Kindle Fire review…a week later…

My Kindle Fire arrived last Wednesday, a day earlier than expected; Amazon making the most of their “shipping a day early” announcement. Naturally I had to open the box as soon as it arrived and I was impressed.

The Fire is a very discreet black pad, small enough to fit in my pocket, even with the leather cover I’d ordered. Speaking of the cover, it’s a black Marware leather Kindle cover. To be completely honest, I had more trouble with the cover than with the Kindle. That doesn’t mean there’s anything wrong with it, and now, a week later, I really like it, but I’ll admit to a bit of confusion at first.

The Fire booted up quickly, though it isn’t an ‘instant on’ device and found my home network without much trouble. Like my previous Kindles this one was already registered to my account so I had media available and ready to go once I’d walked through the relatively few steps of getting set up.

The Fire uses a fork of Android and so the experience is somewhat different if you are used to Android on another device (mine being an HTC EVO phone). It’s not difficult to use, though I find the “Carousel,” the portion of the screen devoted to recent documents, applications, whatever, a bit touchy. I have a hard time slowing it down once I’ve swiped it into motion.

The screen in gorgeous. I don’t know if it’s up to iPhone standards as I don’t own one, but it’s definitely a winner.

The Fire also comes with a free month of Amazon Prime to use with streaming video (Prime Instant Video). Here in Hawaii I’d had no reason to sign up, even at only $79 a year, because Amazon doesn’t support the free two day shipping (Prime’s original raison d’etre), but I’m certainly thinking of keeping it now. I haven’t tried Netflix on the Fire yet though.

I set up my email accounts on the merely adequate email application so that I could at least communicate this weekend. I was attending a convention Thursday-Sunday and wouldn’t have time to really play with the Fire, but I’d decided to give it a workout as my go-to device of choice. Therefore I loaded it up with the Excel spreadsheet of contact numbers and titles for the convention volunteers, the PDF schedule of events, and a variety of other things I’d need each day (I was on the steering committee so I needed access to working docs).

Thankfully, as I mentioned, the Fire fit in my pocket of my slacks so I wasn’t required to carry it by hand all day – and have it with me all day I did. The battery lasted me from 8am to 10pm each day, though I would plug it in for brief periods when I went to my room to rest or shower. Naturally I wasn’t using the Fire for the entire day, but I consulted it frequently, both for email and for documents.

In short I gave it a real-life workout and came away impressed. But…

Isn’t there always a ‘but?’

I missed a few things. Because the stock Fire is restricted to the Amazon App store a few things are currently missing that I rely on.

  1. Dropbox – Luckily you can simply download the app from Dropbox’s Android website. I had no trouble installing it.
  2. Gmail App – I love the Gmail app as most of my email accounts are on Gmail. Yes I do have a few others, but don’t use them much. In order to get this, I ended up having to root my Fire and add the regular Android Market. This turned out to be easier than I though – more below.
  3. Swype – How did we ever get along without Swype? This was a little more difficult to install, requiring root access and the ability to edit the Settings.db to add the input method. Still it isn’t something to be afraid of it you are patient.

I’m not going to post the instructions on how to root your Fire here – mostly because other folks have already done a great job and I’d hate to make a mistake somewhere along the line that bricks your Fire.

I used the instructions I found on RootKindleFire in their Mac section.

Putting the Google framework and Android Market on required the instructions from xdadevelopers. The hardest bit on a Mac was realizing I had to download something to open RAR files. Not a big deal.

I’m also using the Voodoo OTA Rootkeeper app to switch back and forth between root and regular. This seems to be much simpler than always having to use something on my Mac while tethered.

Swype was the most difficult bit as I got started on the wrong foot with what I guess was a bad bit of info. Good info can be found here on xdadevelopers.

I spent a good evening playing around with root, the G apps, and Swype but never felt I was in over my head. Just be patient. Now I’ve got Gmail running, use Swype, and can switch back and forth to and from root access (Prime doesn’t work while rooted). Life is good.

The skinny is that the Kindle Fire is a great little pad for the price and, with a wee bit of tweaking, it’s darn near perfect (till something better comes along of course).

Aloha

Playing with R…

Here’s a topo map of Honolulu from Punchbowl to Diamond Head using data generated by the USGS National Map Seamless Server (available at http://seamless.usgs.gov/website/seamless/viewer.htm). I’m playing with the R language using the book R in a Nutshell which I just purchased as an O’Reilly deal of the day.

Honolulu Elevations (Punchbowl to Diamond Head)

Honolulu Elevations (Punchbowl to Diamond Head)

Both the language the book are pretty cool.
R

Back to business….

Turnkey Linux…

While it’s true I do work in tech and am responsible for a several websites besides this one I’m not really as technically savvy as I like to pretend. That’s why when a cool tool comes along, one that makes life easier, I’m generally quite glad.

Recently I came across Turnkey Linux which is more or less a set of distributions, each targeted to a specific use. Based on Ubuntu you can get turnkey setups that are targeted for development, for blogging, for hosting files, you get the idea. Essentially it’s everything you need and a bit more. You can install onto your own hardware, a virtual machine, or…and this is the cool part…into a cloud.

That all sounded fine but that’s not really the cool part. Because I’d signed up I discovered I was asked to be part of the Turnkey HUB beta. This really takes things to the next step.

Basically it’s a way of moving one of these distributions around, backup and migration made simple.

I already use Amazon s3 for backing up the production sites I work on (two non-profit sites). It’s easy to use and quite cheap. I think it’s been costing me about $0.50 a month each for both sites I caretake. I’m using a ruby based cronjob to tar each site and db. It works well but does require a bit of tinkering. This HUB system does away with the tinkering…well that’s not quite true…you can tinker if you like but you can also just let it do it’s thing.

As a test tonight I tried setting up a the Turnkey LAMP distro in a Parallels virtual machine on my MacBook. It was quite easy and I discovered that it runs a shell over the browser. Sweet. I can tinker on break from work…or at least I hope I can. I’ll find out tomorrow.

Next I set up a user account on that system and put up a test page. So far so good.

I backed up the system to s3 (the default) and it was smooth.

Now, this is the kicker, I set up another bare system on Amazon EC2 as a first step. Next I restored the system I backed up from my MacBook to the EC2 system and sure enough, there was my modified system running on EC2. Sweet.

Of course EC2 costs a bit of change, $0.08 an hour. That’s not much but it is more than I’d pay for my webhosting system so I don’t plan on running a site off of EC2. But I am going to use it as a movable development system. By having the same turnkey system on a variety of machines and using the s3 backup to maintain the changes I should be able to play around just about anywhere…even when I don’t have my own computer with me. Sweet.

Aloha!

Google Apps class…

A quick non-biking note, I sort of use Google Apps. My email runs through Google though I am using my own domain name and I sometimes open documents there. I also help manage a couple of workgroups with websites, though they don’t use Google Apps. Why am I mentioning this?

Today I got a notice from O’Reilly,the publisher, about a five week class on using Google Apps that will be held online (oddly enough, during my lunchtime here in Hawaii). It seemed a like a good opportunity to learn a bit more…at least I can keep my brain active.

Google Apps Class Header Image

Course: Google Apps.
Instructors: Michael Milton
Length: 5-Weeks
Class Dates: Tuesdays, August 31 – September 28, 2010

I’ve got a two of his books in the Head First series and participated in an online seminar he gave on data analysis which was really quite good so I signed up for this class as well. The worst that can happen is I’ll do something else at lunch. :-)

Aloha!

iPhone 4…

The new iPhone 4, announced today, looks like a very sweet phone. It’s definitely sexier than the iPhone 3g I own. It’s even nice than the 3gs that followed mine. In fact if I hadn’t already ordered my HTC EVO I’d be very tempted to order one…but…

It’s AT&T. That’s the sticker. I’m a data hog and I know it. Sigh.

So maybe in two years I’ll be back for the iPhone 6, but until then…