A Dell employee has gotten Chromium OS, the code behind Chrome OS that Google released to open source, to run on a Dell Mini 10v netbook. The fact that a Dell programmer tinkered with the code and passed on his findings to others is a sign of how liberating and rich open source can be, as well as how Chrome OS is piquing curiosity. Still, some experts see Chrome OS as being five to 10 years away from mass adoption with consumers and enterprises, respectively. The world is, after all, still propelled by Windows. Read how to get Chrome OS running on a Dell Mini below ...
The Google Chrome Operating System might be officially a year away from
appearing in netbooks as a polished platform, but that shouldn't stop some
users itching to try it out in their machines today.
A Dell employee has gotten Chromium OS, the code behind Chrome OS that
Google
released to open source Nov. 21, to run on a Dell Mini
10v netbook.
Google Chrome OS is a Linux-based Web operating system Google is building to
run on netbooks as an alternative to computers running traditional operating
systems such as Microsoft's Windows and Apple's Mac. Those machines take
several seconds to boot up, or even minutes if they are older models.
With boot speed a major calling card for Chrome OS, things bode well for the
nascent software, according to Dell Technology Strategist Doug Anson.
"Without a network connection, Chromium OS is not very
interesting,"
Anson wrote on a Dell community blog Nov. 25. "With
a network connection, Chromium OS shines. The Chromium browser is extremely
fast and makes for a great Web-centric browsing experience. Boot time appears
quick too-about 12 seconds from hitting the power button."
That's a tad slower than when Sundar Pichai, Google's vice president of
product management,
booted up Chrome OS on an Asus Eee PC during Google's
Chrome OS launch to open source.
Pichai did it in 7 seconds, with another 3 seconds to load applications such
as Google Talk, but it's still quite a bit faster than loading Windows, Mac or
Linux distributions such as Red Hat, SUSE or Ubuntu.
No matter. Geeks are going to be quite happy to test this out on a Dell
Mini.
Anson got the Broadcom Wi-Fi adapter working for his image and found it
functional but unstable. This
will have to be improved because Chrome OS is geared solely for
Web applications. Anson offered some caveats to his tinkering.
It will take more than 5 to 10 minutes for the Chromium OS network
connection manager to "see" the access points and allow users to
select and connect. There are also issues with both the connection manager and
the underlying components (wpa_supplicant) that can easily break or get stuck,
so Anson advised users to reboot and try again.
To reboot the image, users have to press the "power" key on the
Mini 10v because there is no "reboot/shutdown" menu option yet for
Chromium OS.
Finally, Anson warned: "Use this image at your own risk-it comes to you
totally unsupported and very minimally tested."
Interestingly, Dell wasn't even among the list of computer makers-Acer,
Adobe, Asus, Freescale, Hewlett-Packard, Lenovo, Qualcomm, Texas Instruments
and Toshiba-Google claimed to be working with when it first introduced Chrome
OS last July.
That's why it is encouraging that Anson, who
told Engadget in July that Dell was interested in Intel's
Moblin Linux project, toyed with Chromium OS.
The fact that a Dell programmer tinkered with the code and passed on his
findings to others is a sign of how liberating and rich open source can be, as
well as how Chrome OS is piquing curiosity.
Still, some
experts see Chrome OS as being five to 10 years away from
mass adoption with consumers and enterprises, respectively. The world is, after
all, still propelled by Windows.
Anson released a USB key image file of
his Chromium OS boot
here
under the file name "ChromiumOS_Mini10v_Nov25.img." To copy onto a USB
key (8GB or greater), he advised users to find another Linux machine and
utilize the "dd" command to put the image onto the USB
key.