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https://chrome.googleblog.com/2016/05/the-google-play-store-coming-to.html
Support list:
https://support.google.com/chromebook/answer/6401474
Chromebooks that will work with Android apps in June 2016:
Not sure how I feel about this. I've used stuff like ARC Welder before to run Android apps easily on my computer, like my Wink smarthome app, which doesn't have a desktop app available. I think this will bring the value of Chromebooks up quite a bit, because now you can download the Skype app, the Office apps, and all sorts of stuff that Chromebooks don't do natively (sure, there's Hangouts & gDocs, but it's not always the same), especially since a lot of Chromebooks are in the $200 to $300 range.
On the flip side, Android is rife with malware & other security problems. One of the reasons that I love my Chromebook is because it's simple & secure...boots up right away, wakes up instantly, connects online in no time, never have to worry about viruses. If you hop on google news and search for "Android malware", there's endless exploits going on out there. I'd really rather not expose my "safe" Internet machine to that. Obviously you can just simply not install any Android apps on your machine, but that really changes the security game on Chromebooks quite a bit, especially for attacks like Dogspectus that infect your Android machine simply by visiting a webpage:
https://www.bluecoat.com/security-blog/2016-04-25/android-exploit-delivers-dogspectus-ransomware
Granted, this applies to older versions of Androids (which still make up a significant chunk of the market, because the majority of developers are terrible about providing updates for their Android devices), but the Google Play store has always has security problems due to their distribution model, and continue to have them even into 2016...whether it's visiting a website & getting a virus, or getting a fake Chrome update that takes out your Android's antivirus app & then record all of your data, or knockoff apps with malicious advertisements baked in, etc. So, while I think having the Play Store available is cool, I hope there's a way to turn it off or block it so that your nice, safe Chromebook doesn't get exposed to all that garbage
Support list:
https://support.google.com/chromebook/answer/6401474
Chromebooks that will work with Android apps in June 2016:
The first three Chromebooks will support Android apps in mid-June 2016:
Acer Chromebook R11
Asus Chromebook Flip
Google Chromebook Pixel (2015)
Not sure how I feel about this. I've used stuff like ARC Welder before to run Android apps easily on my computer, like my Wink smarthome app, which doesn't have a desktop app available. I think this will bring the value of Chromebooks up quite a bit, because now you can download the Skype app, the Office apps, and all sorts of stuff that Chromebooks don't do natively (sure, there's Hangouts & gDocs, but it's not always the same), especially since a lot of Chromebooks are in the $200 to $300 range.
On the flip side, Android is rife with malware & other security problems. One of the reasons that I love my Chromebook is because it's simple & secure...boots up right away, wakes up instantly, connects online in no time, never have to worry about viruses. If you hop on google news and search for "Android malware", there's endless exploits going on out there. I'd really rather not expose my "safe" Internet machine to that. Obviously you can just simply not install any Android apps on your machine, but that really changes the security game on Chromebooks quite a bit, especially for attacks like Dogspectus that infect your Android machine simply by visiting a webpage:
https://www.bluecoat.com/security-blog/2016-04-25/android-exploit-delivers-dogspectus-ransomware
Granted, this applies to older versions of Androids (which still make up a significant chunk of the market, because the majority of developers are terrible about providing updates for their Android devices), but the Google Play store has always has security problems due to their distribution model, and continue to have them even into 2016...whether it's visiting a website & getting a virus, or getting a fake Chrome update that takes out your Android's antivirus app & then record all of your data, or knockoff apps with malicious advertisements baked in, etc. So, while I think having the Play Store available is cool, I hope there's a way to turn it off or block it so that your nice, safe Chromebook doesn't get exposed to all that garbage