 23-25, Jose, California
http://nosql2011.wilshireconferences.com/.
VMworld 2011
August 29-September 1st, Venetian, Las Vegas, NV
http://www.vmworld.com/index.jspa.
Storage Decisions New York
September 19, New York, NY
Semantic Technology Conference – LONDON
September 26-27, Hotel Russell, London
http://semtechuk2011.semanticweb.com/index.cfm.

 

Distro News

lightning boltFedora 15 Released with Gnome 3, Btrfs

In late May, the Fedora Project released Fedora 15, the ‘first’ stable distro to come with Gnome 3 as its default desktop environment.

Fedora is a bleeding edge GNU/Linux-based distribution which comes with the latest software packages for enthusiasts and dare-devils to try. However, Fedora can also be used by average users interested in learning more aboutGNU/Linux systems.

Fedora 15l gives users a distro which allows them to explore Gnome 3 with the stability that a Fedora distro offers. Fedora 15 is also introducing Btrfs as a menu item in the installer (only for non-live images – live images support just Ext4) and does not require passing a special option to the installer as in the previous releases. Btrfs availability has moved up a notch as a incremental step towards the goal of Btrfs as the default filesystem in the next release of Fedora.

BoxGrinder is an included set of tools for making appliances, typically used in virtualized environments, or for use in a cloud environment. It grinds out a preconfigured disk image, including the operating system and required software ready for deployment and can deliver the appliance to a targeted location. BoxGrinder originated in the JBoss Community and marks the first time a JBoss Community project has been included in Fedora.

Fedora 15 comes with Indic typing booster, a predictive input method for the ibus platform. It suggests complete words based on partial input, and users can simply select a word from the suggestion list and improve their typing speed and accuracy.

Live images in this release use XZ compression instead of gzip as in older releases, making them smaller (about 10%) to download or providing more space for applications.

Fedora 15 includes a redesigned version of powertop and newer versions of tuned and pm-utils for better power management. The tuned package contains a daemon that tunes system settings dynamically to balance between power consumption and performance. It also performs various kernel tunings according to a selected profile.

For more information on Fedora 15, to download the distribution or to join this community effort, visit the Fedora Project website..

lightning boltVinux 3.2 for Visually Impaired Users

Vinux 3.2 is now available. Based on Ubuntu 11.04. this is a cutting edge release featuring the latest versions of Orca (3.1.2-xdesktop) and Speech-Dispatcher (0.8~2784+13~maverick1) from daily builds.

Vinux iwas originally a remastered version of the popular Ubuntu 10.10 Maverick Meerkat distribution optimised for the needs of blind and partially sighted users. It is now based on Ubuntu 11.04.

By default Vinux provides three screen-readers, two full-screen magnifiers, global font-size and colour changing facilities as well as support for USB Braille displays. Booting the live CD, users will be greeted by the Orca reader/magnifier which enables the graphical Gnome desktop using keybindings, as well as providing full screen magnification if required. For those who prefer a simple text based console, there is the Speakup screen-reader. A second full-screen magnifier is provided by the Compiz Window Manager, which uses 3D technology to allow you to magnify and navigate the whole screen using the mouse, or move a resizable virtual magnifying glass around the screen. The Gnome Desktop Manager itself provides global key bindings to change the font size and/or the colour scheme on the fly. Finally, Brltty provides Grade 1/2 Braille output via the Orca screen-reader. By default all of the screen-readers use the same Espeak Speech Synthesizer via Speech-Dispatcher which provides a seamless experience for the user when switching from one screen-reader to another!

This version is available as CD and DVD in both 32 and 64 bit editions. The DVD version provides the same software as the CD but with the addition of libreoffice and some non-free multimedia codecs etc. The default desktop is Classic Gnome 2.x but Unity is available from the GDM login screen if your video card supports 3D.

The 3.2 release includes the Pico TTS voices in addition to Espeak, the Epiphany Internet Browser and built-in keybindings to quickly organise multiple windows with x-tile. It also features new packages including Orca-Teacher, Talking Clock and CDBurn. Version also plays a system bell when the isolinux boot screen appears allowing users to select different boot options including an experimental ‘toram’ mode. There is also a Vinux 3.2 PLUS edition which features extra packages for partially-sighted users.

There are now more text tools on the CD edition including: sox gpm screen, splitvt, figlet, cmatrix, txt2html, html2text, pdf2svg, pstotext, units mc, trash-cli, vrms, dict, sc, htop, linuxinfo, w3m, elinks-lite, urlview, finch, axel, calcurse, tdl.

Vinux can be downloaded here.

lightning boltNew Version of Just Enough OS released in June

The newest version of Just Enough OS is JeOSS-U-LTS-8.04.3 and is available from JeOSS website.

The JeOS (Just enough OS) concept was introduced in 2007 with Ubuntu JeOS 7.10, then in 2008 as a variant of Ubuntu’s LTS (Long Term Support) Server v8.04. At that time JeOS was a small version of Ubuntu’s server OS, including a virtual kernel tuned for virtual appliances.

The current Jeoss is a very compact size for a real server kernel re-targeted for supporting and being directly-installable even on legacy, limited resource, and embedded x86 (32bits) platforms.

Jeoss in a Nutshell:

  • x86 (32bit) i586 (not PAE required) Low Latency Server kernel;
  • Simple and direct installation even on Headless and/or DVD/CD drive-less platforms;
  • Direct installation on Flash devices (Pen Drive, Compact Flash, SD, HDSD, etc);
  • Full PXE Network install support;
  • Full Serial & SSH Console install support;
  • No Internet connection required during install.;
  • Full Install ISO image 136Mb;
  • 128MB required RAM.


Software and Product News

lightning boltGoogle Launches All Web ChromeBooks

During May’s Google IO developer conference, the first netbooks using the Linux-based ChromeOS were announced from Acer and Samsung. This was a public follow up from the very public beta of ChromeOS netbooks kicked off in December. One of the morning keynotes was dedicated to describing the new netbooks and their features. In June, the ChromeBooks finally shipped and were available for purchase from Amazon and Best Buy. Amazon actually sold out of Samsung Chromebooks in the first week.

Linux Gazette’s correspondent Howard Dyckoff received a beta unit and describes the Chromebook universe in a main article in thie issue of Linux Gazette.

lightning boltProtecode Announces Real-time Open Source License Management

Protecode, a provider of open source license management tools, is now offering its Developer Assistant to the developer community worldwide, supporting all operating systems and software development tools. Previously only available for the Eclipse Integrated Development Platform (IDE), this solution operates unobtrusively in the background and requires no training for developers.

Developer Assistant is a real-time analysis solution that manages licensing and copyright obligations at the earliest point in a software development lifecycle. Operating at the developer workstation, it uses the code analysis services of Protecode’s Enterprise Server and compares the code structure of a file to signatures of millions of files stored in Protecode Global IP Signatures (GIPS). There, it identifies the licensing and copyright obligations of the file and provides instant feedback to the developer as the code is put together or brought in from the Internet, an external storage device or a corporate repository.

“Detecting open source licenses as soon as the code is brought in or put together reduces cost and time associated with fixing related problems later down the road. Developer Assistant is the only solution currently on the market to detect open source and other third party code in real-time,” says Kamal Hassin, Vice President of Product Management, Protecode.

Running in the background of a developer station with other components of Protecode’s System 4 solution, the Developer Assistant manages external content based on corporate license policies. Developers are immediately notified if a software file contains unacceptable open source or other third party content; developers can fix the problem on the spot, choose to ignore the warning (knowing that the violations are also caught by other System 4 components), or attach a comment to the violating software file. System 4 stores and manages all comments against the files and projects, maintaining a record of the events.

Protecode showcased its Developer Assistant at the Open Source Business Conference in May in San Francisco. To view a demo video of Protecode’s Developer Assistant visit Protecode’s website.

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Away Mission http://linuxgazette.net/2011/07/away-mission http://linuxgazette.net/2011/07/away-mission#comments Sat, 02 Jul 2011 17:02:29 +0000 Howard Dyckoff http://linuxgazette.net/new/?p=280 Continue reading ]]> Cisco Live 2011 in Las Vegas, Nevada,  (July 10 – 14, 2011) is the venue for all things Cisco  this month.  Not that I’d recommend Vegas in July, but Cisco does provide lots of tech sessions and good grub. The infamous Cisco Networker Bash also promises arcane but highly coveted headgear, but that’s another story. For the last several years,  the combined Networker and Cisco Live user event has had a strong virtual presence with keynotes and many detailed sessions for free and an even larger program for a paid virtual conference pass. This year, the virtual component also includes panels and partner ‘supersessions’ and morning press conferences.   In fact, the conference literature says full access to the virtual event is free this year. Go here to find the Virtual Live agenda. At Cisco Live Virtual, you can:

  • • Access over 1,000 live and on-demand technical training sessions, keynotes, and Super Sessions.  About 70 conference video and 200 audio sessions will be on-demand, after the event
  • • Download 2011 session PDFs prior to the conference
  • • Build a virtual “briefcase” to manage and organize the content that interests you
  • • Join the conference conversation in the blog center and social media
  • • Download Cisco booth content and partner information in the exhibitor resource centers
  • • Participate in games and win prizes

I was very happy with Cisco Live 2010, especially as almost all session PDFs were available before the day of the session.   You just can’t get slides in advance at most virtual conferences.     But not all sessions were available to the free attendees last year.   If that limitation is removed, this is an excellent opportunity. Since free registration to Cisco Live Virtual is available only for 6 months, last year’s content is no longer available as a virtual conference.   But some sessions are available. One of the sessions I downloaded in 2010 was entitled “Highly Available Wide Area Network Design” (session BRKCRS-2042) and it weighed in at 102 slides.  So many of these presentations are both detailed and quite good. There may be a lot of Cisco partners at the solution pavilion, but the collateral will be on-line.  However, attending has other incentives: the lab experience – Cisco Live’s four- and eight-hour labs give direct experience installing and troubleshooting network technologies and practicing network operations in a simulated environment moderated by Cisco experts. Many labs also qualify as preparation for specific Cisco Certifications exams.  But you have to go to be there, and the labs cost $600-1000 each over the cost of the conference. Collaboration User Group at Cisco Live 2011 If you are actually attending Cisco Live in Vegas, here are also special opportunities for Cisco Collaboration User Group members to meet with each other and Cisco executives and get other members-only perks at the conference. Collaboration User Group members get extra benefits at Cisco Live:

  • • Access to a welcome reception following the Collaboration Welcome Session
  • • Exclusive NDA product direction sessions
  • • Preferred access to the Walk-in Self Paced Labs
  • • Preferred seating at the Collaboration Town Hall
  • • Collaboration User Group polo shirt and badge ribbon

To learn more about Cisco Collaboration User Group activities at Cisco Live 2011, go to the usergroups web site. Conference Hotels include the Luxor, the MGM and Mandalay Bay, so the event is at the end of the Strip nearest the airport.   That make leaving easier and taxi fares less.  That must be Cisco taking care of us. Of course, this is an expensive event to attend physically.   We are now in the ‘late’ registration period, with costs raised $100 to $2195  for June 4 -July 8, and an extra $100 the week of the conference.  Airfare and hotel and expenses would easily be another $1000-2000.  So do consider that virtual conference option.   Its good value for no money.

August preview:
– LinuxCon North America 2011 in Vancouver, Canada
– The first NoSQL NOW! event in  San Jose, California
– VMworld 2011 at  the Venetian, Las Vegas, NV

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Life with a ChromeBook http://linuxgazette.net/2011/07/life-with-a-chromebook http://linuxgazette.net/2011/07/life-with-a-chromebook#comments Fri, 01 Jul 2011 04:01:18 +0000 Howard Dyckoff http://linuxgazette.net/new/?p=275 Continue reading ]]> (Linux Gazette’s correspondent Howard Dyckoff received a beta Chromium 48, or Cr-48 unit and put it through the wringer. He tried to use it as his primary computer and finally succeeded after a few major OS updates. His experience is detailed in the article below.)

Notes on New ChromeBooks and Some History

During May’s Google IO developer conference, the first netbooks using the Linux-based ChromeOS were announced from Acer and Samsung. This was a public follow up from the very public beta of ChromeOS netbooks kicked off in December. One of the morning keynotes was dedicated to describing the new netbooks and their features. In June, the ChromeBooks finally shipped and were available for purchase from Amazon and Best Buy. Amazon actually sold out of Samsung Chromebooks in the first week.

ChromeOS was the cover topic 2 years ago on the July 20th (2009) issue of Information Week. In that article, the bottom line was “… Google has a shot at gaining respectable consumer market share if it produces a slick, fast, secure OS that delivers a great web experience. And if Google succeeds with consumers, it is logical to expect it to steer that momentum toward the enterprise.”

So now, some two years later, we have real products coming out and a quicker focus on business users than anticipated. The new netbooks are fairly fast and fairly secure and at least the beta boxes had some slickness and aesthetic appeal. It is a very good web experience, partly due to its HTML 5 support and Flash plug-in. But is it “good enough” for business users?

I have to say “yes, but” due to one flagrant short coming: without an exposed Java Virtual Machine or JVM, most meeting and webinar software does not currently work with these new devices. I had raised this issue twice during the beta period and took the announcement of ChromeBooks for Business as a signpost that the problem was either solved or almost solved. But as I tried to get more information from Google spokespersons and their PR agency in Mid-May, it became clear that no one there wanted to address the topic.

Ironically, Google held a webinar on May 18th titled “Chromebooks for Business: New computers for the browser-based world”. It was hosted on WebEx and my Cr-48 still could not join in. The problem continued in June. I had emailed the host, Raghu Kumar, the day before athe webinar nd he only mentioned there was a VDI solution in development at Citrix. So Google is not working on this problem directly and they don’t seem to acknowledge that it is a major issue for business users.

To be fair, Citrix is also in beta on using a Flash-based meeting client for the ChromeBook and other web-only devices. There is no timeline for this solution yet, and Citrix GoToMeeting is not the dominant platform for web-based meetings. This problem still remains for the near future.

Why would any business user or techie put up with this limitation? Because getting to a web page from an unpowered, inert device is wicked fast . The cold boot takes under 10 seconds, with part of that time typing your password. And returning from standby mode is barely a second. Yes, it is that fast – unless I have over 30 tabs open and then the Chrome browser gets bogged down. At 20 tabs and under, my Cr-48 has great performance.

So what do you actually get with a ChromeBook? Google has called the Cr-48 beta unit a laptop, mostly due to its 12 inch display and full size key pad, all of which is greatly appreciated. But it weighed in at under 4 pounds with only 2 GB of RAM and a single-core N455 Atom processor. The new ones weigh between 3 and 3.5 pounds and may be a little thinner. I would call that a netbook. There is also some GPS hardware but it is not currently used by the OS. It very fast at web browsing, its senior-moment simple to use, fairly secure, is safely shareable, and it looks like a thin black 13-inch MacBook . There is is also a Linux kernel to play with under it all.

The Cr-48 beta device looks almost identical to the soon-to-be-released Samsung Series 5 netbook, right down to the large hinge and dedicated web browsing keys, but Samsung has stated that it did not build the Cr-48. Both have Lithium Polymer batteries that last 8 hours or 7-8 days in standby mode (my unit lasted more like 6 hours or 6 days, but I won’t quibble). The new Samsung unit has 2 GB of RAM and a snappier 2-core Atom processor plus a brighter LED screen (see the table of specs at the bottom of this article).

Taking notes had been a challenge in December when the CR-48 was originally sent to lucky beta testers as an early Xmas gift. Since the file manager wasn’t working then, users initially had only a local scratch pad and the Quick Note app by Diigo that is cloud-based and stores short docs with some formatting. It looks like a page on yellow legal pad which is retro and comforting.

After a February update to ChromeOS, both note-taking apps became usable with writing supported when no connection was available. Of course, you have to synch up with the Cloud to save your work but the 7-8 day battery life in standby and the built in 3G cell service could take care of that.

Oh, right, I have to explain about the cell service. All new purchases of a ChromeBook get a free 2 years service contract with Verizon for a minimal 100 MB download account. You can pay for additional monthly download capacity if you need it, but if you are a bit miserly and turn it off when you really don’t need auto refreshes, that 100 MB is just enough for occasional work without WiFi. I usually have 20-40 MB left at the end of the month, but twice I had to suck down all 100 MB and waited only a few days for my next allotment of 100 MB. As a Cr-48 beta tester, I actually only get 1 year of minimal Verizon service, but that is still a great perk. Both Samsung and Acer sell ChromeBooks without the cellular modem for less cash upfront but the cost difference is probably less than what the minimal service and modem would cost. I recommend a 3G model if its in your budget range. It may save you from calamity.

Let me also note that this web device does not have an Ethernet connection. I rediscovered that fact at the RSA conference when there was a wireless crash and I was given an ethernet cable for the duration. But there was no connector. I have recently read that Cr-48 users have successfully used an Ethernet-to-USB adapter but I don’t know which brands work.

During the beta test, the most difficult aspect was the hypersensitive touch pad that acted as crazy as a trapped weasel, selecting different tabs randomly and highlighting and replacing blocks of text randomly. Those dark days ended after the second OS update and improved steadily there after. If it hadn’t, I’d have violently thrown it against a wall. There were other problems with the new Flash plug-in and other aspects of use, but these were almost entirely improved or solved by the time of the Google IO announcement of production chromebooks. Of course, if I open more than about 30 tabs in 4 or 5 windows, some plug-ins crash. The security sandboxing seems to consume a little more RAM than FireFox or Opera would and the 2 GB that is standard on the new hardware will help greatly with that. I think 3 or 4 GB would be better. However, I understand that the beta unit and the future Samsung ChromeBooks will NOT allow memory upgrades. That is unfortunate. If I could put a new and bigger SIMM in my CR-48, I would be a very happy camper.

Both Oracle and its recent Sun acquisition have tried and failed to get traction with businesses on thin clients in the Client/Server era of the 1990s that was dominated by Microsoft. But after the start of Web 2.0 period, and the more recent adoption of HTML 5, web-based user experiences are much more like that of native applications. The apps in the Chrome store go further toward erasing the remaining differences and new pressure from iPad adopters is making the new wave of web users first class citizens for corporate IT. Furthermore, the appearance of a web-based version of Microsoft’s Office suite, which should run on a ChromeBook, makes a web-only device more acceptable. Since I have been using Google Docs and Calendar and Mail, the transition was very simple and fairly satisfying.

To sweeten the deal for businesses in these tough economic times, Google is providing both the operating system and hardware as single package for $28/user/month ($20 for schools and, presumably, non-profits that get a big discount on Google Apps). This is like renting a “Chromebook” and getting support as well for about $300 a year. In recent years, the Gartner Group research firm has estimated that supporting a corporate computer user can cost $3.000 or more each year. This estimate is for hardware, software applications and OS, patching costs, security, and technical support. Because of the the Cloud-based and web-centric model, the usual IT patching cycle is provided by Google. Thus, the IT savings for supporting Business users via ChromeBooks could be up to 90% per user. That is significant scratch.

“For the first time, hardware and software are being packaged together as a service,” said Sundar Pichai, Google’s vice president for Chrome Development, during the Google IO keynote introducing the new ChromeBooks. (I think he meant as a package by Google.)

The secret sauce here is that every device is interchangeable – only a little bit of set-up data resides on the individual device. All the documents and emails are entirely stored on the web. If your ChromeBook dies, or is dropped 3 stories from a hotel balcony, you get a replacement ChromeBook that can login and resume where you last left off. The OS itself and most of the specialized web apps are updated automatically and these never go long without being patched.

Google has been paying bounties – but only occasionally – at hackathons where all the major browsers are tested. There have been very few successful attacks against the Chrome browser, and the lack of local storage and a verified Linux kernel make a ChromeBook a difficult target.

There is a ChromeBook YouTube channel for Google videos of Chrome and ChromeBook features. This security video is one of the more interesting ones.

I should add that the beta units have a developer switch in battery compartment that allows the CR-48 to boot up in Linux mode with full shell access. However, the security features, including verification of the kernel at boot time, is by-passed in this mode, making it significanly less secure. In this mode, you can install and select a different Linux distro and add other applications and security packages. Yes, you can run Ubuntu if that’s what you want to do.

If you have a CR-48 and want to look at ChromeOS in developer mode, the following web page has a good summary of the steps and includes photos. Google will soon be linking the partner infrastructure it is developing for Google Apps to a partner program for Chromebooks that will resellers to bundle apps and additional services for Google’s 3 million enterprise users.

Glenn Weinstein, who is CTO at Google partner Appirio, told CRN Canada: With Google Apps, we started as an implementation partner, and there was a period of time when customers could only buy their Google Apps licenses directly from Google. They then introduced the reseller program which allows us to be a more complete solution provider. We expect a similar evolution with Chromebooks, where Google initially provides the machines to customers directly, but relatively quickly expands the partner reseller programs to include Chromebooks as well.

ChromeOS is actually developed by the Chromium projects, whose web site is at: http://www.chromium.org/

The Chromium projects include Chromium and Chromium OS, the two open-source projects behind the Google Chrome browser and Google Chrome OS, respectively. The web site houses documentation and code related to the Chromium projects and is ia good starting point for developers interested in learning about and contributing to these open-source projects.

All-in-all, a ChromeBook is a very adequate travel netbook that can provide a lot of user security. Once the Webinar and Web Meeting issue is addressed, this can also be a very compelling option for business users. I greatly prefer it to my lighter but smaller 10 inch Asus EEE netbook, except when I need a local OS and native apps. But that need occurs less and less often as great web apps begin to take the place of native apps.

Comparative Specs for Various ChromeBooks

Here are the Cr-48 specs and parts from a Dec 14 posting on the chromeos.com blog:

Processor: Intel Atom Processor N455 1.66GHz 512K Cache
Chipset: Intel CG82NM10 PCH
Motherboard: Tripod Motherboard MARIO   6050A240910   MB   A03
RAM: Hynix 2GB DDR3 1Rx8 PC3   10600SRAM
Read Only Memory: ITE IT8500E Flash ROM
SSD Drive: SanDisk sdsa4dh-016G 16GB SATA SSD
Wireless Wan: Qualcomm Gobi2000 PCI Express Mini Card
3g Adapter: AzureWave 802.11 a/b/g/n PCI-E Half MiniCard
Bluetooth: Atheros AR5BBU12 Bluetooth V2.1 EDR
Weight: 3.6 pounds

The Cr-48 has a 12 inch LCD screen, one USB port, an SD card reader, and some dedicated web browsing keys.

Samsung Series 5 Chromebook

Here’s an overview of the specs for the Samsung Chromebook:

Size: 0.79-inch case, 3.3 pounds total
Memory: 2 GB RAM, 16 GB SSD
Processor: Intel dual-core processor (Samsung and Google didn’t disclose processor speed) Update from Amazon: an Intel N570 Atom Processor running at 1.66 GHz
Screen: 12.1-inch LED Display, 16:10 resolution   Samsung claims it is 35% brighter than an LCD display.
Battery: Up to 8.5 hours of normal usage, up to 5 hours of video playback
Software: Google Chrome OS. Bootup time is less than 10 seconds
Peripherals: Two USB ports and an SD/SDHC/MMC card reader
Price: $429 for Wi-Fi. $499 for the 3G version, which includes 100 MB free per month for two years

Acer Cromia Chromebook Specs ($349 Wifi Only, 3G TBD)

Display: 11.6″ (1366×768) HD CineCrystal LED
Weight: 2.95 lbs, 1.34 kg
Processor: 1.66 GHz Intel Atom N570 Dual-Core
RAM: 2GB DDR3
Storage: 16 GB solid-state drive (SSD)
WiFi: Wireless-N Wi-Fi(802.11b/g/n) and 3G Radio (optional)
Other features: HD Webcam with noise cancelling microphone, High-Definition Audio
Ports: 2 USB 2.0 ports, 4-in-1 memory card slot (SD, SDHC, SDXC, MMC), HDMI port
Keyboard: Fullsize Chrome keyboard
Pointer: Oversize fully-clickable trackpad
Battery: 6-cell battery for up to 6 hours of use
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