Disconnect browser extension keeps pesky cookies in check, blocks third-party tracking requests

Internet Explorer 9 may block ’em in 2011, and the US government’s on the case too, but you don’t have to wait for Microsoft or bureaucracy to keep your privacy paramount if you browse with Rockmelt or Chrome. That’s because former Google developer Brian Kennish just released Disconnect, an extension for either one, that banishes Digg, Facebook, Google, Twitter and Yahoo tracking requests (more companies are on the way) as you make your merry way across the web. Install and you’ll find a nice little “d” icon on your browser’s status bar, with a drop-down menu exposing exactly how many requests you’ve blocked from each service, and the option to manually disable blocking at will. Why bother? Don’t you want to keep that secret love of Thanko products all to yourself?

Disconnect browser extension keeps pesky cookies in check, blocks third-party tracking requests originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 06:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ubuntu meets Google Cr-48 laptop, keeps Chrome along for the ride

Inevitable? Perhaps. But there’s still nothing like seeing Linux running on a device for the first time — especially when it involves such a seemingly hacker-friendly device as the Google Cr-48 laptop. As you might expect, however, that required a bit more effort than your usual Ubuntu installation (not to mention a flick of that carefully concealed developer switch), but it isn’t too far out of reach for the average user, and the complete process has thankfully already been explained in a thorough how-to guide. You can also, incidentally, keep Chrome OS around in a dual-boot config so as to not completely break Google’s heart. Head on past the break for a quick video of the end result, and hit up the source link below for all the necessary details to do it yourself — assuming you’re lucky enough to actually have a Cr-48, that is.

Continue reading Ubuntu meets Google Cr-48 laptop, keeps Chrome along for the ride

Ubuntu meets Google Cr-48 laptop, keeps Chrome along for the ride originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Dec 2010 17:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gmail Architect Predicts Death of Chrome

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Paul Buchheit created and served as the lead developer for Gmail. He also developed AdSense and is the guy who coined the company’s “Don’t be evil” motto. Bucheit left the company to found FriendFriend, which was later acquired by Facebook.

Since Google doesn’t sign his checks anymore, Buchheit can feel free to talk a bit of smack about the company’s current projects–projects like Chrome. Buchheit used his Twitter account this week to suggest the upcoming death of Google’s latest baby, “Prediction: ChromeOS will be killed next year (or ‘merged’ with Android).”

Buckheit went deeper in a FriendFeed post, writing,

ChromeOS has no purpose that isn’t better served by Android (perhaps with a few mods to support a non-touch display). I was thinking, “is this too obvious to even state?”, but then I see people taking ChromeOS seriously, and Google is even shipping devices for some reason.

Google has largely insisted that the two operating systems serve different markets. But, as TechCrunch points out, Sergey Brin himself has suggested that the company will someday focus on a single OS.

Google hides mathematical puzzle in Cr-48 video, rewards its solver with a laptop

Watching Google destroy Cr-48 laptops for fun can’t have been easy for any of you, but it turns out that the wily geeks of Mountain View had a clandestine purpose to their malevolence after all. An equation, scribbled out in old school chalk in the background of one scene, attracted the attention of a Sylvain Zimmer, who, together with a group of like-minded geeks, set about trying to solve it and discover its meaning. A full day’s worth of cryptographic work later, Sylvain was left with a set of numbers he was able to convert into letters, which in turned spelled out “speed and destroy.” Appending goo.gl, Google’s URL shortener, to the front of those words got him to a screen congratulating him for being “first to figure out our MENSA-certified puzzle” and promising to send him a Cr-48 laptop as his prize. Kudos to Sylvain… and to Google for being such irrepressible geeks.

Continue reading Google hides mathematical puzzle in Cr-48 video, rewards its solver with a laptop

Google hides mathematical puzzle in Cr-48 video, rewards its solver with a laptop originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Dec 2010 07:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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All Laptops Should Be Like Google’s Stark Naked Notebook [Chrome]

“Is that the Google notebook? Wow, I really like it!” That’s what everybody’s who’s seen the Cr-48 Chrome prototype says. It’s not because they love the software. More »

Google Cr-48 laptop torn down and destroyed in one unlucky day (video)

Boy, we know the Cr-48 is supposed to be a test platform and all, but even by that standard, Google’s Chrome OS laptop has had a very rough first day on the job. Ambushed by one of our kindly tipsters upon its arrival, the Cr-48 has been gutted and disassembled (mostly, the motherboard is mercifully left attached to the chassis), revealing the typical arrangement of tiny electronics, which includes Hynix memory chips and a SanDisk-branded SSD. We’re just glad to see that masking tape isn’t playing a structurally integral role in its construction. Things don’t really get much better for the slinky 48 once it gets back home to Google HQ, however, as its makers have put together an entire video composed of creative destruction methods for it. Cruel, cruel people.

Continue reading Google Cr-48 laptop torn down and destroyed in one unlucky day (video)

Google Cr-48 laptop torn down and destroyed in one unlucky day (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Dec 2010 02:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Flash working poorly on your Google Cr-48? Adobe’s working on it

Yep, that Flash error up there is one of many we got today on our Cr-48s. On top of that, as you may have read in our in-depth preview, we’ve been experiencing incredibly sluggish Flash performance, including choppy playback of YouTube and Hulu videos. It’s certainly not a good situation, but Adobe’s aware of it and promising that hope is on the way. Adobe’s Senior Director of Engineer
Paul Betlem has put up a post regarding the matter on the company’s very own Flash Player blog, and says that ” In terms of Chrome notebooks specifically… video performance in particular is the primary area for improvement.” He also goes on to promise that the updates will be seamless as the Flash plug-ins are integrated directly into the self-updating operating system. That sure sounds good to us, but in the meantime, we’ll be waiting for these Flash errors and stuttering 480p videos to disappear — or, you know, for HTML 5 to take over.

Flash working poorly on your Google Cr-48? Adobe’s working on it originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 19:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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First Look: Google’s Netbook Has Its Head in the Cloud

Google’s Cr-48 netbook is a promising but incomplete step toward a life lived fully on the internet.

It’s not a consumer laptop, it’s a test machine designed to showcase how Chrome OS netbooks will work. As a result, you can’t buy one, but you can sign up to get in line for Google’s pilot program.

Here are our first impressions after a few hours using the machine. A full review will follow.

The all-black Cr-48 looks like a stealth fighter. It has rubberized black surfaces, no logos anywhere and has minimal accoutrements: a built-in camera, one USB port, one video-out port, a headphone jack and a power supply. Dual-band Wi-Fi and a world-mode 3G radio are built in, as are a microphone and speakers. It has a 12.1-inch screen and a full-sized keyboard. At 3 pounds 10 ounces, it weighs more than I expected it to.

We’re still digging up specs about the guts, but some impressions: It’s pretty zippy, but not that zippy. We know there’s an Intel Pine Trail processor inside. It’s certainly as fast and responsive as you’d expect from a netbook, but it’s not nearly as fast as a MacBook Air or a reasonably equipped, sub-$1,000 laptop. While scrolling web pages, playing some web-based games and watching videos from YouTube and the Onion, I noticed some jerkiness and skipping.

Flash Player is pre-installed (and presumably sandboxed) but watching Flash videos is a bit of a sucky experience, especially in full-screen mode. But everything at least works as advertised, and it’s still totally usable.

The keyboard is full-sized, but it has some quirks. Much has been made of the Cr-48’s lack of a Caps Lock key, but it’s totally fine by us since the caps lock key is now a Search key. Press it and a new browser tab opens with the cursor in the URL/search bar, or the “omnibox” as Chrome terms it. Just start typing and you get instant search results from Google (the default engine, though Yahoo and Bing are also options).

If you miss the Caps Lock key, it can be remapped by clicking on the wrench icon in the top right. That’s where all the system settings live. You can also re-map the Alt and Ctrl keys (helpful if you’re a Mactard like me) and you can set the keyboard to swap between Dvorak and normal-person mode.

Also gone are the function keys. They’ve been replaced by browser controls (including a dedicated “refresh” button that will doubtless get a lot of use) and your standard brightness and volume controls. The trackpad is a little bigger than a credit card, and it’s the tap-to-click variety without a button. You use two fingers to right-click. Finally — and I’ve never seen this before — the letter keys are all lowercase.

It’s important to note that almost nothing is stored on this laptop. Chrome OS is just a very thin system OS with Chrome browser running on top. The desktop is gone, all you see is the browser. You log in with your Google account when you first turn it on, and it syncs up all of your settings, bookmarks and personal data through the cloud.

When I first started it up, it had a few problems connecting to the “Get Started” pages on Google’s servers. Also, we tried to connect to the Chrome Web Store and got a security alert for a certificate violation. Oops. But after logging out and logging back in as a different user, everything went smoothly.

It’s remarkably easy to log in and get started. You feed it your Google credentials and within seconds, you’re looking at a Chrome browser window. You’ve been here a million times before, and you know exactly what to do. Most of the familiar browser keyboard shortcuts are there. Ctrl-T and Ctrl-W open and close tabs. Ctrl-N launches a new workspace, and you can swap between work spaces using the key formerly known as F5.

From the time you press the Power button, it takes about 15 seconds to get to the “desktop.” All your Chrome bookmarks appear at the top of the screen, and you can start searching and browsing right away. Some biggies — Gmail, Google Talk, Google Maps, YouTube — come pre-installed. There are also two pre-installed games, Poppit and Entanglement. When I say “installed,” I basically mean there are shortcuts displayed in a grid on the default Chrome New Tab screen. Click on a candy-flavored icon and a web page launches in that tab.

As a cloud-dependent netbook, the Cr-48 does not fare so well without a net connection. I disconnected from the office Wi-Fi and, after about a 30-second pause, I was able to keep using some apps in offline mode.

However, Google Docs doesn’t have offline mode, so you can’t edit documents without a connection. (Google Docs’ offline mode is being reworked and will be back in early 2011, says Google, and presumably this won’t be an issue by the time Chrome OS laptops are generally available.) When I switched tabs to write a few e-mails, I found that Gmail was unresponsive, too. Instead, I played a few games of Entanglement and read a news story I had previously loaded. When I reconnected, everything turned back on in a few seconds and my Gmail inbox refreshed.

I also kicked on the 3G radio. One click connects you to Verizon’s network and brings you to a screen where you can easily configure your machine. Every Chrome OS laptop will come with free Verizon data service providing 100 MB of data per month for two years.

Back on Wi-Fi, I visited the store and installed some Chrome apps, including The New York Times, The Onion, and Tweetdeck. All of these are basically just web pages, but they’re specially tailored for Chrome users. For example, when you browse the NYT app, you don’t see the Times website. You get a customized layout that looks and feels more like an iPad app than a traditional website. It doesn’t have iPad-like smoothness, but it is tablet-esque in design.

When using apps, there are some cases when the machine definitely feels underpowered. Most websites and things like Gmail and Google Docs work with no problems and very little latency. But the Times app isn’t so smooth. The Onion’s app, which puts a big video player front and center, lags. Tweetdeck, which is a mix of Flash and HTML5, is clunky.

But this is, after all, a test machine. The Atom processor inside will probably need a boost before Chrome OS hardware hits the shelves. Otherwise, people who would be excited about a fast, web-connected portable powerhouse will be dismayed by the relative lack of muscle.

However, anyone who needs something stable, simple and fully synced that’s instantly familiar out of the box will be delighted.

See Also:

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Cr-48: Google Chrome Notebook Hands-On

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Our pals over at PCMag were kind enough to give us a little bit of hands-on time with the Cr-48 Google Chrome notebook. I should note, right off the bat, that this is far from being a production unit. It’s more or less a dummy laptop, really, designed to show off the long-awaited Chrome OS.

No one’s really even sure who designed the thing, actually, but the word online is that it was created by Inventec, a Taiwanese company. Acer and Samsung have both signed on to release Chrome-based netbooks next year. The notebook’s screen is 12.1 inches. The system has both Wi-Fi and built-in 3G. The system ships with 100MB of free data from Verizon.

Using Google’s Chrome OS Laptop of the Future [Video]

The Chrome Cr-48 netbook might just be a reference design—as in, most folks won’t ever be able to use it—but it is what Google thinks a Chrome laptop should be. And it has some pretty nice touches. Updated. More »