litl
25Jul/110

Faster browsing. New features. New channels.


Good news! Tomorrow, July 26th, we are releasing an update to the litl webbook software to give you more speed and more choices. Some of the improvements you’ll notice right away, and some may be harder to spot - we want to give you a quick rundown:

Faster web browsing
The webbook’s browser is now based on the latest version of Google Chrome for faster and smoother web browsing. Want to try something cool? Check out Google’s new voice search. Go to www.google.com, click the microphone icon on the search bar, and say your search aloud.

See more with TV mode
Now when you plug in your webbook to a TV, we adjust the way web pages display to take advantage of the bigger screen size. We also increased the size of the cursor and provide an extra-large overlay of what you’re typing so you don’t have to squint.

Facebook on your Mediawall
Sit back and enjoy all your Facebook photos in Mediawall, litl’s signature photo channel that turns your webbook into the world’s best photo frame. View your photos from Flickr, Picasa, Shutterfly, SmugMug, and now Facebook in a timeline or as a slideshow.

More channels, more web cards
We’ve improved the performance of your webbook so now you can have more web cards and more channels open at the same time.

And speaking of channels, you may even see a few new additions in the Card Catalog. But more on that later.

Watch for the software improvements tomorrow. As always, litl will download and install the updates - automatically, and free of charge. Depending on the speed of your Internet connection, it should take five to ten minutes. But it’s totally worth it.

Enjoy!

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23Nov/101

A perfect 10.1

At litl, we work hard to put the latest and greatest technonology on your devices. For litl webbook users, our regular updates make your computer run faster and smoother without the hassle of installing your own plug-ins and patches.

Earlier this month, we upgraded all litl users to Adobe Flash Player 10.1. Normally we don't like to talk about anything too tech-y, but this new version of Flash is spectacular, and we want to give credit where credit is due.

Flash Player 10.1 will dramatically improve video performance for some of the web’s most popular sites. That means faster and smoother playback on your favorite shows on Hulu, or on CNN's top stories. Your litl channels like Mediawall and BakeSpace will also get zippier.

As always, we at litl will download and install all of these updates for you - automatically, and free of charge. Enjoy!

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Filed under: software 1 Comment
16Jun/101

Ready, set, surf!

Here at litl, we are constantly working to improve the webbook and your experience with it. In our latest batch of updates, we enhanced the browser for a faster, easier web surfing experience.

Most significantly, we are now using the same browser engine as Google Chrome, so you can load sites quicker and smoother than ever. We have also changed the look when you open new web cards to enable one-click access to sites that you have frequently visited, searched, or recently deleted.

We have also done a bit of grooming. So, watch out for some cool, new animations and designs on your webbook. You may experience some delays as the software upgrades, but as always, we here at litl will download and install all of these updates for you - automatically, and free of charge. So sit back and enjoy!

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Filed under: news, software 1 Comment
21Apr/100

Uploading made easy with litl

The litl webbook is an Internet computer, meaning it gets content from the web instead of from a hard drive. Our Mediawall card, for example, streams photos and videos from photo sharing sites like Flickr, Picasa, SmugMug, or Shutterfly. If you lose your litl webbook, you don't lose your photos. It's great.

Of course, users still need a way to get stuff to the web. So we had to find a way for them to get their photos and videos from their cameras online from their webbooks. And it meant doing it the litl way - without folks having to sort through nested folders or filenames that sound like missile codes (CIMG0187? DSC01342?).

Enter our latest update: easy uploading.

Just plug in your camera to the webbook's USB port, and litl opens up a slideshow of your photos and videos. Litl asks if you want to upload them to the web - if you do, it does; if you don't, you can keep viewing the slideshow. That's it. Watch the video to see just how easy it is.

If you are a litl webbook user, we have already updated your software - as usual - automatically and free of charge. We also added some performance upgrades to make your web experience faster and smoother. Enjoy!

vimeo video
youtube video

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8Apr/100

More whimsy, less “computery” stuff


When people think of computers, words like “fun” and “joyful” don’t usually come to mind. That’s too bad, we’d argue. We think computers and their software take themselves far too seriously. For the most part, they’re dry and soulless.

When we designed the litl webbook and the experience of using it, we envisioned something very different. We wanted smiles and an occasional chuckle to be part of the litl experience. These unexpected moments — we call them “joy drops” — are small and subtle, but collectively they sum up to a computing experience with more whimsy and less “computery” stuff.

We've already shared David Macaulay’s delightful instructional cards that help the world learn how litl works. Yesterday, our interaction design partner, Cooper, described two more of these playful moments in an insightful blog post. Check out their videos:

litl power off from Cooper Journal on Vimeo.

litl giggle from Cooper Journal on Vimeo.

Please let us know what you think, here, on Facebook, or on Twitter. We’d love to hear your thoughts: Can computers be fun and joyful?

Photo credit: Steve took it

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3Mar/100

Getting better all the time

Because the litl updates its software automatically, we are constantly making improvements to the litl's performance. Today, we released a new batch of updates that will make the litl's photo and video experience faster and easier to use.

First, we redesigned our signature channel, Mediawall. In particular, we improved speed and made navigation more intuitive when looking through your timeline and albums.

litl's Redesigned Mediawall

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5Feb/100

Sweetest dreams

The litl webbook's self-updating operating system is one of its most popular features: while you sleep, we update your computer for you with "new and improved" software.

Why's it so popular? For one thing, there's no computer maintenance anymore--so say goodbye to software updates, security patches, and other "computery" tasks. If you're the technology support person for your family and friends, you know what we're talking about! The litl webbook always runs fast and safe.

These updates also mean that we can add new capabilities that make your litl webbook even more useful and fun. Since our launch, we've introduced several new channels (Facebook Status, for example) and tweaked the performance of many features.

And, of course, all these updates are completely free. No subscription charges or licenses to purchase.

So, what's in store for litl webbook owners in February and beyond? Here's a few hints:

  • Family games. Relax with some classic family games done litl-style. Bonus points when enjoyed on your large-screen HDMI-equipped television!
  • Recipes and cooking. Cook up a storm with a recipe channel uniquely designed for the litl. Yum!
  • Mediawall. View your photos stored on Google Picasa and SmugMug as we extend support to these popular photo websites.
  • Photo upload. Transfer your photos directly from your memory card reader to your favorite photo website by way of the litl's built-in USB port. Easy!

Looking ahead, we're also laying the foundation to enable third-party developers to unleash their creativity and build their own channels. Watch for more news about this in the coming months.

Illustration credit: David Macaulay for litl. More of David's genius.

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Filed under: channels, software No Comments
25Jan/103

Tools keep multiplying

Screenshot of calculator toolThe litl webbook operates in the cloud so it doesn't run local applications. So how do you perform simple tasks like, say, adding up the cost of flowers, dinner, and a movie? Just use the new calculator tool that we added to our card catalog. It's a web-based calculator that performs basic addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. It's just what you need...unless you're a scientist. For non-litl users, you can check out the tool here.

In the coming months, we've got a whole slate of other cards and channels coming out, plus the release of our SDK. But hey - sometimes even the simplest tool can be exciting. Just ask these guys.

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Filed under: channels, software 3 Comments
22Dec/092

A litl faster

Check out the demo of tonight's software upgrade. Customers will experience faster full-screen video performance on Hulu and YouTube (or any Flash video), lightening fast photo scrolling in our Mediawall, and a new Javascript engine for faster browsing. Happy holidays!

vimeo video
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25Nov/090

litl OS: Channels

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

Watch on Youtube
Watch on Vimeo

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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

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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!"

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