It always surprises me how emotopn laden this subject is.
Personally, I'm quite content with other people being dumbed down. That makes me more special, since I know all this stuff. The less the younger generation knows about computers and the Internet, the more I know, relatively speaking. At the end of the process I will be like the gods themselves. The future is bright!I don't understand this mentality that if you want to use a machine that you have to know exactly how the machine works before you are allowed to use it. Just smacks of bloody elitism, if you ask me.
Personally, I'm quite content with other people being dumbed down. That makes me more special, since I know all this stuff. The less the younger generation knows about computers and the Internet, the more I know, relatively speaking. At the end of the process I will be like the gods themselves. The future is bright!
I'm now reading that the Chrome OS does indeed not allow you to install applications locally. It will only allow you to install web apps that run "in the cloud". Presumably you'll be locked in to Google's apps only. That's ridiculous and a total blocker for me, I'm afraid.
So they want you to pay for the privilege of not being allowed to control your own computer. Good luck selling that.
Yes, I suspect it's easier to control distribution and make piracy more difficult that way maybe.A lot of things seem to be going that way now... more about access than ownership. Now it's software, but the same thing is happening with films and TV. Take Netflix and LoveFilm as examples.
From here: Make the SwitchYou have some storage on your device for those times you need to access a file without access to the internet, but for everything else you can access and store it in the cloud. And your Chromebook comes with 100GB of free Google Drive storage for 2 years.
Well, I admit to be looking at Chromebooks again after a colleague told me about ChromeOS Developer Mode which apparently allows for installing both Debian and Ubuntu (and derivatives) alongside ChromeOS. However, ChromeOS is still focusing on cloud storage:
From here: Make the Switch
My colleague was doing all his work in Debian and Ubuntu, and the ChromeOS didn't appear to be doing much for him.
Well, if I find a cheap Chromebook with good specs, I might be tempted. Doubt I will keep the ChromeOS, though.
That's cool, having your data on an SD card. Makes a lot of sense.You'd be able to run Ubuntu with this baby: Find Yours
I've been using a Chromebook for the past few months as my Windows laptop went kaput, and I like it a lot. The downside is the lack of storage space, but I've compensated for that by keeping an SD card with a lot of my data on it connected to the computer.