f13.net

f13.net General Forums => General Discussion => Topic started by: schild on November 19, 2009, 10:24:58 PM



Title: ChromeOS
Post by: schild on November 19, 2009, 10:24:58 PM
At first I was all, why would they make this if they had Android?
Then I was all, why doesn't Microsoft just do CE RIGHT this time since they finally managed to get Windows right with 7?
Then I was like, "why won't Linux just go away?"

But I suppose that last one is off-point.

ChromeOS is completely unnecessary for 90% of the computers in the world today. Probably more like 98%, but I'm making up statistics here to back up a point that probably doesn't need to be made.

This shit:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QRO3gKj3qw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hJ57xzo287U

Should be the only thing on netbooks from the day it releases until the internet radically changes.

It looks exactly like what netbooks need to become truly viable. If I ever see it on any other computer though, gonna have to punch a baby.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Hoax on November 19, 2009, 11:56:09 PM
Really wish I hadn't sold my tiny amount of shares in google to buy a car that was promptly hit by a truck, they are going to be killing it when this catches on which judging from Android will take awhile.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: K9 on November 20, 2009, 04:48:32 AM
That first narraotr guy is too smug; he needs a punch to the face.

I agree with Schild, this looks great for netbooks, but places way too much faith in Google for anything else.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Big Gulp on November 20, 2009, 04:51:45 AM
Everything done in the cloud?  Why doesn't Google just come right out and say "We want all of your data"?


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Tarami on November 20, 2009, 05:05:32 AM
The feeling I got from watching both videos was kinda "Hey, we made you a bootable web browser... then we realized that's not all you actually want to do, so we're going to fudge everything else! Aren't we great?!"


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Murgos on November 20, 2009, 05:50:26 AM
Thin client ++;


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: KallDrexx on November 20, 2009, 05:56:18 AM
this looks great for netbooks, but places way too much faith in Google for anything else.

I'm pretty sure it's only meant for netbooks, not for full laptops/desktops.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: 01101010 on November 20, 2009, 06:34:05 AM
Wow... behold the matrix, one step at a time.  :oh_i_see:


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: schild on November 20, 2009, 06:35:58 AM
Everything done in the cloud?  Why doesn't Google just come right out and say "We want all of your data"?
Because the video wasn't shipped with tinfoil hats.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Murgos on November 20, 2009, 08:24:36 AM
Wow... behold the matrix, one step at a time.  :oh_i_see:

Not really.  This is not for the people on this board, at least not your main computing purposes.  This looks to me like it's aimed at stuff like your DVR (to finally realize that 'set top box' concept) or very light netbooks or low to bottom end mobile phones.  Sure, it may be all grandma needs on a daily basis but most of 'us' do more with computers than just interact with web-apps.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Yoru on November 20, 2009, 09:17:18 AM
Oh hey I heard this before. I think it was in like 1997 or something. Oracle NCs. Sun JavaStations. And then there was WebTV too.

And before that they called it timesharing.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Quinton on November 20, 2009, 09:27:43 AM
I'm still a little skeptical about why many people would want netbook+chromeos instead of netbook+win7+chrome, which can browse the web *and* run WoW or whatever.  But I did work for a company in the late 90s that became an "internet appliance" company (RIP, Be Inc), so I may still be scarred and jaded from that experience.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Trippy on November 20, 2009, 09:28:33 AM
Oh hey I heard this before. I think it was in like 1997 or something. Oracle NCs. Sun JavaStations. And then there was WebTV too.

And before that they called it timesharing.
Sun had its diskless workstations more than a decade before that (1982 - 83). It was great cause when the network went down you couldn't do anything (just like now if your Internet connection goes down and all your data stored remotely) so we would all go and watch a movie.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Yegolev on November 20, 2009, 09:30:40 AM
:oh_i_see:


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Trippy on November 20, 2009, 09:35:19 AM
:geezer:


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Quinton on November 20, 2009, 09:37:45 AM
Home directories on NFS make me cry.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Trippy on November 20, 2009, 09:40:27 AM
Indeed.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Kitsune on November 20, 2009, 09:44:53 AM
Moblin stuck me as more impressive an implementation of the light OS concept.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Tarami on November 20, 2009, 09:47:35 AM
That was my point aswell, Quinton. Even if "the web" is 90% of the time spent, you don't want to lose the ability to do the things you do in the remaining 10%. Either it's games or it's some professional application that you need for work. Very few professionals, I wager, can do with just a gimped Office package (i.e. Google Docs.) Also, the times when a netbook is nice to have are often when there is no available Internet; on the train commuting, on the plane or the hotel room. It's kind of the strength of netbooks; they are so small and light that you can bring one with you, regardless of where you go. Therefore they also need to work practically anywhere, not just from locations with WiFi.

I suppose you could have a dual-boot with Windows or OSX or whatever is your fancy, but then it feels like you're missing the point.

Also, if you're a frequent laptop/netbook user, chances are you never completely shut off the computer anyway, you just put it in hibernate. From hibernation it is literally like 10 seconds until you're up and running again. I can't remember the last time I fully booted a portable PC, to be honest.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Yegolev on November 20, 2009, 09:56:45 AM
Home directories on NFS make me cry.

/hi5

Related to Trippy's post: My new HP boss was just today complaining about how shitty Sun is and how he was very happy that we were an AIX shop.  Besides the two Solaris shitboxes we have, which I avoid, last time I touched Sun was using an IPC to read email (pine) and surf porn in 1994.

Speaking of porn, who wants to have to stream that every time?  Having the .avi in the cloud means I can't skip ahead to 2:45 until it downloads.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Trippy on November 20, 2009, 10:01:40 AM
But but The Network is the Computer.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Quinton on November 20, 2009, 10:10:34 AM
Also, if you're a frequent laptop/netbook user, chances are you never completely shut off the computer anyway, you just put it in hibernate. From hibernation it is literally like 10 seconds until you're up and running again. I can't remember the last time I fully booted a portable PC, to be honest.

Yeah, I'm completely baffled by the chromeos team's obsession with boot speed.  Especially with "always on" mobile devices (which netbooks should fall into), you really should only ever do a full reboot if the battery is dead or you have a major system update.  It feels like a lot of optimization for something that is better fixed in other ways.

also

The Computer is the Computer.
The Network is the Network.
We're sorry about any confusion.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Morfiend on November 20, 2009, 10:19:54 AM
From the other ChromeOS thread.

I have been saying to my friends that I think the OS is going to basically become a browser, and everything is going to be done in a cloud. This seems like the first step towards that.

I personally embrace the idea of moving to the cloud for stuff like netbooks. I look forward to the day when all our data is in the cloud and everything is done over the net. Although I think we have a way to go on internet speeds before that came become the norm for Desktops.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Brogarn on November 20, 2009, 10:45:14 AM
Thin client ++;

This.

Also, ya... baby punching if this is on anything other than a very basic netbook. Because "Thin client". Anything else is a waste.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Yegolev on November 20, 2009, 10:49:36 AM
Yeah, I'm completely baffled by the chromeos team's obsession with boot speed.

Am I the only person that leaves his computers on all the time?  If booting takes too long... don't do it.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Prospero on November 20, 2009, 11:06:15 AM
The security model for the devices sounds very appealing. I think even my father in-law would be hard pressed to infect one of these things.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Ingmar on November 20, 2009, 11:13:35 AM
Yeah, I'm completely baffled by the chromeos team's obsession with boot speed.

I'm guessing some product marketing guy laid down the law on that because it is one of the most common complaints people have about MS OSes.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Murgos on November 20, 2009, 11:34:27 AM
Yeah, I'm completely baffled by the chromeos team's obsession with boot speed.

Am I the only person that leaves his computers on all the time?  If booting takes too long... don't do it.

No, my personal computer is always on.  It sleeps into a power saving mode but that really takes <3 seconds to come up.  From the time I hit the space bar to when I sit down it's usually ready to go.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Prospero on November 20, 2009, 11:39:42 AM
Most normal people turn off their computers each day, or even after each session. When I visit my folks it can take 5+ minutes to get to a damn browser.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Yegolev on November 20, 2009, 11:41:59 AM
See, I turn all the power management to "always on" for nearly everything.  I don't even let my monitor go to sleep.  It's like those ovens in the other thread.  Furthermore, if you don't turn off your computer, chances are very good you won't find yourself wondering why your computer won't boot anymore.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Soln on November 20, 2009, 11:46:43 AM
I'm skeptical


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Yegolev on November 20, 2009, 11:48:31 AM
Of periods?


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Soln on November 20, 2009, 11:49:32 AM
yes, especially with Google


they'll monetize yr periods, just you wait


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: HaemishM on November 20, 2009, 11:50:20 AM
This shit:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QRO3gKj3qw

By 1 minute in, I want to skullfuck this narrator to death.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Soln on November 20, 2009, 11:52:11 AM
so very very smug, so Google


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: schild on November 20, 2009, 11:53:13 AM
This shit:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QRO3gKj3qw

By 1 minute in, I want to skullfuck this narrator to death.
At work, assuming that's the elaborate video. I liked it.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: fuser on November 20, 2009, 11:53:57 AM
I'm still a little skeptical about why many people would want netbook+chromeos instead of netbook+win7+chrome, which can browse the web *and* run WoW or whatever.

Same, a Dell 10v/1Gb ram runs 7 Pro fine and that's not the stripped down starter edition they offer now. By the time ChromeOS is out the next generation Atom's will be out with more power speeding this whole process even more.

I have tried to sway some people on using Google Apps vs other services with no success, I cannot image what a whole Google/cloud PC would be like.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: HaemishM on November 20, 2009, 11:54:28 AM
No, that's the 3 minute video you linked first with the faux handdrawn diagrams and shit. Infuriatingly smug.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Yegolev on November 20, 2009, 12:06:03 PM
Assimilate, you bastard!


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: MahrinSkel on November 20, 2009, 02:27:49 PM
I've become fond of Asrock mobos because of their "Instant On" feature, when you shut down the computer it reboots and then enters Hibernate mode, which means it the loading overhead comes when you don't care.  The reality is that most of what most people use computers for as tools (wordprocessing, photo manipulation, even spreadsheets/budgeting software at the personal/small business level) doesn't *need* a lot of computing power or memory.  ChromeOS is probably too stripped as-is for most people, but with the appropriate add-ons everything else people need from a computer comes from connectivity, not the hardware.

--Dave


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Venkman on November 21, 2009, 05:27:43 AM
I'm about as skeptical of this as I am of netbooks in general. I was there in the mid/late 80s with the VAX system my university had. Cloud computing works well as long as it's a) ubiquitous; and, b) so redundant it removes human error.

We are probably at least a decade from both. There is no such thing as an anytime/anywhere connection in the US and EU. There is no such thing as 0% downtime. And there's no such system that survives some human screwing something up. Look how people freaked the two times this year Gmail went down (along with a bunch of other services tied to the login account). 99.9% uptime is only good when that 0.1% happens at 3am local.

And I use "human error" here very broadly, because it's not about forgetting to plug something in. It's about the humans making decisions across all sorts of corollary spectrums. Like the idiots who decided they either didn't need a backup solution or didn't bother using it for that "Danger" mobile phone.

Yea, I'm old. And yea, many of us have seen this tried many times before. And yea, sometimes that's a crutch that prevents open minds. But this is still today more promise than reality. It'll probably catch up first with kids, because they're not stuck in the world of installed programs, local files and email. But it's going to take that generation growing up and replacing old farts in corporate IT groups for cloud computing and netbooks to truly take off.

Which is where I got my decade estimate from :-)


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Yegolev on November 21, 2009, 05:32:53 AM
Age does not seem to be a factor in "I want my own server", which happens a lot in corporate IT.  People don't want to share servers.  I'm sure they would have dedicated ethernet cables run to their desks if they could.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: MahrinSkel on November 21, 2009, 01:48:12 PM
Server for what?  Only thing I ever insisted on having my own server for was a database, and rather than argue about it I just frankenboxed one together out of old parts (mobo and CPU were from my old gaming rig, case, power supply, and drives from the reject pile at the office).

--Dave


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Yegolev on November 22, 2009, 12:01:33 AM
Server for what?  Only thing I ever insisted on having my own server for was a database, and rather than argue about it I just frankenboxed one together out of old parts (mobo and CPU were from my old gaming rig, case, power supply, and drives from the reject pile at the office).

--Dave

I don't mean individuals since those guys have zero chance, I mean projects/apps and the managers who control them.  Like anything that needs an DB under it, those guys all want their own server... seems like you also wanted your own DB server.  Sometimes this is warranted but for small things it is not, not in our shop anyway.  Sometimes it is warranted for security or "security", but I'd argue that all of our machines are nearly equally at risk.  Specifically known to me, we have some SAP applications that really could be rolled into the existing giants, but the project leaders want their own "hardware" which calls for another HA setup and backup nodes, etc.  Kinda silly for a 200-500GB DB, in my opinion.

In any case, I think we are on the same page: people don't really want their shit in someone elses hands.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: caladein on November 22, 2009, 02:07:27 AM
Yea, I'm old. And yea, many of us have seen this tried many times before. And yea, sometimes that's a crutch that prevents open minds. But this is still today more promise than reality. It'll probably catch up first with kids, because they're not stuck in the world of installed programs, local files and email. But it's going to take that generation growing up and replacing old farts in corporate IT groups for cloud computing and netbooks to truly take off.

Maybe I'm one of those kids (turn 23 in January) but hell if I want local files at all.  They just make it a hassle to get things on my phone, or office computer, or friend's laptop I borrowed for five minutes.

As cliché as it sounds, I do live in my Chrome window.  Ignoring games (or something ultra-nerdy like WinSCP or SyncToy/Dropbox), the only app I would miss from my current Windows 7 set-up is Notepad++.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Ironwood on November 22, 2009, 04:44:09 AM
Some of you old timers are really surprising me.

Caladein is not alone in his thinking, nor is it too hard to apply his thinking to bigger and bigger businesses.

There was a time that factories had their own Power Generators also.  Look what happened to that.  The Cloud computing model IS going to be a reality, like it or no.  Already there are huge economical factors driving it and they're only going to get harder and harder for any business to resist.  Crowdsourcing is also a massive factor in driving this to reality, in almost any sector.

Downtime isn't a factor.  Downtime is NEVER a factor.  Any company looks at downtime as a reality of doing business, not as something that you can ultimately avoid.  That's fantasy. 

Also, the guy that wants his own DB ?  He gets fired because it's easier and cheaper to leverage your business on someone elses architecture, remove the cost of administration and then FIRE that guy who's fucking leaching thousands off you as the only fucker who 'knows how it works'.

Surprised.



Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Engels on November 22, 2009, 08:44:54 AM
I can see both sides of the arguement. In a very generalised way, Ironwood's prognosis is probably accurate. Pervasive computing tools, such as office suite programs, SQL, Oracle, CAD and widely used mathematical programs will probably be entirely 'leaseable' from a cloud structure. Deeper within a scientific enclave, however, tools need to be tweaked and specialized and that will invariably need a more hands on approach and a level of control that can't be left to the some cluster managed in India.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: K9 on November 22, 2009, 03:29:13 PM
No, that's the 3 minute video you linked first with the faux handdrawn diagrams and shit. Infuriatingly smug.

++


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: MahrinSkel on November 22, 2009, 04:58:36 PM
I don't mean individuals since those guys have zero chance, I mean projects/apps and the managers who control them.  Like anything that needs an DB under it, those guys all want their own server... seems like you also wanted your own DB server.  Sometimes this is warranted but for small things it is not, not in our shop anyway.  Sometimes it is warranted for security or "security", but I'd argue that all of our machines are nearly equally at risk.  Specifically known to me, we have some SAP applications that really could be rolled into the existing giants, but the project leaders want their own "hardware" which calls for another HA setup and backup nodes, etc.  Kinda silly for a 200-500GB DB, in my opinion.

In any case, I think we are on the same page: people don't really want their shit in someone elses hands.
When I program DB stuff, I need a snapshot or proxy database I can do whatever I want to without worrying about.  It doesn't need to be fast, or complete, or even real data necessarily, I just don't want to have to triple check every line of code before I start debugging.  When my PHB's wouldn't give me that, I created my own.

Anyway, on the larger issue: I've been hearing people say that everyone having their own CPU, RAM, and storage was wasteful and inefficient since client-server first started taking over from mainframes and dumb terminals.  Somehow, because the flow-chart diagrams have replaced big iron with "the Cloud", things are supposed to be different now.  I'll believe it when it happens.  I have no particular bias against it, I'm just skeptical.

For the foreseeable future, bandwidth will continue to be the major limitation, and most methods for minimizing bandwidth will continue to involve putting the data on the client and leaving it there as much as possible.

--Dave


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Quinton on November 23, 2009, 05:11:21 AM
Numbers Everyone Should Know
L1 cache reference0.5 ns
Branch mispredict5 ns
L2 cache reference7 ns
Mutex lock/unlock25 ns
Main memory reference100 ns
Compress 1K bytes with Zippy3,000 ns
Send 2K bytes over 1 Gbps network20,000 ns
Read 1 MB sequentially from memory250,000 ns
Round trip within same datacenter500,000 ns
Disk seek10,000,000 ns
Read 1 MB sequentially from disk20,000,000 ns
Send packet CA->Netherlands->CA 150,000,000 ns

Slide 24 from http://www.cs.cornell.edu/projects/ladis2009/talks/dean-keynote-ladis2009.pdf


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Ironwood on November 23, 2009, 09:13:14 AM
Yeah, but that's technical shit and therefore doesn't matter.

Economic>Social>Political.

That's all you need to know.

Speed of access ?  Seriously ?  That's going to be your argument against Thousands of pounds of savings for a company ?

"I went into my CEO the other day and talked about Nanoseconds.  My ears are still ringing from the slap."

Look, we all recognise the limitations and we are ALL a little non-plussed by it all, but, at heart, that's because we're techies and we're far too invested in this shit.  If you look at it from an 'outsiders' point of view (as well as a historical point of view) the whole paradigm becomes irresistable.

Literally, like Resistant is Futile type irrestistable.

Are there tech limits RIGHT NOW ?  Yeah.  Security Limits ?  Damn Right.  Logistical Issues ?  You bet your ass.

But that only requires another small leap in the tech chain to solve.  We've been here before.  The information is outstripping the technological ability, but that's when people step the fuck up and SOLVE the problem.

Hell, right now we're back to square one, since one of the problems of cloud computing is apparently the energy required to do it right.  It's almost humourous how far around in a circle we've become.

I find it surprising, as I've said, that there will be people out there reading this on an Iphone talking to me about how Cloud computing isn't here yet.  Wake Up.

I now return you to your regularly scheduled Ironwood one liners.  I blame Righ.



Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Quinton on November 23, 2009, 10:12:36 AM
I don't believe I made an argument.  Just sharing some numbers which have an impact on computing in distributed environments.



Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Ironwood on November 23, 2009, 10:15:46 AM
Well, thanks.

 :oh_i_see:


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Yegolev on November 23, 2009, 10:18:50 AM
Good to find that we can all angrily agree with one another.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Ironwood on November 23, 2009, 10:27:31 AM
Hey, it's me.  I can do anything with anger.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: dusematic on November 23, 2009, 10:39:26 AM
Hey, it's me.  I can do anything with anger.


I hear you suck a mean cock when you're angry.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Ironwood on November 23, 2009, 10:42:29 AM
Um.

I'm fairly sure the two events would be connected, yes...


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Engels on November 23, 2009, 11:58:14 AM
I feel naked, scared and alone when Ironwood says,
  You bet your ass.

Its somehow just not right.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Ingmar on November 23, 2009, 12:02:32 PM

Speed of access ?  Seriously ?  That's going to be your argument against Thousands of pounds of savings for a company ?


If the savings is offset by your employees sitting around waiting for files, then yes, that can be a pretty compelling argument against it. Remember, employee downtime is not actually free. A real cost analysis will take that into account.

EDIT: I think you may be underestimating the incredible conservatism of upper management in general. Speaking for my own company, it is like pulling teeth to try to get anyone to move off of old technology they're comfortable with. We won't see any cloud computing in this building until the current generation of management is all gone, I'm certain.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Ironwood on November 23, 2009, 12:16:55 PM
No, I get that.  But we're talking about seconds and, again, it's a technical problem that increases in tech will eventually solve.   Businesses need to start planning now for what's going to happen then or they'll be totally humped when the time comes.  Unless you have wooden shoes, you'll have very little option left to you.

As for the Management, I also concede that, mostly because that's exactly what history has taught us ;  these chaps won't innovate until they have to - and many, many, many will go under in the transition.

That's really sad and makes me cry great big tears of 'Fuck You For Not Thinking Ahead'.

I don't understand Engels.  I can live with it tho.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Ingmar on November 23, 2009, 12:21:36 PM
What makes me particularly  :facepalm: is our own core business is all about getting people to move onto our new technology from their old comfortable tech. But I guess finance departments and the like are the same everywhere, no matter what business you're in.


Title: Re: ChromeOS
Post by: Engels on November 23, 2009, 12:26:02 PM

I don't understand Engels.  I can live with it tho.

Sorry, just an irrelevant quip about using what I think of as an Americanism. Carry on.