The End Of The CrunchPad?

Excerpt

It was so close I could taste it. Two weeks ago we were ready to publicly launch theCrunchPad. The device was stable enough for a demo. It went hours without crashing. We could even let people play with the device themselves – the user interface was intuitive enough that people “got it” without any instructions. And the look of pure joy on the handful of outsiders who had used it made the nearly 1.5 year effort completely worth it.

Our plan was to debut the CrunchPad on stage at the Real-Time Crunchup event on November 20, a little over a week ago. We even hoped to have devices hacked together withGoogle Chrome OS and Windows 7 to show people that you could hack this thing to run just about anything you want. We’d put 1,000 of the devices on pre-sale and take orders immediately. Larger scale production would begin early in 2010.

And then the entire project self destructed over nothing more than greed, jealousy and miscommunication.

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Full Article: Tech Crunch

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Filed under  //  2009   Brian Kindle   Chrome OS   Chrome   CrunchPad   Dead Pool   Fusion Garage   Google   Michael Arrington   November   Tech Crunch   TiVo  
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Posted 3 months ago

Google Chrome OS and Canonical Engineering Partnership

Congratulations to Google on the open sourcing of Google Chrome OS

When Chrome OS was announced in June we saw this as a positive development, bringing choice to the consumer. We considered how open source development is as much about co-operation as it is about competition. Google have made it clear that they are keen to develop Chrome OS openly and we have had the pleasure of hosting a number of the Google team at the Ubuntu Developer Summit in Dallas over the last few days where we have been able to see that openness in action.

In the interest of transparency, we should declare that Canonical is contributing engineering to Google under contract.  In our discussions, Sundar Pichai and Linus Upson made it clear that they want , wherever feasible,  to build on existing components and tools from the open source community without unnecessary re-invention.   This clear focus should benefit a wide variety of existing projects and we welcome it.

On the consumer side, people will ask about the positioning of Chrome OS and Ubuntu. While the two operating systems share some core components, Google Chrome OS will provide a very different experience to Ubuntu.  Ubuntu will continue to be a general purpose OS running both web and native applications such as OpenOffice and will not require specialised hardware.

So 2010 looks set to be a very exciting year. In addition to delivering Ubuntu experiences with both existing and new OEM partners, we will be working with Google on Chrome OS based devices.

Chris Kenyon  VP of OEM Services, Canonical

From: http://blog.canonical.com/?p=294

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Filed under  //  2009   Canonical   Chrome   Chrome OS   Google   Linux   November   Partnership   Ubuntu  
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Posted 3 months ago

Book of Cats and Dogs, and other friends, For Little Folks - Published 1888

Read Here: http://www.archive.org/stream/bookcatsanddogs00johogoog

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Filed under  //  1888   2009   Archive   Archive.org   Book   Cat   Dog   First Book   Google   Kids   Natural History Series   PDF   Pets   Read  
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Posted 3 months ago

Google has a new solution to privacy concerns

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Filed under  //  2009   Google   Onion   Opt-Out   Privacy   Spoof   Video  
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Posted 4 months ago