My little daughter is 9, and we've decided it's time to get her a laptop.
I was looking for something that has a small form factor, no moving parts, and inexpensive.
Was considering a Chromebook, but then came across the x205ta from Asus - A small, Chromebook-like device, capable of running Windows 10.
Price was under 200$, so not much of a risk, and after receiving the machine with windows 8.1, I had to upgrade to windows 10 (Left the upgrade working overnight.)
After using it a little bit, the obvious question was - How does it work in comparison with my (Now wife's) Macbook Air 11?
So here are some conclusions:
- Specs: The Asus has budget processor, 32 GB drive, 2 GB ram and costs 25%. Though these specs are quite nothing in comparison with the Air's Haswell processor and 4/128 RAM, But you can get a 128GB micro SD and extend your HD capacity for dirt cheap.
- Form factor: The tiny Asus is a bit lighter, smaller width, and thicker than the Air 11.
- Finish: No comparison here. The Asus feels much cheaper. Its keyboard and touchpad are ok. The screen has the same resolution, but isn't as good. But it's completely ok, considering it costs quarter than the Mac.
- Performance: Well, you can't really compare a budget processor and 2 GB RAM to a top of the line one with 4 GB. But Windows 10 actually works really well, runs office and browsing fine, and (Compared to the unusable Metro UI) is very comfortable to use. It's not a gaming platform.
- Battery life: Now this is the first time I've seen a windows laptop runs so long between charges. More than 12 hours (For browsing and office usage). The Air? 9 hours was my record.
- Software: The most important software for my kid is office, and though Office runs on both laptops, Hebrew support for Office still lags on Mac OS. The Asus comes with 1 year free Office subscription.
In conclusion - This is a very smart buy for students. Cheap, light, fun to use, and runs everything you need - It's not a tool for heavy programming, photoshopping or gaming, but rather for browsing and office applications. The price is the main disruption here - Why get a tablet for your kid when you can get her a fully functional laptop?
This is quite like comparing apples and peaches (Pun intended) - Eventually, if I'm a casual user, this is a no brainer - The Asus takes it. But if I'm a heavy user and need an ultraportable, the x205ta isn't an alternative to the Air. I would look for something more in the area of the Air's 800-900$ MSRP (Yes, they MSRP for less now...).
Monday, September 14, 2015
Monday, August 10, 2015
My take on the Google/ Alphabet rehash
So Google gets a new CEO, and the leaders form a parent company named Alphabet.
I've written quite a lot about Google's ability to change, and pressure reinventing themselves out of being an ad agency.
Looks like they've come to the conclusion that they can't. Google will remain Google, and Alphabet will be... Something else?
The real question is, if you don't change the people in charge, will you be able to do new things?
Time will tell. One thing is certain: They have enough cash to begin with.
I've written quite a lot about Google's ability to change, and pressure reinventing themselves out of being an ad agency.
Looks like they've come to the conclusion that they can't. Google will remain Google, and Alphabet will be... Something else?
The real question is, if you don't change the people in charge, will you be able to do new things?
Time will tell. One thing is certain: They have enough cash to begin with.
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Don't solve this.
Part of the fun in building a new product is creating and writing it. A lot of the creation process includes problem solving - We need to do this feature, we need to create an interface for that etc. etc.
However, a lot of these problems have already been solved.
Don't waste your time re-solving problems yourself in an early stage. Do some research - You'll most likely find off-the-shelf components, even if they're not 'tailor made' for your needs.
Put your efforts on your new product, not on re-solving problems that were already solved.
This will save you a lot of time to focus on what's really important - Your value.
However, a lot of these problems have already been solved.
Don't waste your time re-solving problems yourself in an early stage. Do some research - You'll most likely find off-the-shelf components, even if they're not 'tailor made' for your needs.
Put your efforts on your new product, not on re-solving problems that were already solved.
This will save you a lot of time to focus on what's really important - Your value.
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Ad Blocking - A different approach
This is nice:
Wired (And probably other content sites) is now making a lot of its cash from displaying ads.
However, as ad blockers are common practice, this hurts their living. A lot.
As solutions like DSERO are getting more and more common, there's also the direct approach method.
Worked in my case. I've whitelisted Wired.
Wired (And probably other content sites) is now making a lot of its cash from displaying ads.
However, as ad blockers are common practice, this hurts their living. A lot.
As solutions like DSERO are getting more and more common, there's also the direct approach method.
Worked in my case. I've whitelisted Wired.
Friday, April 24, 2015
How Netflix cracked the formula for hit shows
I'm a sucker for comics. Specifically super hero comics. And, after seeing Netflix's Daredevil, I was taken by how accurate and well done it is. It's one of the best adaptations I've seen to a comic series. Fast paced, good action, just blunt and dark enough.
That got me thinking - How the hell did they do that? After "Orange is the new black" and "House of cards", Netflix seem to be churning out great TV, again and again.
The answer is simple. Netflix, which started as a mail rental service (Just because broadband infrastructure wasn't relevant back then) and moved on to online video rental, simply know exactly what we want as viewers.
They know which movies we like.
Which movies we watch until the end, and which movies we "break" in the middle.
They also know which scenes we run over and over again.
By tagging every scene in every content, they have the ability to create the perfect show for each one of their viewers. They can actually make script decisions (Exactly how the story will be built) according to data.
Furthermore - In the future, story would not be linear as we know it, but every subscriber will get his own, personal, customised version of the show. Yoni Bloch's Interlude might actually close this gap from the production end.
That's pretty amazing.
That got me thinking - How the hell did they do that? After "Orange is the new black" and "House of cards", Netflix seem to be churning out great TV, again and again.
The answer is simple. Netflix, which started as a mail rental service (Just because broadband infrastructure wasn't relevant back then) and moved on to online video rental, simply know exactly what we want as viewers.
They know which movies we like.
Which movies we watch until the end, and which movies we "break" in the middle.
They also know which scenes we run over and over again.
By tagging every scene in every content, they have the ability to create the perfect show for each one of their viewers. They can actually make script decisions (Exactly how the story will be built) according to data.
Furthermore - In the future, story would not be linear as we know it, but every subscriber will get his own, personal, customised version of the show. Yoni Bloch's Interlude might actually close this gap from the production end.
That's pretty amazing.
Monday, March 9, 2015
That Magic Factor
Apple came out very strong from yesterday's event.
Though nothing's really new (Macbook model was long due, though it's much more stunning than I've expected), there is one thing I take from this:
The Magic Factor.
Watch wearables, and successful ones, exist for years now. Garmin, Pebble, Android wear - They're all there. But still, none of them generates the excitement that the Apple watch does.
Than I've looked at last year's major Apple releases, and found out that each year, there was a feature released that was either magical or breakthrough - None of the competitors had it, and it worked like magic:
- Retina screen (iPad and than Macbook Pro)
- Macbook air battery life
- iPad mini form factor
- Touch ID
- iMac 5K
(And now) The watch, force touch, HR monitor, research kit...
Apple seems to have a 'game changer' out at least once a year. One thing that creates a buzz. When was the last time you were THAT excited about a product from Microsoft, Samsung or Google?
Though nothing's really new (Macbook model was long due, though it's much more stunning than I've expected), there is one thing I take from this:
The Magic Factor.
Watch wearables, and successful ones, exist for years now. Garmin, Pebble, Android wear - They're all there. But still, none of them generates the excitement that the Apple watch does.
Than I've looked at last year's major Apple releases, and found out that each year, there was a feature released that was either magical or breakthrough - None of the competitors had it, and it worked like magic:
- Retina screen (iPad and than Macbook Pro)
- Macbook air battery life
- iPad mini form factor
- Touch ID
- iMac 5K
(And now) The watch, force touch, HR monitor, research kit...
Apple seems to have a 'game changer' out at least once a year. One thing that creates a buzz. When was the last time you were THAT excited about a product from Microsoft, Samsung or Google?
My Next Laptop |
Monday, February 16, 2015
Google, The One Trick Unicorn.
A lot of people like having the discussion of picturing Google as this evil, all seeing dystopian future type conglomerate.
While Google does all but admitting to be one (A monopoly with more power than politicians, buying AI and robotic companies, creating self driving cars etc.), it's still a bit far from reality.
So let's take a step back, and see what Google is. It's the biggest ad tech company in the world. Google makes money from pushing ads.
Not a content company. Not a hardware/ space/ AI company. Not a social network, email provider. Not a hosting company.
A huge ad company.
How big is it?
It's about as big as Microsoft in terms of market capacity, but earns 44% less. And Microsoft does a lot more business than just ads.
Google is almost twice as big as Facebook, but Facebook is leaner and growing like mad these days - And video monetising is yet to come.
But the biggest fear of Google, being a one trick unicorn (I refuse to call Google a pony), is being disrupted. Because people are aching to disrupt them.
So Google is not just trying to take over the world. It MUST do that in order to survive. It needs another meaningful business. Something that IBM, Apple, Microsoft and other tech giants which are here to stay have done.
While Google does all but admitting to be one (A monopoly with more power than politicians, buying AI and robotic companies, creating self driving cars etc.), it's still a bit far from reality.
So let's take a step back, and see what Google is. It's the biggest ad tech company in the world. Google makes money from pushing ads.
Not a content company. Not a hardware/ space/ AI company. Not a social network, email provider. Not a hosting company.
A huge ad company.
How big is it?
It's about as big as Microsoft in terms of market capacity, but earns 44% less. And Microsoft does a lot more business than just ads.
Google is almost twice as big as Facebook, but Facebook is leaner and growing like mad these days - And video monetising is yet to come.
But the biggest fear of Google, being a one trick unicorn (I refuse to call Google a pony), is being disrupted. Because people are aching to disrupt them.
So Google is not just trying to take over the world. It MUST do that in order to survive. It needs another meaningful business. Something that IBM, Apple, Microsoft and other tech giants which are here to stay have done.
Sunday, February 1, 2015
The Cloud Will Be Disrupted.
The cloud is where it's all at.. A centralised, managed, virtual place, where all the data and logic go. It's comfortable. It's better than in house IT. It's safer than keeping your docs on your PC.
For my 100th blog post, I would like to make a careful prediction about the future of applications.
Like traditional IT before, the cloud also has its drawbacks. The biggest one: It's not really free, and it's not really yours.
The docs you put on Google, mails you send via your free provider, images you post on Facebook, files you put on dropbox - Unless you start paying a monthly tax for these conglomerates, is theirs to use, and sometimes delete.
Some of the big companies built an eco system (Google, Facebook, but also airBNB, Uber and a lot of the shared economy companies), which gets a lot of the population to be dependent on them for their monthly pay check.
Some of these companies have enough cash and political power to bend governments.
The shared economy is best for the customer, however it puts a lot of power in the hands of too few companies. Imagine that all taxi drivers at the states belong to Uber.
Part of the fear of societies and companies from bitcoin is not the currency itself, but the democratic, P2P model of its application - A distributed application, in which logic, as well as data, could be shared by every user, not just by the service provider - Because every user is, essentially, a service provider.
Imagine an airBNB service hosted by every airBNB user, containing all the users in his country - Without the need to pay commission to the airBNB. Or a 'floating' Uber like service, where drivers and customers connect and bid directly.
This will get the prices even lower, and give more to the specific service provider, rather than cut a fat commission to an already fat company.
The infrastructure is already there - In my opinion, we will start see those applications during the coming years. Like P2P shook the media world, decentralised applications will shake and disrupt the cloud.
For my 100th blog post, I would like to make a careful prediction about the future of applications.
Like traditional IT before, the cloud also has its drawbacks. The biggest one: It's not really free, and it's not really yours.
The docs you put on Google, mails you send via your free provider, images you post on Facebook, files you put on dropbox - Unless you start paying a monthly tax for these conglomerates, is theirs to use, and sometimes delete.
Some of the big companies built an eco system (Google, Facebook, but also airBNB, Uber and a lot of the shared economy companies), which gets a lot of the population to be dependent on them for their monthly pay check.
Some of these companies have enough cash and political power to bend governments.
The shared economy is best for the customer, however it puts a lot of power in the hands of too few companies. Imagine that all taxi drivers at the states belong to Uber.
Part of the fear of societies and companies from bitcoin is not the currency itself, but the democratic, P2P model of its application - A distributed application, in which logic, as well as data, could be shared by every user, not just by the service provider - Because every user is, essentially, a service provider.
Imagine an airBNB service hosted by every airBNB user, containing all the users in his country - Without the need to pay commission to the airBNB. Or a 'floating' Uber like service, where drivers and customers connect and bid directly.
This will get the prices even lower, and give more to the specific service provider, rather than cut a fat commission to an already fat company.
The infrastructure is already there - In my opinion, we will start see those applications during the coming years. Like P2P shook the media world, decentralised applications will shake and disrupt the cloud.
Monday, January 26, 2015
Your lovely graphs are useless.
Visualisation used to be everything. If you need to make a point, show it with a nice graph.
A lot of times, when we demo our system to decision makers, they are really impressed with our ability to analyse their data and display it in graphs.
However, while increasing credibility and showing our software's lovely abilities, graphs have a learning curve, and sometimes it takes an expert to analyse graphs and conclude the necessary conclusions. While we accompany our clients during the initial use of the system, not too many of them are keen to learn the delicate art of data analysis, even if it looks great.
This is why we're starting to move towards insights. Instead of showing a scatter chart with quadrants and let the customer deduct where each group is located, we can display them a summary, showing each group's grade - This group consumes too much energy in relation to its throughput. this one is more efficient. A link to the graph is attached, for credibility, however once the customer trust your system, he won't even need it.
Build trust with your customer, and then only show him the bottom line instead of confusing him with complicated visuals. He will feel better treated as a decision maker rather than one of your analysts.
A lot of times, when we demo our system to decision makers, they are really impressed with our ability to analyse their data and display it in graphs.
However, while increasing credibility and showing our software's lovely abilities, graphs have a learning curve, and sometimes it takes an expert to analyse graphs and conclude the necessary conclusions. While we accompany our clients during the initial use of the system, not too many of them are keen to learn the delicate art of data analysis, even if it looks great.
This is why we're starting to move towards insights. Instead of showing a scatter chart with quadrants and let the customer deduct where each group is located, we can display them a summary, showing each group's grade - This group consumes too much energy in relation to its throughput. this one is more efficient. A link to the graph is attached, for credibility, however once the customer trust your system, he won't even need it.
Build trust with your customer, and then only show him the bottom line instead of confusing him with complicated visuals. He will feel better treated as a decision maker rather than one of your analysts.
Sunday, January 18, 2015
Do not bury the Laptop just yet...
Four years ago I had an argument with a peer of mine about Chromebooks.
We got a Chromebook from Google, I tested it and found it slow and useless, both as a work tool and a browser. Even battery life was poor.
Laptops (And PCs) seemed to be a decaying platform back then. Tablets were all the rage, and for consumer (And education) seemed like the go to platform.
My prediction was that ChromeOS, which was parallel to Android, was useless, and sales figures approved this.
But Google, with its limitless cash, kept on pushing.
Web tools got way better, becoming usable (Google docs, Office 365, Dropbox to name a few)
The first hit came from Samsung, which sold a 250$ Macbook air lookalike, with decent screen and battery life. It quickly became the most selling laptop in Amazon.
Finally, after finding out that tablets are a nice play tool, but not as good for education, the educational market also caught on.
I'm pretty sure that decent developer frameworks are on their way as well, though the road is still a bit long.
So now, I'm admitting I was wrong - The Google way of doing things (Throwing pre mature products to the market, and then throwing a lot of $$$ on them until they take off) actually works.
Unless you're Google plus.
We got a Chromebook from Google, I tested it and found it slow and useless, both as a work tool and a browser. Even battery life was poor.
Laptops (And PCs) seemed to be a decaying platform back then. Tablets were all the rage, and for consumer (And education) seemed like the go to platform.
My prediction was that ChromeOS, which was parallel to Android, was useless, and sales figures approved this.
But Google, with its limitless cash, kept on pushing.
Web tools got way better, becoming usable (Google docs, Office 365, Dropbox to name a few)
The first hit came from Samsung, which sold a 250$ Macbook air lookalike, with decent screen and battery life. It quickly became the most selling laptop in Amazon.
Finally, after finding out that tablets are a nice play tool, but not as good for education, the educational market also caught on.
I'm pretty sure that decent developer frameworks are on their way as well, though the road is still a bit long.
So now, I'm admitting I was wrong - The Google way of doing things (Throwing pre mature products to the market, and then throwing a lot of $$$ on them until they take off) actually works.
Unless you're Google plus.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)