litl
25Nov/090

litl OS: Channels

Watch the video above to learn more about Channels in the litl OS.

Watch on Youtube
Watch on Vimeo

20Nov/090

litl webbook on KRON4 TV San Francisco

litl webbook video on Kron4 TV San Francisco.

Filed under: news, video No Comments
17Nov/094

litl OS: Card View and Browser Video

litl OS: Card View and Browser from litl on Vimeo.

litl hit the reset button on computing and built a webbook made for the web. Watch the above video for a peek at navigating the litl Browser and zooming out to views all your web cards in Card View.

vimeo video
youtube video

16Nov/0911

litl solves computer frustration

litl.relax

"58%.  That’s the portion of computer experts who report getting helpdesk calls from friends or family at least once a week"  reports , Nat Friedman in his informal survey on computer frustration.

Litl's own Havoc Pennington responds with some insights on how we designed the litl webbook to reduce these frustrations"

via HP's Post:

Design with a computer-frustrated audience in mind

We designed litl OS with Cooper, Pentagram, and our own design team. Cooper contributed a set of personas, adding to our own thinking about who would love the litl. We focus on busy families at home. While we have big dreams for how litl OS can evolve, for now we didn't think about work computing, ignoring the needs of business travelers and IT guys.

Windows will ask hundreds of questions busy families don't care about understanding. It's not that they can't understand, but they do not care. (The most famous example might be Vista's overzealous need to "Allow or Deny?"). We can say definitively that our audience doesn't care about this stuff, and so we don't ask it. Period.

As geeks, who have been spent our entire adult lives using and administering PCs, we tend to think the entire world is like us... the more the better... we want total control. Our research (and our own families) have shown that there's a huge portion of the world, such as busy moms, who only care about results. They don't care about tech specs, and they don't care about tweaking what Tufte calls "computer administrative debris."

As software developers, we don't realize how much worthless debris we put in front of people. Stuff they don't care about or don't need to know. At litl, we're trying to take a different approach.

Make the OS automatic
If your favorite web app or web site fixes a bug, it isn't nagging you about whether you want the fix. You simply get the fix. We approached litl OS in the same way. litl OS is smart about avoiding updates while you're using the webbook, and quietly updates itself while you sleep.

Hide implementation detail - manage it for you
File management is one of the more complex features of traditional operating systems, and litl OS avoids it entirely. Web apps just store their stuff, they don't ask you where to store it. We continue the entire OS in that spirit.

Sandboxed Sites and Channels
Applications on the litl don't have free run of the operating system. We have two kinds of "app"; web apps running in our browser, and channels. (Channels are a special kind of app with three states, one for lean-forward/laptop, one for lean-back/easel, and one widget-like state in card view.) Channels are run by a custom flash player in their own process.

This gives us a number of tools to control malware (since we don't have to distinguish it from "normal" unsandboxed apps), and it throws out all kinds of complexity associated with installing and updating traditional application software.

Sandboxing eliminates a whole class of "system integration" issues where applications interfere with one another or with the OS. On the litl, web pages and channels can't (and need not) install their own annoying updater software. They can't add tray icons to your screen. They can't break other apps in unforeseen ways.

Hardware/Software Integration
Building for a single hardware platform throws out whole domains of complexity. There's no mess of interface on the litl related to hardware drivers; we know about our hardware already. We know which buttons are on the keyboard (and incidentally, a bunch of useless ones are not). We know the screen resolution.

This means no setup or configuration to start using the litl. It means our help and instructions can be precise - instead of "look for the key that says..." we can say "press the big blue key in the lower left." It means we can ship the litl preconfigured with information entered during the ordering process. It means any number of OS features "just work" instead of requiring tuning to the particular hardware the customer has.

Eliminate the hard drive
The hard drive is the number one point of failure in PCs, and when it breaks, it's a disaster - you lose all your stuff. Best practice is to use the hard drive only as a cache, keeping a backup copy of everything on some web service. litl does this by default, going further to automatically manage the cache so it only has what you're actively using. No hard drive failures; no data loss; no setting up or managing backups.

A new issue: web service integration
The webbook model isn't all positive complexity-wise (yet) - as Nat says, it may raise new issues. Here's one: a litl OS design principle is to use any and all existing web services and apps, rather than reinventing the wheel. We decided to use web mail rather than create our own litl mail app, we decided to use Flickr and Shutterfly rather than invent our own photo storage and sharing site, and so forth. We see our goal as improving the web, and helping people use the web, rather than replacing the web with a "walled garden" of litl-branded services.

There's no question that a "walled garden" of services we controlled completely would be simpler and easier to use. But we don't think our customers would be happy as hothouse flowers. We want to be the best OS for using the whole Internet, rather than a limited appliance.

A Challenge: Internet and WiFi setup
Internet and WiFi setup are tough to address, because problems on the access point side are outside litl's control. Still, on the litl itself, wifi configuration couldn't be simpler - we start with a big list of access points, instead of a tiny little tray icon. People need to recognize their network name and know their password. If they have those two things, we automate everything else.

Personal anecdote: I recently helped my sister fix her wifi; there were two problems, and both were caused by Windows complexity.

First, Dell had installed some garbage "wifi manager" software that interfered with Apple's AirPort software. On the litl, we don't ship OEM crapware.

Second, when you add a network, Windows opens this absurd, verbose dialog that makes no sense; she'd clicked the wrong answer. litl OS does not ask this sort of question, by design. If we don't think our customers care about a question, we don't ask it. (This has nothing to do with the webbook model per se; but it does have to do with our well-defined target audience. We know our customers don't care about this question.)

Only the beginning
We've come a long way with litl OS, but there's a lot more we could do. Nat's survey mentions printing; we could automatically discover printers with no driver installation. He mentions performance; we could manage CPU usage of sandboxed sites and channels to keep the "too much stuff" problem (too many open sites) from degrading performance. We could much more extensively lock down the OS using SELinux-style technology, to further restrain malware. There are so many possibilities because the OS is truly managed on behalf of our customers, not managed by our customers when they have better things to do.

To be sure we get this right, we're planning to rotate the litl development team through customer support, giving every software developer firsthand knowledge of our customers.

We would love to hear your ideas on how to further reduce computer frustration - let us know!"

11Nov/094

litl webbook evolution

litl webbook evolution from litl on Vimeo.

The litl webbook launched November 4th, 2009, but before the final production was ready, litl went through quite a few prototypes to experience the new idea, carry it around, show it to some friends, fit in all the great engineering inside, and make necessary changes . Watch the video above and see the historical grey foam model (towards the end of the video) that started it all.

vimeo version
youtube version

10Nov/096

litl webbook unboxing

litl unboxing from litl on Vimeo.

litl orders shipped out to customers this week. Here's a quick video peek at the litl webbook packaging and more.

vimeo video
youtube video

Filed under: design, hardware, video 6 Comments
10Nov/091

litl First Shipments

litl.first

litl units started to ship yesterday,  November 9th! Above is a picture of the first set of shipments rolling out to customers!

update: a few more photos from the shipping day on our flickr account.

Filed under: news 1 Comment
9Nov/090

Changing the channel on web browsing

litl.channels
Great blog write-up on channels by one of our developers, Kathryn:

"Now that we’ve launched, i’m happy to be able, finally, to talk about the lovely litl webbook and some technical details about flash-based channels. before i talk shop (which i’ll save for my next post) i should probably explain what we mean by channels. i am seeing some blogs use the word widget which misses some important subtleties about the channel experience.

you are probably familiar with the idea of channels from television. you sit down on your comfortable sofa, perhaps with family or a few friends, turn the tv on, and flip to a channel with a show you like.

now imagine that instead of flipping to a tv channel, you use the remote control to flip to your favorite website. you need an experience that allows you to enjoy the content from across the room -- preferably offering you up the newest, most relevant bits in an uncluttered, distilled way so that you can just lean back and enjoy it like a tv show.

step in litl channels. channel is the term we use to describe optimizing the web browsing experience for this new way of experiencing internet content that blurs the line between computer and tv. it's your favorite internet recipe propped up on the kitchen counter, your favorite webisodes of popular tv shows autoplaying while you brush your teeth, your syndicated news updates and your social networking, all easily experienced throughout your house instead of at your desk.

truth be told, this passive, tv-like experience (which can actually be hooked up to a tv using an HDMI cable) is just one of three “views” of the channel. it’s the view that you see when you’ve flipped your litl into easel mode with the mouse and keyboard tucked neatly out of sight. when you do surf your web content in the traditional laptop mode, there are also a small, at-a-glance view that we call card view, and a fully mouse-and-keyboard-interactive view that we call full view.

in the next post, i’ll geek out on how actionscript and the litl became bffs."

together these three views make a channel. and together, channels make the litl a whimsical, fun, and unique way of experiencing web content.

6Nov/091

Engineering behind the litl webbook

6Nov/096

Thinking of a netbook? I'd rather buy a litl. Let me explain.

The screen is the most expensive component of a computer. Our screen is better than netbooks. First of all it's larger. Second, our 178 degree viewing cone enables viewing from any angle which is very beneficial at home. Most netbooks have inexpensive screens with narrow viewing cones. Lastly, our screen is much brighter. Some might not need a great screen but if you like to see family photos or video without distortion then you want our screen.

litl provides services you don't get with current netbooks. We're maintenance free. You never need to worry about viruses, updates, downloads, plug-ins, security patches, etc. We do that for you for the life of the machine. By self-updating at night your computer is always ready to go. Not important? Well, how about saving hours of time doing tech support for your mother-in-law. Now how much would you pay! ;-)

litl provides all server side OS services for free. Most netbooks don't have server side OS services. Server side OS services solve, among other things, the syncing problem. You can link litls and automatically share content. That means photos and channels are available on any litl: in your bedroom, kitchen, on your TV, or in your mom's house across the country. Content is automatically updated and displayed.

It also means that you never lose your stuff. If a litl is broken, your current computing state is immediately available on another litl. If it is lost or stolen, we can de-link the machine to safeguard your privacy.

Yeah, we don't have hard drives but you'd have to pay me to use one! Hard drives are the number one point of failure in machines and the cause of catastrophic unhappiness. The litl environment solves hard drives (not by backup - that's using a flawed device to backup another flawed device!) by eliminating its need altogether.

litl's guarantee is unmatched: two years unconditional. If you are not happy for any reason send the machine back for a replacement or refund. So you can try us out risk-free.

So, take your run of the mill netbook, add whatever expense/time you spend doing virus, updating, upgrades, patches, plug-ins, synching, back-up, tech support, and file transfers for the life of the machine. Add in a one year service plan then add some more because we give you an unconditional money back guarantee not an extended warranty. Add in a killer screen. Then add in the stuff I haven't talked about such as plug-and-play HDMI, awesome channels, and sweet UI. What's that worth? Depends on your situation. But for most home computer needs, $350 netbooks are probably too cheap and $1000 laptops are more than you need. litl, at $699, is just right.

jc

Filed under: company 6 Comments
4Nov/090

Hey look, litl in Times Square

litlLook, a big litl in Times Square!

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4Nov/090

The Way litl Works by David Macaulay

litl.cards
David Macaulay is the award-winning illustrator and contributing author of The New Way Things Work and more recently, The Way We Work.  Among his awards are a Caldecott Medal, AIA medal, Bradford Washburn Award from the Boston Museum of Science and a MacArthur fellowship.

David created these card illustrations to help the world learn how litl works. They’re the perfect introduction to the big ideas behind every litl.
Welcome to the way litl works!

See all the cards after the jump, or visit the Flickr page here.

Filed under: design Continue reading
4Nov/090

Boston, Meet litl @ Starbucks (755 Boylston) 10:30am -12pm. Coffee and treats and totally sweet

meetup.starbucks
Come say hi to litl. Today, 10:30am-12pm at Starbucks (755 Boylston St. Boston).  This is a chance to get your first "hands-on" experience with litl.

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4Nov/091

Here’s to the beginning…

litl_family.image2
Today we announced the litl webbook.  This computer represents over two years and thousands of design and engineering hours from a small, dedicated group of employees and partners. I think it is fair to say we wouldn’t be at this point without the understanding of our friends and family who have been incredibly supportive throughout the process. To them we say, “Thanks so much!”

We are certainly proud of what we’ve created and we are happy to finally arrive at this day.  However, a frequent mantra that has reverberated around our company walls today is that “we’re just getting started.”

We believe the litl webbook is a step in the right direction towards the next generation of computers.  We make a conscious effort to break from existing norms and as a result have created something pretty different. Please take a moment to learn about litl and let us know what you think.

Cheers

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