[OPLIN 4cast] OPLIN 4cast #435: Stick computers

OPLIN Support oplinsupport at gmail.com
Wed Apr 29 10:30:21 EDT 2015


    Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
<http://www.oplin.org/4cast/>  [image: OPLIN 4Cast]

OPLIN 4cast #435: Stick computers
April 29th, 2015

[image: Intel Compute Stick]Computers-on-a-stick are not this year’s
favorite cheap toy that you can win at the county fair, but real things
made by some serious companies (Intel and Google most recently) that may,
or may not, be the next big thing in computing. The basic concept is
simple: Build a computer that will fit in your pocket with a protruding
plug you can stick into the HDMI port of a standard display. Actually
building a computer that small that people will actually want to use is the
tricky bit, but some pundits claim these little devices will be big in
education and business. It’s possible they might make their way into
libraries, too, either in patrons’ pockets, or as something you just hand a
patron when they ask to use a computer.

   - 3 things you need to know about Google Inc.’s tiny new Chromebit
   computers
   <http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2015/04/03/3-things-you-need-to-know-about-google-incs-tiny-n.aspx>
   (The Motley Fool | Daniel B. Kline) “‘By simply plugging this device into
   any display, you can turn it into a computer,’ Google engineer Katie
   Roberts-Hoffman wrote in a blog post <http://chrome.blogspot.in/>. ‘It’s
   the perfect upgrade for an existing desktop and will be really useful for
   schools and businesses.’ The idea of a computer that slips into your pocket
   is not completely unique — Intel showed one at the Consumer Electronics
   show this year — but Google’s has the potential to establish the category
   as viable.”
   - Intel compute stick review
   <http://www.digitaltrends.com/stick-pc-reviews/intel-compute-stick-review/#ixzz3YXe6TmlQ>
   (Digital Trends | Matt Smith) “So-called Stick PCs running Android have
   been around as long as media streamers, but their inability to handle
   Windows severely limits their appeal. Now computers of the same size have
   become powerful enough to handle a full install of Windows 8.1. […] While a
   number of small manufacturers rushed to market first, Intel was the
   inspiration for the surge.”
   - Intel and Google sticks unlikely to revolutionize computing
   <http://seekingalpha.com/article/3062076-intel-and-google-sticks-unlikely-to-revolutionize-computing>
   (Seeking Alpha | Daniel James) “Users expecting a high-powered USB stick PC
   will be disappointed. Intel has suggested
   <http://money.cnn.com/2015/01/07/technology/innovationnation/intel-compute-stick/>
   the stick be used for ‘light productivity, social networking, Web browsing,
   and streaming media or games.’ Also, it could provide a low-cost solution
   for business computing. However, there doesn’t seem to be a specific niche
   that the product is filling. The fact that it still needs a screen and a
   range of peripherals to operate means that it takes up roughly as much
   space as a small notebook. If you add up the price of all these components,
   it isn’t actually much cheaper than a small notebook.”
   - Your quick guide to stick computers and what they’re good for
   <http://readwrite.com/2015/04/06/chromebit-stick-computer-guide-revolution>
   (ReadWrite | Brian P. Rubin) “The good news is that there will probably be
   even more options before too long, since we’re only at the beginning of the
   stick computer movement—if it does turn out to be a movement, that is. It’s
   still entirely possible that these HDMI dongles will fail to catch on, and
   we’ll toss stick computers away in the same dustbin as the world’s
   discarded netbooks.”

 *Articles from Ohio Web Library <http://ohioweblibrary.org>:*

   - The dongle-size PC isn’t coming–it’s here.
   <http://web.b.ebscohost.com.proxy.oplin.org/ehost/detail/detail?sid=08582a9a-0ea2-47ec-b789-7351cb0d1f8c%40sessionmgr111&vid=0&hid=125&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=cph&AN=100634457>
   (*PC Magazine*, Feb. 2015, p.168-170 | John C. Dvorak)
   - Hacking Google’s Chromecast.
   <http://web.a.ebscohost.com.proxy.oplin.org/ehost/detail/detail?vid=3&sid=ce0e51c4-deb4-4d58-a158-843598b6f29b%40sessionmgr4001&hid=4214&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=f5h&AN=101205425>
   (*APC (Future Australia)*, Feb. 2015, p.98-101 | Darren Yates)
   - HDMI stick creates a virtual PC.
   <http://web.a.ebscohost.com.proxy.oplin.org/ehost/detail/detail?vid=10&sid=ce0e51c4-deb4-4d58-a158-843598b6f29b%40sessionmgr4001&hid=4214&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=f5h&AN=86173025>
   (*PC World*, April 2013, p.18 | Yardena Arar)

    ------------------------------
The *OPLIN 4cast* is a weekly compilation of recent headlines, topics, and
trends that could impact public libraries. You can subscribe to it in a
variety of ways, such as:

   - *RSS feed.* You can receive the OPLIN 4cast via RSS feed by
   subscribing to the following URL:
   http://www.oplin.org/4cast/index.php/?feed=rss2.
   - *Live Bookmark.* If you're using the Firefox web browser, you can go
   to the 4cast website (http://www.oplin.org/4cast/) and click on the
   orange "radio wave" icon on the right side of the address bar. In Internet
   Explorer 7, click on the same icon to view or subscribe to the 4cast RSS
   feed.
   - *E-mail.* You can have the OPLIN 4cast delivered via e-mail (a'la
   OPLINlist and OPLINtech) by subscribing to the 4cast mailing list at
   http://mail.oplin.org/mailman/listinfo/OPLIN4cast.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.oplin.org/pipermail/oplin4cast/attachments/20150429/270bc5e5/attachment.html>


More information about the OPLIN4cast mailing list