Good Enough IV

acer-aspire-one-751-netbook-image It struck me today while using my netbook that economy computers have reached that baseline of being good enough at more than the minimum set of tasks. With their very portable size and impressively growing battery life these minimally powered laptops can meet the needs of many folks.

The interesting thing to me is how we continuously discover how we really only need the basics. In the age when we’ve pushed computing hardware to levels that we never imagined, the utility of a basic computing platform is quite impressive. Because we’ve pushed the upper end so aggressively, the side affect is the low end has benefited in reductions in power requirements and size.

Making these low end systems so useful is the way they’ve been packaged into great “mini” laptops. Whether they’re a 9”, 10” or even the larger 12” models that stretch the definition of “netbook”, the ultra portability of a 2 to 3 lbs. laptop is a game changer. It’s just another case of less being more.

Of course, they can’t do everything. In fact, they really are only good for the basics as I mentioned. Anything more than web browsing, email, reading, and some light office apps like spreadsheets, word processing, and presentations. If you need much more than that, you’ll quickly find the limits of these systems.

However, therein lies the catch, the majority of the work done is in this basic range of computing tasks. Writing ideas out, answering email, reading news and information, keeping in touch… the bulk of what we do can be done with a netbook. Especially if you’re a web worker since most everything one does is web-based anyway.

While I’m not suggesting that netbooks will be the main computer for the majority of folks, I know some will be tempted to try.

Good enough. This is where good design and reasonable feature sets reign. The benefit of a simple, cohesive design with a feature set that meets the expectations of the user can be quite successful.

A day in the build of the perfect laptop

technology Some of you know that I have no hesitation to re-format my system and install whatever version of OS that I influenced by at the time.  Well, this time I really took the opportunity to re-build my laptop from the ground up.

The opportunity was created by some hardware purchases, a RAM upgrade to 4GB and a 250GB USB HDD.  I was running out of space and wanted to get rid of the original dual partitions that were configured at the factory.  The laptop (Acer Aspire 5610) came with two 70GB partitions on it’s 160GB HDD – and I hate having to split things up.

laptop-on-desk-1 So with the new external, I backed it all up, wiped the disk, created the new partition and installed Vista Ultimate back on the clean machine.  No Acer software, no other "value adds" that end up causing problems.  And finally got a change to take a snapshot of the cleanest Vista install I’ve done to date.

So, I’ve now spent the last 30+ hours rebuilding all the additional software and tools that make up my "kit" for what I do, and there is still probably 10 hours of configuration work left.  Yes, I have a lot of software, tools, utilities, tools, VMs, tunes, scripts, and such that takes a lot of time to configure.

The best part, for what I do, is that I have over 120GB free just for Virtual Machines which I use for a substantial amount of testing and proof-of-concept.  Along with the extra memory, I just became much more productive in this area.

Anyway, this is the kind of IT geeky stuff I find interesting.  Later!

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