I’ve had the Stealthbook for 2 days now, and I’m ready to give my first report. Â It’s heavier than I’d think from a device with no hard drive; I assume that giant battery is the reason for that. Â I unplugged it after giving it a full charge, and after one and a half nights of use, it claims to have 40% and just about 3 hours of battery life remaining. Â The claimed 8 hours of use seems likely to be true. Â The Flash plugin is flakier than a pie crust, and this illustrates some differences between ChromeOS and Chrome on Windows. If a plugin crashes in Windows Chrome, Chrome offers to restart it; ChromeOS doesn’t. Â If all else fails, you can close Chrome in Windows and restart it; since the browser is the OS on the Cr-48, restarting the browser requires logging out and logging back in. Â Since the login process takes only a couple seconds, the difference is minimal, although it does mean you have to type your password more.
Most web sites work just fine, including Youtube and LOLcats – although the Flash instability means that I may avoid them until a patch shows up. Â Just as with any other Atom-powered netbook, don’t expect to run any fun Flash games on the Cr-48; Bejeweled Blitz on Facebook is a slideshow. Â Netflix doesn’t work, as it needs Silverlight. Â That is one thing which needs to be addressed in order to make the Stealthbook a replacement for Kat’s netbook – she uses that thing for Netflix streaming, LOLcats, email and Facebook. Â I think a big question is the cost. Â Nobody has indicated how expensive these machines will be once they are actually for sale. Â You can buy a single-core netbook with integrated graphics for under 300 bucks. Â Bumping up to a dual core or adding decent graphics power moves the Windows netbook into the 500 dollar range, which is awfully close to real laptop territory. Â Even assuming the Microsoft tax is $100, it becomes hard to imagine the Chrome netbooks entering the market for under 200 and having anything like good performance. Â We’ll have to see what happens. Â I also didn’t understand the iPad, so marketers aren’t looking at me for guidance.
If you’ve never taken a programming or discrete math class, you should just move along. For the two of you that remain, here is the funniest binary tree Christmas joke I’ve ever seen.*Â And a bonus max-heap joke!
* – This is also the only binary Christmas tree joke I’ve ever seen, so your mileage may vary.