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Messages - Artie See

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Got my 16GB Nexus 7 just over two months ago.  So soon the price drops... :(

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Nexus 7 General Discussion / Re: How Important is the 16GB?
« on: September 20, 2012, 09:48:51 AM »
There are free apps which allow you to access the files on an external USB flash drive.  Adapter cables are very inexpensive online, impossible to find locally.

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Nexus 7 General Discussion / Re: How Important is the 16GB?
« on: September 20, 2012, 09:44:18 AM »
I've had my Nexus 7 16GB for about a month, and so far I've loaded less than a gig of stuff (including quite a few documents, and a GPS map of Pennsylvania).  My guess is that 8GB should be plenty for most people, unless you plan to use it as a traveling workstation, traveling entertainment center, or as a mobile GPS.

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Nexus 7 Polls / Re: Where Did You (or plan to) Order Your Nexus 7?
« on: September 20, 2012, 09:36:35 AM »
In stock at local Game Stop in late August.  16GB.  Last one.

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Nexus 7 Apps / Serial port for Nexus 7?
« on: September 08, 2012, 06:37:31 PM »
I work on a variety of industrial devices that require a serial port and terminal program to configure and/or diagnose.  Usually it is rather difficult to find a place where a laptop can be safely placed to work on such equipment.

Maybe I'm dreaming, but a Nexus 7 with a serial adapter and a terminal program would be the PERFECT device to use for field troubleshooting and device configuration.  Does anyone know if these might be available anywhere?

6
I've been working on a variety of computer systems for about three decades now.  I started with several proprietary systems in the early 1980s, graduated to MS-DOS 2.01 through 6.22, Windows from 3.0 (hated the text-based versions) through a beta of 8.  Worked professionally for a while around AIX (IBM's flavor of Unix), dabbled with OS/2.  I've played around with various flavors of Linux enough to be comfortable with configuring a system.  I've never had a smart phone or tablet, my cell and laptop are issued by my employer.

My wife bought me a Nexus 7 16GB for my birthday, amazingly a local GameStop had one in stock.  I've spent some time over the past week playing with it.

My early impressions:

The Nexus 7 is an OUTSTANDING tablet.  It does a lot, and does it all very well.  I've had no real problem with configuring or connecting anything.  I can even transfer files via USB, something that my wife's iPad 3 cannot do without an app running on both ends.  It just works.

The Nexus 7 is a poor excuse for a computer; in reality, it is a computing appliance.  (I am not considering rooting, since it is beyond the capability of most users.)  Customization options are extremely limited, mostly to appearance settings.  The factory-installed apps for Gmail access your account as soon as the Nexus 7 is turned on, and there doesn't appear to be any way to change that behavior OR uninstall the app.  Neither Chrome nor the Firefox beta have even the most basic security settings available to the user, which could easily create a privacy risk.

Over the years, I've been asked many times by many different people what I thought the computer of the future would become.  I've always said that computers would evolve to the point where they are basically an appliance, where you turn it on and it just works; of course, an "appliance" has extremely limited customization options.  The Nexus 7 is an implementation of that future.

I can understand how tablets, smart phones, and other computing appliances will make computing power accessible to many people who can't figure out a desktop; even our 20-month-old granddaughter knows how to play music, play simple games, and view pictures on grandma's iPhone.  My disappointment is that such powerful devices are so highly restricted in how they can be configured.

Please avoid the flames, I only wanted to start an intelligent discussion.

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Nexus 7 Apps / Newbie question about Chrome privacy
« on: August 31, 2012, 05:08:33 PM »
I've only had my Nexus 7 for a week now; I almost never use Chrome on my Windows 7 desktop.  Is there a way to clear the Android Chrome browser history and cache like in desktop Firefox and Internet Exploder?

I had loaded the Android Firefox beta, but it is missing so many features I uninstalled it.

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Nexus 7 Apps / Can Gmail app be uninstalled?
« on: August 31, 2012, 05:05:05 PM »
Both Gmail and Facebook track web browsing, which is why I ALWAYS log out of both when I'm not using them.  I'm a newbie with my Nexus 7, and I've been using Chrome Incognito to access both (the Firefox beta doesn't appear to have Private Browsing).

Is there ANY way to uninstall the stock Gmail app?  It automatically logs in and checks my primary email as soon as I turn on the Nexus 7.  I had no trouble uninstalling the Facebook app, but Gmail doesn't appear to have an uninstall button.  And no, I'm not going to "root" it.

Any constructive comments will be greatly appreciated.

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