[101063] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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New product showed on Shark Tank makes history deal

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Kristy Sherman)
Tue Feb 20 00:17:27 2018

Date: Fri, 19 Jan 2018 09:08:03 -0500
From: "Kristy Sherman" <kristy_sherman@phomowse.com>
To:   <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>

Biggest invesment ever made on Shark Tank
Friday Ep. 838263




This is going to be the best product for 2018 > > 
http://www.phomowse.com/fingernail-lamed/ef4l8F6B8e0t18aRhvVdVKyxdhVtFMuKmji0hvV0ONW909


These 2 sisters from California didn't belived they walked out with a 10 mm deal  that set the record for the biggest yet


See Replay Now / 6565147918
http://www.phomowse.com/fingernail-lamed/ef4l8F6B8e0t18aRhvVdVKyxdhVtFMuKmji0hvV0ONW909







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Eliminate your information from our list by verifying your name here
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The message above is an advertis-e-ment
Go now and end these for good
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About halfway through writing this article I learned that, by default, Fuchsia compiles in debug mode. This puts the slow mode banner on the top right corner of the UI, and, well, it makes everything really slow. Adding a   release to the end of the build command disables all the debug stuff, making the OS run much faster and disabling the banner. I still wouldnt say Fuchsia works particularly well right now on the Pixelbook, though. The Pixelbook is always hot when youre running Fuchsia. Even just sitting on the home screen, its a fireball. Things crash a lot, a lot of things dont work. There is still lots of work to do.


The lock screen also has a few hardware button commands for development. Caps Lock (which is technically called the launcher button on the Pixelbook keyboard) will switch between the GUI and a command line interface. In the command line mode, volume down will switch between multiple command line instances, one of which is a debug readout. In the GUI, volume down will make the display render upside down, which is nice for the Pixelbooks tent mode. 

So after the recent news that the Fuchsia team picked the Chrome OS powered Google Pixelbook as a supported device, we jumped at the chance to get it up and running. And after a little elbow grease, it actually booted. Now, were not just running the system UI on top of Android like last time, were running Fuchsia directly on a piece of hardware 

There are a few features that seem specifically focused on development. The blue Fuchsia logo in the top left corner will switch between what clearly seems to be laptop and phone modes. The most official description of Fuchsia weve ever gotten from Google is from the Fuchsia kernel documentation, which says it targets modern phones and modern personal computers with fast processors. With that in mind, the phone and laptop modes make sense. Remember, this isnt an emulator, though, so the phone mode is a bit odd. The Pixelbook is pulling double duty as both a native laptop device and a stand in for a phone device.






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