I appear to unexpectedly be the owner of an Eee PC. I know very little about these things, but it seems to be a fairly high end recent model (EEEPC 1005HA), with an Atom 280 processor, 1GB RAM, 160GB hard drive, multi-touch capability, and a bunch of other features. It apparently runs Windows XP, though I assume I could install Linux on it if I tried (though I'd need to figure out how to do that without an optical drive).
So, who out there has used these before? What sorts of things should I expect to work well, and what should I watch out for? Given that I'm reasonably comfortable with both Windows and Linux (despite being mostly a Mac person these days), is there any especially good reason to get rid of Windows? Either way, should I expect much trouble getting Firefox up and running?
It's very cute, regardless.
So, who out there has used these before? What sorts of things should I expect to work well, and what should I watch out for? Given that I'm reasonably comfortable with both Windows and Linux (despite being mostly a Mac person these days), is there any especially good reason to get rid of Windows? Either way, should I expect much trouble getting Firefox up and running?
It's very cute, regardless.
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I've not used them myself, but a number of my classmates have (go figure: they're ideal for grad students taking notes and writing papers), and they all seemed happy.
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DO NOT PUT THE Eee PC ON YOUR LAP OR OTHER PARTS OF THE BODY TO AVOID INJURY FROM THE HEAT
That was unexpected.
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Where can I learn more about ChromeOS?
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If you want to try it, the easiest would be to find a disk image of Chromium OS that's ready to go ("Chromium" is the open-source version of "Chrome"), stick it on a USB flash drive, then boot your Eee PC with it.
So, why Chrome OS?
It's not a whole new operating system. It's just a web browser. The ENTIRE operating system is just a web browser. There's no file manager, virus scanner, no way to install software, etc.
Your netbook is too underpowered to run Photoshop or Matlab anyway, so why bother with a complete operating system where you'll be wasting so much time installing security patches and dealing with install wizards? Chrome OS boots in about 5 seconds, shuts down in about 1 second, and it auto-updates transparently in the background.
Here's the video that tries to sell Chrome OS to people who don't know as much about computers: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QRO3gKj3qw
I think it's perfect as a second or third computer. You can carry it anywhere, and get on the Internet wherever you are.