Chromebook

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Bought a 14 inch HP Chromebook with 4 Gigs of Ram & a 32 Gig Solid State Hard Drive about a week ago.

Have been fooling around with computers starting back in the early 1970s with the IBM 1005 card processor.

The Chromebook cold boot time is just under 7 seconds. Recovery from sleep is virtually instant. There are a few off-line apps but most require internet access. On the home network have a wireless Brother HL-3170CDW color laser printer. Works fine the Chromebook. Google lists several printers that work with Chrome O/S.

Had given thought of sticking Linux on it too but after using it am sticking with only the Chrome O/S as it meets most of my needs. With Linux installed you can toggle between operating systems.

You get 100 GB cloud storage + the 15 GB that you would normally have with Google Drive. Virtually everything is stored in the cloud and I have a couple of 64 GB SD cards that work just fine with it and also have a 1.5 TB USB 3 external hard live that I could use if needed.

Because of virtually everything is done in the cloud. Either a 16 or 32 gig hard drive should be plenty and if more storage locally is needed that is where the SD cards come in handy. I have mainly used them to have access to my Photos and Music. You could use a thumb drive too for local use or transfer stuff to the cloud, etc.

I find that the apps meet my needs for word processing, email, web browsing, some photo editing, etc.

There is options of using Microsoft Word on line and Google Docs. Both work well unless you are a very advanced user of Microsoft Word.

There is not an app for Skype yet but that is not a show stopper as I don't use Skype but rather use Google Hangouts.

For younger users there is a lot of educational material available.

For what it is am impressed and it meets many of my casual computing needs both at home and at the local coffee shop & it takes a lot to impress an old geezer over 70!
 
Originally Posted By: zzyzzx
Obligatory:

http://www.scroogled.com/chromebook

It's a very one-sided rant. Obviously Chromebook is not meant to be a traditional laptop. They are pretty open that all the apps are in the cloud and hence you need some kind of a wifi connection. In return, you get a lower priced product.

Is the whole wifi connectivity really that much of a problem these days? If you're at home, office, coffee shop - all these places give you internet access. Alternatively, you could turn your smartphone into a wifi hotspot. But if you're one of those people that needs to work on Office documents out in the field or on a plane and don't have access to internet, then yeah, Chromebook is probably not for you. It's basically an android tablet with a physical keyboard and a few extra connections.
 
Originally Posted By: uc50ic4more
Originally Posted By: SrDriver
Had given thought of sticking Linux on it too but after using it am sticking with only the Chrome O/S as it meets most of my needs. With Linux installed you can toggle between operating systems.


Chrome OS *is* a Linux distro. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrome_OS


While this is true some install Ubuntu Linux along side Chrome O/S version. Gives you a choice of running Ubuntu or the Chrome version of Linux on the same device.

For my needs have not found that necessary at this juncture.

I have an ASUS Ultra Book running Windows 8.1.1 and a 15.6 inch Laptop running 8.1.1 too along with a desktop but find myself using the Chromebook quite a bit.

Big plus for casual use is the lack of worries regarding a virus, trojan, malware, etc.

Being retired and traveling I can see the advantage of it. I will have the ASUS Ultrabook along too if needed for any reason.

While a Chromebook or Chromebox is not for everyone it meets most of my needs when you consider it's purpose.
 
It's a perfect web browsing machine, which is really all most people use a computer for at home anyway. I use it on the sofa and when I travel - the battery lasts all day and they include 12 free Gogo inflight passes with most machines. I recently purchased a second Chromebook just for the passes.
 
Originally Posted By: SrDriver
While this is true some install Ubuntu Linux along side Chrome O/S version. Gives you a choice of running Ubuntu or the Chrome version of Linux on the same device.


Of course - I didn't mean to bust your hump; I was just pointing out, light-heartedly, that Linux is everywhere! Chrome OS and Ubuntu and Android are entirely different operating systems that just happen to use the same kernel.

There are some quality tutorials on the Ubuntu Wiki and via the Ubuntu Forums for folks who want to install and optionally dual boot their Chromebooks if you're ever interested in poking around.
 
We have one of the original Chromebooks, a Samsung one with the ARM processor, and it runs like a champ. I would like to install Linux on it, though, so I could install LibreOffice and Dropbox sync. I'd use Google Drive sync, but they don't natively support Linux, at least not yet.

Our kids use it all the time. I use it for surfing all the time. It's much more convenient than a laptop for many uses. The Scroogled article is humorous. It's like telling someone who bought a new Cruze that they got screwed by Chevy because it doesn't seat as many people as a Tahoe.

We have a lot of IT in the house...more than we need to be certain. But all are used for specific purposes. Nobody can call us brand loyal, at least when it comes to electronics.

Chromebook (Chrome OS)
HP Compaq TC4200 (WinXP/Xubuntu)
Compaq C306 (Win7/Xubuntu)
eMachines desktop (Xubuntu)
Dell desktop (Win8.1)
Acer Iconia A100 (Android 4.x)
iPad 4
iPhone 4S
iPhone 5S
 
I bought the HP inch Chromebook with 4 gigs of ram on EBay for $276.00 factory refurbished. Came in factory box in new condition.

Plan on buying an ASUS Chromebox. They have one out 2 gigs of ram but it can be upgraded as a simple procedure. Same goes for the solid state hard drive if you would need more. There is a You Tube video showing this.
 
Originally Posted By: uc50ic4more
Originally Posted By: Hokiefyd
I'd use Google Drive sync, but they don't natively support Linux, at least not yet.


They're, uh, "working on it".


So I've read elsewhere. I'm not holding my breath. I've moved to Dropbox for now. If they come out with a Linux Google Drive client, I'll probably switch back.

SrDriver, I want a Chromebox as well. I'd like one for the garage. I have an eMachines desktop out there and that's used for YouTube, Pandora, etc when I'm working outside. A Chromebox would be a perfect fit for that application. You can get 'em with VESA mounts so you can hang them from the back of your monitor. I've got a cheap 20" Samsung monitor out there that I paid 40 bucks for on Craigslist. Like most of Samsung's stuff, it has great picture quality.
 
Yesterday I took the Chromebook to the coffee shop downtown and was able to print to my home computer from a remote location.

I have a Brother color laser wireless printer that is one of the ones that is listed as supported by the Chrome OS.
 
After living with the HP 14 inch Chromebook with 4 gigs of ram and a 32 gig solid state hard drive now for a couple of weeks I am quite happy with it.

Found several useful apps.

Plan was to install Ubuntu Linux along side of the Chrome OS but after using it have found no need for that.

I am not ready to get rid of my desktop or other 2 laptops but find that I use the Chromebook quite a bit especially when out and about.

Boot time is less than 7 seconds and shutdown is instant.
 
I have an ASUS Ultrabook running Windows 8.1.1 and am finding that much of the time I am taking the Chromebook along on trips or to the local coffee shop rather than it.

No worries about trojans, virus, spyware, etc., and even if it were hacked everything is in the cloud or on SD Cards so no data loss.

I did a backup to an USB Thumb Drive and it was approximately 1.4 GB because of cloud storage and the use of SD Cards.
 
Originally Posted By: SrDriver
No worries about trojans, virus, spyware, etc., and even if it were hacked everything is in the cloud or on SD Cards so no data loss.


If a malicious party gains access to your Chromebook they can very easily delete everything you have stored in the cloud. Google keeps a revision history of most items stored there for exactly these cases but it can be a pain to restore them sometimes.

ChromeOS is Linux, though; so you really need only worry about someone guessing your password in order to log in if they have physical access to the machine. If that happens it really does not matter what OS you're running!
 
Having a password consisting of letters, numbers, and symbols is a + and I keep a copy of everything on an SD card and often keep a copy too on an external USB hard drive.

I am not sold on only keeping a copy of documents, pictures, etc., only in the cloud either.

As cheap as SD cards have become it is an inexpensive method of keeping a backup.

Learned the hard way many years ago that it is not if something could happen but when.
 
Originally Posted By: SrDriver
Having a password consisting of letters, numbers, and symbols is a + and I keep a copy of everything on an SD card and often keep a copy too on an external USB hard drive.


The scripts/ software used by light-weight hackers and crackers (likely the only people interested in prying into your Chromebook) is thrown for a loop by **spaces** in your password(s) as well. A couple of spaces will increase by an order of magnitude how much time and effort has to be expended in a brute force attempt at guessing your password and that is usually enough to dissuade an already-bored teenage nerd from you, as you are no longer "low-hanging fruit".
 
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