Chromebook

lopri

Elite Member
Jul 27, 2002
13,310
687
126
Yet another toy from Google. (Just as Surface hits the store -> http://surface.microsoftstore.com/store/msstore/Content/pbpage.Surface)

http://www.google.com/intl/en/chrome/devices/

Spec Highlights

◾11.6’’ (1366x768) display
◾0.8 inches thin - 2.5 lbs / 1.1 kg
◾Over 6.5 hours of battery 1
◾Samsung Exynos 5 Dual Processor
◾100 GB Google Drive Cloud Storage2 with Solid State Drive

◾Built-in dual band Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n
◾VGA Camera
◾1x USB 3.0, 1x USB 2.0
◾HDMI Port
◾Bluetooth 3.0™ Compatible

Aaaaaaand.. it's $250.
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
359
126
Great timing on their part.

But they aren't really new. Chromebooks have been available for over a year now.

This is just a much better entry in that class of netbooks. Pretty damn competitive, actually.
 

lopri

Elite Member
Jul 27, 2002
13,310
687
126
First question on my mind is: Can you install WinRT on it? :biggrin:
 

cheezy321

Diamond Member
Dec 31, 2003
6,218
2
0
Anyone else think this looks exactly like the Apple macbook line?

Samsung just wont quit their copying ways.
 

MagickMan

Diamond Member
Aug 11, 2008
7,460
3
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Maybe good for a cheap netbook for kids to do homework and check email, I guess.
 

ghostprivacy

Junior Member
Sep 20, 2012
4
0
0
I swear this was announced about 4 years ago.

Anyway, it's a Linux kernel so I'm intrigued... anyone ran one?
 

Red Storm

Lifer
Oct 2, 2005
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Kinda expected more battery life for something like this, but not too bad for the price. I don't see myself getting one though.

I wonder if Office Web Apps will work on this?
 

lopri

Elite Member
Jul 27, 2002
13,310
687
126
Yeah. And for $250, it kind of changes the value of a PC. You buy a $1K+ laptop and you naturally worry about damages, theft, or just overall longevity. But at this price it does give you a feeling that it's more of a toy. As long as you have adequate data protection, you wouldn't worry too much if it dies after a year or two. My Kindle that died was $300 at the time when I received it as a gift. (2nd generation)

I wonder what the profit margin is for the hardware? It's even got a USB 3.0 port.
 

bearxor

Diamond Member
Jul 8, 2001
6,605
3
81
I normally wouldn't care, but that 250 price point would have me looking twice.

There's still some nice thin Pentium B laptops around for about 300 though.
 

cbrunny

Diamond Member
Oct 12, 2007
6,791
406
126
I've seen this... isn't Chrome OS a wildcard though? especially for a laptop.

Not like a Windows mobile phone - that is still a phone even if app support is lacking. I wonder what Chrome OS can do to make it competitive with other laptops - even cheapo laptops.
 

Ns1

No Lifer
Jun 17, 2001
55,420
1,600
126
pardon the obvious, what happens if there's no wifi?

I'd pick one up if I can use offline google docs or something
 

Wonderful Pork

Golden Member
Jul 24, 2005
1,531
1
81
Anyone else think this looks exactly like the Apple macbook line?

Samsung just wont quit their copying ways.

The worst is making the power button part of the keyboard on the top right. Apple only does that on their laptops that don't have optical drives (rMBP and MBA). That is a blatant duplication! 99% of other laptops have a dedicated button separate from the keyboard. Ridiculous.

After some Googling, it looks like other "ultrabooks" are doing the same thing.

Macbook Pro (non Retina)

Macbook Air

Samsung Chromebook

ASUS Zenbook UX21
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
359
126
I'm not here to really defend it, because this is one Google-based product I could not care any less regarding its success or failure, but a few points need to be made:


1) The "Macbook" design scheme? Really? Has not a single person looked at the prevailing design for most Thin and Light / Ultrabook laptops? Unibody and sleek industrial minimalism is all the rage. Apple made it so, but that's what the market wants now, for everything; I like it, and Apple has no claim to rights/ownership of such design.

- 1a) Aside from a few shared characteristics with Macbooks / Ultrabooks, there are quite a few differences. One, that hinge is ugly as sin - you'd never see that on anything Apple. ;)

2) This is also far from the first application of the "Apple-style" product page. Oh, and that would also be entirely on Google anyhow, not Samsung (in case anyone missed that). Many "big-item" product pages are employing that design; and hell, why not? It's simple, understated, and very effective. I won't deny the initial concept is completely Apple in origin, but at this point I honestly don't even see Apple when I see such product page styles. Why? Because I have seen it in many places. Hell, I've seen it on Amazon product pages (which, of course, are sourced from the manufacturer/designer and not Amazon in origin).

It's the Apple effect, and there should be nothing wrong with it. Can anyone honestly name a market where a major competitor brought about a certain "flair", and saw major success, and even decades later that "flair" cannot be found in any competing product/service/etc? It's how the market works, and honestly that's how it should. Apple brought to market not only products that performed in a certain way, but brought about a certain way of even doing that (imho, it's more all-encompassing that simply stating "marketing"), and the market answered with a resounding "more! MOAR!!". It's in the heart of the market for competitors to answer back by taking what they can from said competitor, and making it work for them. Can it be a little shady at times? Sure - but that's business, and we all benefit for it. Unless of course you happened to rather like a flailing competitor's clunky approach to something, because it had a particular odd character - but the march forward always brings about a sweeping evolution to an entire market segment, usually due to a single competitor's methods/styles/approach to that market in general, or a particular demographic.
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
359
126
pardon the obvious, what happens if there's no wifi?

I'd pick one up if I can use offline google docs or something

I do believe most Google products like that (Docs/Drive, Gmail, etc) have an offline mode.

But yeah, the "the web as OS" approach doesn't really do anything for me at this point in time. It's a neat concept, and it might work for some (particularly for half of the Macbook crowd who use them solely for facebook, youtube, email, and maybe just maybe typing a college paper :p), but it's not for anyone who really does anything.
 

dagamer34

Platinum Member
Aug 15, 2005
2,591
0
71
It's as if Apple held a patent on a thin laptop that didn't have an optical drive... :whiste:
 

Wonderful Pork

Golden Member
Jul 24, 2005
1,531
1
81
I do believe most Google products like that (Docs/Drive, Gmail, etc) have an offline mode.

But yeah, the "the web as OS" approach doesn't really do anything for me at this point in time. It's a neat concept, and it might work for some (particularly for half of the Macbook crowd who use them solely for facebook, youtube, email, and maybe just maybe typing a college paper :p), but it's not for anyone who really does anything.

Truth be told, I could easily get by with one of these laptops as a daily driver at home. I have a work-issued laptop which has all the applications and horsepower I need for work (its a gigantic, laggy POS, but whatever), but at home I mainly use a browser.

If it had something to manage music/movie files I'd be all over it since I use Google apps to manage mail, calendar, contacts, etc anyway.
 

Bryf50

Golden Member
Nov 11, 2006
1,429
51
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I have one of these. At the same price as this it's hard to beat the full windows o/s and the actually fairly fast 1.4ghz sandy bridge cpu. The build quality is also surprisingly good compared to some of Acers cheap notebooks. If they were selling the Celeron version that they already had out for $250 then it would be something I'd consider. But with the ARM soc you're basically locked into Google's red-headed step-child of operating systems unless it gets outside dev support.
 
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ThatsABigOne

Diamond Member
Nov 8, 2010
4,422
23
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Acer Aspire One 756 is a better deal from Best Buy for 250 bucks. Dual core Celeron 877, 2GB of ram, and 320gb of storage.