I have been paying close attention to all the latest and greatest notebooks / laptops that are coming out. The Chromebook looks great and the price is not bad at all. I recnelty purchased a regualr laptop, becuase there are just some things that you moight need to do that all these smaller devices can not handle. And the worst part is that right after I bought the laptop, all these laptops/tablets stated coming out. Anyeays, I have purchased some of these Chromebooks for my team of employess and they seem to be great so far. No complaints and can not complain about the prices. Just wnated to share this with everyone.
I assume Google wanted to offer an even cheaper laptop than the Samsung Chromebook, so Google agreed to Acer's product. Reviewers seem to think Acer's is based on a cheap, old, very mediocre existing laptop that Acer merely changed slightly for the Chrome OS in order to attain the $199 price.
There also are rumors that Google is working on other, more advanced Chromebooks -- developed to its own specifications and with its branding -- but there aren't any confirmations about this.
The $249 Chromebook remains quite difficult to obtain, and perhaps Google underestimated the demand. It has been "out of stock" since it was introduced, although stores (such as Amazon) get shipments and will send them to people who are in the queue.
I have been pondering whether to keep or return the Chromebook. However, I spend almost all my working time on the Internet and with Internet applications. Also, Google updates Chrome OS about every six weeks, so there are continuing improvements. And for $249 it's nice to have a laptop that I'm pretty much assured won't be infected with malware, will turn on instantly and allow me to work if anything happens to my other computers. So, I'm keeping it.
I think it really does make sense for enterprises to consider the Chromebook.
Yes, I must have missed that comment. Going back and reading it, I'm glad that you agree with what seems to be a contradiction with the Chrome OS concept when Google is putting a 320GB disk drive in a Chromebook. The purpose of Chrome OS is to utilize the power of the cloud. It's also a way for Google to sell its services like Drive and Google Apps. But they must have come to some sort of concession with Acer in order to ship this particular device. I know that Acer has been an iffy partner in Chromebook at the same time they knowing that they are not going be able to rely on the Windows ecosystem as much as in the past with the changes that Microsoft is making in hardware stratgy. It will all be interesting to watch!
The day this blog was published, Google announced the new $199 Acer Chromebook, and I discussed it in a comment I posted. The reviewers now say it might be a bit faster than the $249 Samsung Chromebook, although the battery life is significantly worse and and it weighs more.
I find that $249 Samsunh Chromebook is fine for certain tasks and I assume the Acer Chromebook also will be good. The Acer isn't as good as a take-everywhere device because of its poorer battery life of perhaps three or four hours. But it's difficult to get any computing device for $199, so both the Acer and Samsung Chromebooks are priced well.
There certainly seems to be a demand for them. The Samsung is quite difficult to get, although the Acer Chromebook is still available, at least currently from Google Play.
Acer is going to be coming out with a $199 Chromebook. What is interesting is that in order to get down to such a low price they had to sacrifice certain components. Instead of a solid state hard drive that has come standard on Chromebooks, the Acer model has a regular platter drive. It also has an older Intel processor that will slow down performance and battery life.
But this is being done in an effort to get cheap Chromebooks into users' hands. I'm not sure it will work if the product and overall user experience is mediocre at best.
If you read to the end of blog, you'll see that I wrote about some of the problems, such as the performance bogging down, the construction and the lack of locally stored Windows applications.
For $249, many enterprises should take a look at the new Samsung Chromebook, if only as a spare computer.
It all depends on the use case, Even enterprises that typically use regular laptops might consider Chromebooks useful for specific applications, plus the security and lack of IT support. For $249, many enterprises could afford a Chromebook as a "just in case" laptop.
Samsung has announced a $329 version of the new Chromebook with a cellular modem, but I don't know if it's available yet. That's an okay price.
The older Samsung Series 5 550 Chromebook comes with a cellular modem, but it costs $550 and I don't see that as a good price. Might as well get a cheap laptop and use tethering from a phone or modem.
I've had 16 or so tabs open at once in a browser window and another browser with a few tabs, but it's certainly not as snappy as with one or two windows with a total of a dozen or so tabs. I can certainly empathize with needing multiple browser windows with dozens of tabs plus other open apps.
As a wrote, Chromebooks aren't good for all situatiions, but they are useful. And I like the somewhat "fail-safe" aspect with a constantly updated and clean copy of Chrome OS that boots fast and is available if Windows or OS X machines have problems.
after reading the article i only found the pros . it may not be good for large and big organizations but for small SMBs and home-base companies offering solutions for IT it may be a good and cheap option.
It is for the reason that I do not see traction for this platform in the enterprise. With that being said, I can see it working in educational institutions and non-profits because of the overall cost savings it can have in hardware and IT services.
In the long run, getting it into schools may be the best strategy: students who use them will someday be in the workforce, and they will be familiar with the concept and may even champion the technology. But this is a very long-term view.
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