And for most of us, they're a perfect solution for all of our needs, since most of us don't have specialized needs like music production, photo/video editing, etc.
$400 ? Mannnn you can get a way cheaper Chromebook for about $150 that can easily do and run UA-cam and Netflix, shop online, browse, and all that lol smh $400 to do the basics. COME ON MANNNN 🤦♂️
@@davidhardcore704 True, I just picked up a decent spec Chromebook for $180. Prices have come down with better spec over the years. Obviously memory, resolution, touch screen, etc play a factor and can lead to price creep.
I learned Windows, MacOS, Linux, because 10-15 years ago that's what home computing was; having a powerful local system and locally installed programs. Once I thought about how I use a home computer in 2021 I'm doing everything in a browser. So I got a Chromebook just to try it and I love it for all the reasons stated in the video. As a geek the hard part is going down in processor and storage. My brain thinks I need an i5 and 256gb but not on chrome you can comfortably go down a step or 2 and be just fine.
So I’m debating about getting this Lenovo thinkpad chromebook but only has 4gb of ram. U think it’s worth getting? I never owned a chromebook but I think it should be at least 8gb of ram …..I also hate that it’s only 32gb of storage but I can upgrade it by micro SD
That's me, i'm in the market for a Chromebook, because i was so impressed how ChromeOS flex made my laptop (in which Windows always crashed) a better computing experience, it's faster, performs better under a much heavier load, such as typing documents, streaming on youtube, watching high resolution videos locally and having lots of tabs open in chrome, no issues like an update crashing your system, can set my brightness and sound up much higher and my battery lasting longer. Now i want a full on Chromebook, my mind keeps telling me, i need a powerful Cpu and a lot of Ram, but then i remember that with Chrome OS, you don't need a very powerful device.
I’ve had a Samsung chrome book 3 11.6” and I’ve had it for almost 5 years. My battery health is 90%, which it lasts 7 hours and 13 minutes on a full charge. I haven’t had any problems out of it whatsoever.
I got a Chromebook this year (Lenovo Flex5) and currently, I'm very happy with its performance (Battery life, keyboard, and operation) for the things I'm doing with it, is it competition for MacOS or MS-Windows? My reasoning is: No, the Chromebook is a very capable personal computer solution, and an alternative for some of the common tasks done on a PC, and definitely not a toy.
I just bought a Chromebook. It will let me avoid the dumpster fire that will probably be Windows 11 at release. My windows PC needs a rebuild but hardware costs way more than I want to spend right now. For gaming, I switched to an Xbox. A Chromebook meets 95% of my computer needs and will do nicely for the next few years.
Actually, it does. And, hear me out: I have a Pixelbook Go. It was $650 for an M3 with 8GB RAM. INSANE?? RIGHT??? Well, not really. I have never had one app do anything strange or slow down a tick. Ever. Running 20 tabs? Check. Netflix? Sure. Every Google Office service? Yep. Stadia? Yep. Even been looking at other game streaming services. But, the build quality and screen quality... you may not think it's important, but after a long day at work, staring at a crappy screen vs a nice HD screen has more impact than you think. The build quality of the keys and the machine itself... super light, super durable. It is literally no worry of breaking a thing. It feels as premium if not more so than my Surface Pro or my iPad Pro for work. And, it is just simple and no compromise to use. Don't need a keyboard case or extra bits to type or watch stuff on. It always works, and last at least 12 hours on one charge. It even connects to my phone and all of the features automatically. Any picture I took during the day is right on my laptop, and I can even post to instagram from the device. Zero lag. And, the camera blows away every device I own, including the iPad when dealing with video calls. Are there $300 chromebooks that can do all that? Well, they can definitely do all of the functions, but there are limits. Speed. Resolution. Then there is typing on those cheap machines... bleh. Then, there are the update cycles. I am not talking about how long will they get updates, but can you live with the cheap plastic machine for 5 years? Will it hold up as our demands increase? Imagine trying to buy a computer in 2015 knowing what 2020 would require? Your shopping needs and desired features would not resemble what they did back when you bought a computer then. Is that a definitive "I'm right/You're wrong"? No. But, it depends on what you value. It is like saying a Chevy Spark is superior to a Chevy Camaro because it is cheaper and does what a car does. That is true... a Chevy Spark does the same basic things as a Camaro, and even has the same infotainment features for a bit of luxury. But, to some people, there is no matching what a Camaro can do, even if it is not necessary or if it seems "too much" to some. *Full disclosure: I do own a Surface, a Mac Mini M1, an iPad Pro and a Pixelbook Go. And... a Chevy Spark, which I love dearly.
I have to disagree. For me, the $300 or less Chromebooks often have mediocre or poor displays, speakers, keyboards, processors, features, etc. I want something more premium which I could get at $500. And at that price, I can get a good convertible Chromebook which works great for typing, writing on the screen, or as a tablet. And Android app support is a HUGE selling point for me too. I love my Windows Surface Pro 4 but even at $1,000, it's not great to use as purely a tablet or writing notes or other stuff that Chromebook does well and has a million apps for.
With the Linux support, Chromebooks have become incredibly capable devices. If we had more developers focusing on more offline browser based software, Chrome OS could be more competitive against Windows and macOS. I believe they have huge potential.
@@odzergaming very strange. Chrome OS is a Linux distribution so it's a pretty light weight OS. If a reset didn't correct the problem then it's an account or hardware issue. Which model chromebook do you have?
I've been using them since 2013 and just got a new one a week ago. I got several of my friends and family members to use them and they've been using them ever since.
I love my Chromebook! I've always been a PC user, but before the pandemic hit, I bought a Chromebook to work remotely on weekends. I too had dismissed these as toys for years, but was amazed by what I could do! Fast forward to today and I can use online tools for creating 3D prints and then converting from stl to gcode - all for free, I might add. Also, no moving parts in the CB! I can add external media (i.e. hard drive) via USB, print over my network, and remote desktop works flawlessly. I've been using Android since the Galaxy S4, so I was accustomed to the layout. Then add Google Drive and Sheets - it's almost a no brainer! Don't get me wrong, I still love the power and versatility of my laptop, but my Chromebook has definitely become my go-to.
@@LUCKO2022 not trying to impress anyone, just my opinion! Trying to help people make an informed decision. Not everyone has the ability to set up a Linux box. I would imagine a lot of people reading the comments and watching the videos are senior citizens trying to figure out what to buy. I'm just saying there is an $80 option that can help people be productive instead of buying a $500+ laptop. Again, my comment was intended to help, unlike yours, and the fact you replied shows that you're the one trying to impress someone, not me. Stay happy! 😁
@@LUCKO2022 until it crashes or freezes cuz the apps aren’t fully optimized . Sorry, but the Linux overall distro is pretty much a headache for the average consumer. When it comes to chromebooks, google simplified and optimized everything. It’s just overall better. This is coming from a past Linux user. (And Linux distro hopper).
Chromebooks are fantastic. I got one for school and it has been incredible. It cost me 350 and has lasted me through my first 2 years with no issues. Paired with stadia for gaming its been a really great purchase
I bought the Spin 713 and I love it for productivity, its fast and my workflow with the Google suite is seamless and they boot right up. Im an Apple guy and have a macbook air as well but prefer the Chromebook for work from home I love it and this is my first time using a Chromebook also my airpods pro work seamlessly with it as well for video conferencing. Chrome OS just keeps getting better and better.
How is a chrome book better than a MacBook Air? A MacBook Air usually runs stuff better and has a better screen, better speakers, and much better build quality (trackpad, no keyboard flex)
@@gmdrandom6287 the 713 has no keyboard flex and is zippier as it’s 8gb compared to 4gb MacBook Air. And the google workspace for work is great it all meshes together well. 713 is good build quality except the speakers they suck but glass track pad aluminum top and bottom. The deck is plastic but sturdy.
Chromebooks are fine for most needs when I set aside my bias for Google and view them objectively. There are ways to install ChromeOS on old hardware which I’ve done, making for a cheap alternative.
You hit the nail on the head when you asked the question: "what do you need a laptop for?" There are millions of people who spend the VAST majority of their time surfing the web, checking their emails, and consuming content like movies, UA-cam, etc etc. For them, a Chromebook is a great, fast, and affordable machine. BUT......if your needs include heavy-lifting productivity programmes, a CB (still) won't be a good fit. So.......what do YOU need a laptop for.....??
I'm totally a browser/web guy, and the CBook changed my life. I fought with a Windows laptop to the point of meltdown, took it back, and had a CBook running in 4 minutes. Game over. I have four, including two high powered Samsung Plus's (OCTANE benchmark 25,000+) and I can run native gmail faster than a local cooy of Outlook Express. Game over. I do everything with this puppy, am online almost all day. Granted, I don't run many apps or games. Rather, I do financial research. I do laugh when people ask me antiquated questions like what security software do I run? Huh??? My advice is to buy a fast one, check the benchmarks, spend $500 or more. Has HD, and I run Chromecast as well as use it as a music server. Cant forget the youtube connection. How do I really feel?
Hahaha that is what sold me also. The boot speed an app launch speed. I use to click edge/explorer and count to 15 because that is how long it took my windows laptop to bring up the browser.
I don't do anything major on my Galaxy Chromebook. Web browsing, video warching and some minor picture editing are done with no issues at all and I really enjoy the experience. It connects to my phone too so that's a bonus. I don't see myself buying anything else than a Chromebook from now on unless my needs change.
I am an audio and acoustics engineer who not only runs a venue but works as a consultant and even does a bit of my own music production. This definitely puts me in the category of "power user"/artist (Sorry, but I REFUSE to use the term "creative" or "content creator", as those are very much corporate terms for someone who churns out product, but that is just me). What do I use? All of it. Including ChromeOS. Windows runs the administrative side of everything at the university venue. Microsoft 365 is just so damn good at being the go to office software! For media production, so many video editors, DAW's and the like pander to Apple so desperately that you have no choice but to be forced into their Ecosystem, paying premium prices with the hope that the $2k to $10k machine doesn't get the dreaded "vintage" status after only a couple of years. While the M1 chip has changed the game, it also backstabbed so many developers who were blindsided by how much the new ecosystem didn't work with the current software, and gave small developers zero time to adapt. Even with Rosetta II, it has been carnage on the music production side for the last 6 months, with it only getting better just recently. Not "good". Just... better. And, I use ChromeOS for everything NOT music or administrative related. What does that entail? Well, any and all of my freelance documents actually live well in Google's Docs/Slides/Numbers environment. Is their word processor as powerful as MS Word? No. But, it isn't bad. Same with all of the other office apps. I use Gmail for all of my non-day job communication. Same with the calendar, although I do have my Outlook calendar from the day job imported to make sure I don't double book. I use Google's business web tools to maintain a webpage, keep track of freelance contacts and to maintain a professional side hustle. Outside of making money, ChromeOS fits the bill for normal life. A web browser full of extensions is perfect for shopping, personal finance, watching movies, writing and even the occasional light gaming with Stadia. It lives right in the middle of the Google Nest devices, and having a Pixelbook Go and a Pixel 4a, it is like everything I do on my phone is seamless to my computer. It is literally so easy to live at home and the road with Google's Chrome/Android system that I even switched to Google Fi, getting even more perks like upgraded Drive storage and such. I literally never touch my iPad or Mac Mini unless it is to record or edit music. The hidden advantage to this is that I KNOW my private life and my freelance life is separate from my work life. There are no conflicts of interest using university software or equipment for personal gain. There are no questions if my personal emails in a work server could cause me or someone else grief. There is no legal way some opinion or action that I do on my own time will impact my work or compromise the people I work with. I don't feel that I do anything nefarious, and I am very boring. But, you never know who may find something you are doing to be in conflict with your work when you have a state job. It could very well be as simple as being accused of using state resources because you wrote up a phone list for a city council political campaign you were volunteering on for the weekend. So, better to be honest and a responsible citizen by respecting that division. And, lastly, ChromeOS is made for the AVERAGE person, which means it does the daily stuff so well, and allows you to sandbox yourself with a level you are comfortable with. Can I open Microsoft documents on a chromebook? Of course! But, I have a choice to *not* do so, and that means work stays over there, and my personal life stays over here. I don't have to run slack on my chromebook. I don't have to run Zoom, but still can use Google's Duo or Chat to speak to friends, family or for parent/teacher conferences. It allows me to not only have a home computer, but a home environment. To literally turn work *off*, yet still be connected as much as I want to. So, ChromeOS of 2021 has a vital role in society, since we are all having to work and live online more than in person these days. And, it is keeping me sane.
The never ending updates for both Windows and Mac can get annoying, even phones need endless updates nowadays, a device that boots up fast and has minimal updates is a welcome change, I don't do much with my laptops anyway
I used Windows from it's early iterations back in the 90s thru 2014 when I switched to Chrome OS. Chrome covers all of my needs as it will for most others. The OS runs very fast, even on the most modest hardware, because it's so efficient. Windows requires hardware with a lot of horsepower because it's essentially a flawed, bloated mess that is constantly vulnerable to malware. And Chromebooks seamlessly update themselves in the background, and you don't have to buy a security program for them. Chromebooks just make a lot more sense for the overwhelming majority.
You said it all Amigo! I Love Chromebooks, & DETEST Windows O.S. along with that Fraud Bill Gates. (I'm adding that other fraud on this list: Dr. Anthony Foul cheese! :( :(
I'm writing my third book in Google Docs on this Chromebook (Acer 15"). I originally got interested in Google because of Google Drive (centralised storage) but when I realised they had a 'save offline' function I bought my first Chromebook. And haven't looked back. Even now, Windows is only just _considering_ a cloud-based shareable system.
@@CxAgar Maybe you got a defective Chromebook :( I have been using my chromebook for three years without major problems. My chromebook model is HP x360 14'.
I've been using Chromebooks since they first came along and when people were saying they're nothing but a web browser and are useless even back then you could save articles save manuals for different things "I haven't kept a paper manual in years" download movies at home and watch em from a sd card or thumb drive run spreadsheets and docs all while being offline in my Chromebook I never got why people always said they are useless unless you're online a good percentage of the apps will run offline also. what I can't run on Chrome OS I try with Linux and for apps that only run on Windows I keep a laptop around "boy I dread going there with the updates and ads" I also would rather run the cheaper chromebooks you don't need an I3 or I5 for Chrome OS I prefer the lower powered processors without the fans it still runs faster that a windows machine with an I7 Chrome OS is a very resource sipping OS doesn't take much to run it fast
Throughout the most of my working years, I wrote programs using Microsoft languages, tools and technologies. But I've also always loved Linux and had some version of Linux running at home for some 17 years or so. Now, I am learning Java programming on my Acer Spin 713 in Linux mode (Debian on Crostini), and it runs IntelliJ Idea community edition IDE just as well as my windows desktops and laptops do. If it weren't for MS Visual Studio/SQL Server and all those tools and if it weren't for music production DAWs such as FL Studio and all the VST software instruments (like my beloved Korg M1 synthesizer emulation), I probably wouldn't even need to run Windows at home since I also find myself spending more and more time in a browser. But what I love about Chromebooks is that they're this amazing intersection of Chrome OS apps, Android apps, Linux apps, web apps and cloud apps. And with all these browser extensions, there's just so much a person can do on these nifty little devices.
Chromebook is perfect for the average user. Everything now is internet base anyway. If I don't have internet, I can't do much for my work no matter if I use a PC, Mac, or chromebook. I have all 3 types at home, but the chromebook is the go to one for daily use. Since it's my daily driver, I have no problem spending extra for better hardware (nicer screen, better keyboard/touchpad), the important things for interfacing with the internet.
I think this is the big takeaway. Does every car need to be a Ford F350 super duty because it is the "only" truck that can do real work? It is ok to have the base model nissan pickup that costs $40k less, because you can still haul a 1/2 ton of stuff, and a dent here and there on that doesn't worry you. Do you HAVE to get the cheapest base model 4 cylinder econobox, or would you rather have a Mini? Yes, it is only 4 cylinders and is the same size as the econobox, but having leather seats, a turbo and a cool paintjob is just fun. Value depends on the user, and options are what makes the user experience overall better. When I am not at work, I do not need to mix and master 128 tracks of audio and sync that with 5 hours of concert footage. I just want to watch Netflix, buy a new guitar pedal on Reverb and order a pizza. I just happen to want to have a nice 4K screen to watch my shows on with good battery life, so I'll pay extra for that bit.
I feel like chromebooks are very reliable if you just wanna surf the net or submit an online project because it only relies internet and not on the system os itself which is why its eco friendly
Google's Productivity tools like Docs, Sheets and Slides are useful but limited. Therefore, like Apple's Mac OS, Google's Chrome OS too needs a native version of MS OFFICE. Google should deal with Microsoft and get them to launch a version of the MS OFFICE for Chrome OS. MS OFFICE should come pre-installed with the Chromebooks. It's the only thing that I miss the most on my Chromebook.
Everything is web based now. Chromebooks has the security, ease of use, and can play games. Most people just have a computer to browse the web and send emails. Plus Chrome OS gets years of updates. But who really keeps a laptop for over 5-7 years.
No ease of access, can't get 80%of games(can't run steam or any pc games store) can't even do simple tasks like just running Google earth Slow most of the time, really bad bluetooth connection(from painful experience) And chrome have large battery life because it can't run any thing
@@monikamyszko5512 That was probably a couple years ago. I'm good on not having Steam. I have other options to play games. i have no issue with connecting bluetooth devices. Chrome is less power hungry now. Chrome OS boots up in under 5 seconds on my 5 year old machine.
Bought an Acer Chromebook in 2014. I took it to the Edinburgh Fringe for a month. It was a steep learning curve but became my principal computer for years. I had to buy(refurbished) a Windows laptop to connect my insulin pump to the web but just this month bought a new Asus Flip C434. It's amazing!
I just watched this on a Lenovo IdeaPad 3 and it runs like a dream it's quick does all the things I want, like writing in google docs, listen to music, watch netflix, youtube browse the web. unless you need a pc for pro business reasons, i think chromebooks are more than capable enough
Chrome OS is now updated every 4 weeks,, normally for 5 years,, Recent exceptions, $270 4/32GB ACER 2 in 1 Acer Chromebook Spin 311 (CP311-3H) -- 8 years $270 4/64GB Lenovo DUET Chromebook Tablet - 8 years,, ..... the DUET is also comparable with the USI pressure stylus & with a USB C HUB can drive an external monitor
@@adminpro875 Agreed on privacy front and all. On the functionality front though, I can run any Debian stable open source app I want on my ChromeBox and hundreds of stand alone .Deb binary packages.
I do think Google knows entirely too much about me. If you own an iphone or and android and use the services those companies provide privacy become s very difficult. In the end I have to decide what companies to trust.
Currently wathcing this on my chromebook. I purchased my chromebook for school, and for my needs it perfect for what I needed. Battery life on the one I have is perfect, I no longer need to look for an outlet everywhere I go.
I bought one 10yrs ago and hated it. I got one last week and have been super impressed. That being said I have a Pixel and my home ecosphere is Google-it integrated effortlessly. Still do real design work on my MacBook Pro. But, everything else is easier on Chromebook for a Google Household.
I love my chromebook. I paid less that $200.00 for my current one two years ago, Amazon refurbished. It's four years old now and I do want to get a new one, but for $700.00, might as well just buy a laptop. I won't pay more than $300.00 for CB.
My chrome book is for traveling. My Mac laptop got dropped and I couldn’t afford another. I bought a chrome book and I can check my email and surf the web. I love it that I can watch the UA-cam videos. I wish that I could get visual studio code for the chrome book and I haven’t found something to replace my program. I have a Mac mini at home where I can use VS code and rip my music to put on my iPhone. So when I travel, I can’t work, is that a bad thing?
What I don't get is, how can we be sure of what we need when we buy a laptop. People generally use laptops for a long time and the needs might change leading to another purchase. Isn't it better to buy a laptop which can do many things apart from just the things we think we need at that point of time?
As a minimalist both philosophies make sense to me: getting fewer and more functional things, vs getting fewer and low maintenance things. In this case I'd lean toward the latter because day-to-day benefits (like battery life, simplicity, security etc. which make the device itself less of your focus) are more important to me, plus Chromebooks can do nearly everything.
Agreed to an extent, though with many people I would say it's easy to predict that how demanding their individual tasks will barely change. There are cases where it's foreseeable, for example with university students, but otherwise it would be hard to make a decision considering that there are tradeoffs (battery life etc vs more capable OS)
@@Usman34210: What do you study? Do you need any particular software/programming languages etc? It's impossible to give a definite answer, but while they'll work for many courses, there are some where they're better/worse than others.
@@fetchstixRHD i do accountancy and finance so i dont need anything crazy just the typical office stuff google and just something with a decent battery life tbh
I use my android phone and dell optiplex destop. I brought tv tuner for my pc and phone. I need to watch local tv without internet, play dvd , play some steam game, writing or open documents, like windows for my pc and android for my phone. If you have phone with you all the time and pc at home then you don't really need chromebook.
I got a Lenovo one as a gift for christmas and its actually not that bad. My current daily driver is a 10 year old MacBook thats staring to show its age so the chromebook is a nice secondary laptop to have.
Even though this video is two years old, I began recommending Chromebooks to a lot of people who just want to browse the web, check their email and other web-related activities. I'm retired now, but during my IT career, we used Windows. I was used to that, but after I retired, I no longer wanted to hassle with all of the Windows updates, antivirus and things like that. I purchased a Chromebook for my wife and later I purchased one for myself! I'm very happy with the Dell Chromebook that I purchased two years ago! My wife and others are very happy with their Chromebooks are also very pleased and do not have any problems!! I agree with the review!
Loved my Chromebook, last me for the last 6 years. During the pandemic, gave it to my sister for class and she was happy with it for the year. However, the charging port is loose and has a hard time charging. I do not think I am getting another Chromebook, as I want an iPad with a nice screen and easy to carry. But for anyone that wants something simple, especially for school use then a Chromebook is really great. I might get a cheap chrome just for typing use.
I like my iPad which is why I haven’t bought a Chromebook. Bought the Magic Keyboard for it which is great even though it costs as much as several Chromebook offerings.
Never looked back after getting rid of windows. Never slow, had 30 tabs open before whilst working. It does have limitations and not for everyone if you want to do any heavy gaming or design work but for most people as a family computer it does a good job. At work I still have windows and often you get the dreaded 20 minute update before you can do anything and it constantly slows. Now most things are cloud based they make sense more.
I tell people about my Duet & they laugh But I look at them like "dude. I'm not trying to game on this. I'm getting work done" Not everyone needs some _over the top_ laptop or PC that ends up costing me four digits just to get office work done. I literally paid only $300 for the thing, plus the $35 for the USI stylus. I don't regret my choice But now that I've seen that new Galaxy Book Go, I think I'm gonna try trading this in or selling it to get that 😅 That thing looks marvelous!
is it competition for MacOS or MS-Windows? My reasoning is: No, the Chromebook is a very capable personal computer solution, and an alternative for some of the common tasks done on a PC, and definitely not a toy.
@@silentnomad84 it's not that I'm a "non-tech guy". I just prefer mobile tech over normal computers, as everything that I know how to do I've learned through phones, as that was all I had for the longest time. Literally the only thing that I'd ever need a Windows-enabled computer for is streaming gameplay, and I recently found out I can just flash Windows onto my Chromebook, so At the end of the day, it's really just about me keeping my life simpler by sticking to a more mobile way of completing tasks.
@@silentnomad84 also, I wouldn't limit Chromebooks to simply a "personal computer solution", as they offer services like G Suite, in addition to the administrator options for keeping things within a cohesive network for completing work duties in a normal office I'm not saying every company should get to saving money & buy chromebooks for the whole office, as it still needs fine-tuning for a closed ecosystem, but this could work for many, and not just small, businesses as it is now.
@jake d and I don't blame you, but I never grew up with a computer in my home, hardly ever using a computer at school, let alone using one in the library that wasn't locked to a specific program for school-related tasks. Computers were just never a big part of my life
I wish they made them with DVD & disc drives... Because I feel like the disc drive's are super annoying on the Lenovo tower version. That I have is a very stressful. Because I have had it go black screen from Puting a cd disc considering I have over 370 cds,& 700 tapes and 69 Vinyls... & probably even more now, than I did before seeing that, I bought Van Halen, ice house, Def Leppard, Starship, Paul Simons, Europe, & the best of 80's, George added to the 370 plus the extra CDs, I bought from JB Hi-Fi, and I like to transfer a lot of music to USB so therefore I can play it in the car, or on my Aldi Stereo which I have had since 2009 USB flash drive surrported... And sometimes with the new Lenovo tower that I bought from Officeworks, feels very lightweight the pop out disk drive, so you need to be extremely careful when trying to place the disc on the side in the towers DVD power to go. Also have a Chromebook and I Love it to Bits... It's just Great & Iconic but doesn't support 💿DVD📀 power to go only USB SD card & other things. So is there such thing as a DVD player or somewhat on any updated Cromebooks🌍. DVD Drive Cd player for transferring it to your USB version in 🤔Chromebook💭 Edition🤷♂️.✌️.
My dad gave me his old Acer C720 when it stopped being supported. I use it for a TV hookup in my bedroom for Disney+, Netflix, etc. It'll Bluetooth to my soundbar so it's still got decent serviceability 9 years on
I just got the Acer 314 Spin 2 in 1 it has touch screen and can turn into a tablet. it has 8gb ram 128gb storage and 6000 intel celeron processor. this is my first Chromebook and I'm enjoying it. I don't do photo editing, office work, or game on my laptops. I only paid $300 for my Chromebook. I'm enjoying my Chromebook.
I am a Chromebook "homer". I'm not a gamer, don't need a lot of storage, so it is my primary computer. It does everything I need it to. I try to stay around the $300 price tag and upgrade every two years. I see no reason whatsoever to spend $1500 for a "real" computer.
A little over a year ago, I purchased a Poin2 14" Chromebook on Amazon (LT0301-01US) for $166.44 new! I love using it as I am retired I mainly use it for email and accessing the internet. Just about 11 months in, the Chromebook developed some issues and I contacted Poin2 tech support. I can honestly say I have never had such great customer service! In the end, they assisted me in returning the item for repair, keeping me advised of what the issue was all along the way, and returned it to me good as new. I have used Windows since the '80s and find the Chromebook extremely easy to use without all the Windows issues.
Chrome OS has been serious competition for awhile. Every since companies have been pushing cloud, Chrome OS has made a lot of since. Since Chrome OS runs Android apps and Linux programs, I've rarely needed anything other than my Pixelbook. Devs have been pushing all their features into iOS and Android apps because of iPad and Chrome OS's increasing popularity as portable productivity machines for both work and education.
The Linux support on ChromeOS has made it more appealing. The only issue is that most professional software is made for both Windows and macOS. So until we see more apps come to Linux, Google may struggle to push ChromeOS out to the market. But the Linux app support also benefits Linux developers since it has increased the install base of Linux apps.
Back around 2015 when I was using a Windows-7 laptop, my computer caught a Ransomware virus that totally bricked that device (Luckily, I had a recent backup of all my data on an external HD, so I only lost about 2 weeks of work). I bought a cheap Chromebook and opened up the same Email attachment and it was immune to that virus, so now I use a Chromebook to check my Emails. I have installed Linux MINT on another old laptop and I actually like Linux MINT more than a Chromebook. With the ability to run Linux apps a Chromebook is now similar to that of having a laptop running Linux.
I love my Chromebook and it does everything great. I am 70yrs old and I dont need a powerful computer to run a company.I spend about 300 pounds and its more than enough for what I needs.
Ever since getting a Pixelbook Go, I almost NEVER do any non-work writing on my surface or my mac. The system is just perfect for creative writing, and that keyboard! The hush keys are literally the best laptop keys I have ever used.
for web browsing, email and office programms you really only need a chromebook or android tablet/ipad with a keyboard tbh. low end windows devices just feel pointless to me except if you have to run a specific software that doesnt need the extra power.
How can a person know how long a Chromebook will automatically update, when looking to buy one? The last one I bought only updated for about a year and then it wouldn't play movies any more. I didn't know Chromebooks expired.
I recently got 2 Chromebooks (acer spin 713 as a main and hp x2 11 for school) and I love em. Switched from windows to chromeos and honestly, for what I need it for, it's perfect.
This may sound stupid. Is there a chromebook that has a SIM card slot/tray so it can function like an Android smartphone. Make/receive calls and access the internet? Thanks
I had to finally buy a chromebook (Asus 525) to experience it. The biggest set back was chrome books cannot stream audio and video files presently using zoom app just like android. It's screen starts flickering while sharing video files. So I had to sell it for a windows laptop.
Okay I agree that you can do what you need with a chromebook. But if you can buy an F150 and that’s all you need and there’s an F250 for the same price then there’s no reason not to get the 250 right?
I'm a teacher and sometime i need to teach remotely, prepare my lessons, work on the syllabus, power point animations, share screen, share a video via microsoft team, big blue button, zoom etc.. I always want to keep my camera on during online classes. My question, would a chromebook fill these particular needs for online sessions? Is it equipped with a webcam?
Great video. Since i've started using chromebooks a few years ago I love them and try to teach other's about them, everyone doesn't need to spend Macbook money to just be on the internet lol
I am trying to figure out of a chrome book is a good fit for me but I am not that tech savvy so I don’t have a clue about processing speed or any of that stuff. I am a kindergarten teacher and I just need a laptop for those rare days at work when they want us to bring a computer to meetings and such. I just want something that has a big screen, is touchscreen (because I am visually impaired), and loads pages fast. Oh yea, and cheap hahaha!
You are talking about India, where chrome books have no penetration. In developed nations they are cheaper than $250-300. Can easily be considered an impulse buy there. Cheapest ones in India are around $500
@@hirakchatterjee5240 no he mentioned about 700 dollar chrome book. There are cheaper version chromebook available in India too, similarly 250 dollar decent i5 powered windows based laptop are also available in usa. Before commenting I searched America Amazon channel 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼 problem is that we liked the review but we don't realised the limitations of chromebook. My friend brought it by going through review and he realised he can't do office work because it lacks productivity apps such as tally, or SPSS, or arc GIS etc. Chromebook are good for those who has a another pc in house and would like a laptop for typing some projects works. 🙏🏼
@@sudiptokumar986 exactly having another windows laptop is mandatory for most office apps. I use Citrix workspace which is fortunately available in Android. But I think even it has some limitations like able to only open one instance and not supporting multiple instance. Unfornately I have a gaming laptop with beefy Discreet graphics which weights more than 2 kg and has less than 3 hours of normal usage battery. For me a Chromebooks portability and touchscreen is enticing but the price is unfortunately out of my current budget. They need to offer it at lower prices in India.
I was looking for a laptop few years ago and considered Chromebook just as Android support was rolling out. I didn't feel like waiting and bought an hp specte x360. But realistically, currently I can do everything in browser or an android app. So I would totally consider a Chromebook. However, a premium windows laptop can be bought for basically same price as premium chromebook, think pixelbook. So if price is the same or similar, why go Chromebook? And if I need linux, I can easily side load it on my windows machine, which is actually what I have now.
I think the main reasons are simplicity, security and Android support. These make them ideal convertibles/360/detachable as Windows tablet functionality and apps remain sub-par. We see that Windows apps can run on Chromebooks along with Linux and you have a device that has it all. The monthly update cycle means it is constantly improving and no buggy Windows stuff or BSOD. If it slowdowns just reset it with a powerwash, which takes 10-15 minutes and you are as good as new (I do it bi-yearly).
@@craig2web True but then it is a different class of computer. But if you are buying pixelbook or even the $700 acer in the video, the purchase starts to make less sense. I kind of see chromebooks as like netbooks of circa 2010. Oh and I was a huge netbook fan in those days while being in college and having hour+ commute to school.
As you said most of people don't need to do much and a browser is all we need. So I myself have turned to Chromebook from a few years so it gets the job done. But occasionally I do turn back to normal windows for a bit.
Yes, I like Chromebooks very much, and of course they can replace a Windows laptop for most everyday purposes. However, if you are a professional and creative user and use software that is not available on Chrome OS, then a Macbook Pro blows it out of the water and especially for the price. If you don't actually need a portable computer, and I believe a lot of people really don't, then consider an iMac or a Mac mini. They are great value for your money too. And if the computer is the tool you use to make a living, or to pursue your interests and hobbies, then the price may not be an issue at all.
Exactly, most older people don't need to do anything else other than search the web, watch videos, do some typing, and not be overwhelmed with all the potential for viruses and complications that come with a Windows Laptop. Also it's cheaper than a Mac anyday. My mom pretty much just uses the web on her $1000 Mac book 🤣.
I was apprehensive when I initially purchased a chromebook. But now I felt in love with it. I am also going to get it to my son, and run linux on it. I will never ever go back to windows. This Chrome OS is light and a breeze to work upon. And no noise on my laptop as chromebooks do not have any fans. Actually windows makes dummies out of us.
I'm still confused. I found a renewed HP Elitebook 820 G3 with Windows 10, an Intel Core i5 processor, 16GB of RAM, and 256 GB of storage on Amazon. Why should I get a Chromebook if I get a cheap, high spec Windows laptops like this one? All I do is brows the web, but why not have more options? I'm not hating on Chrome OS. I just want to know why I should get a Chromebook if I can get a Windows laptop that's cheaper and can do more than a Chromebook.
I like the concept of these devices, but IMHO it’s really hard to recommend them when the iPad exists. Overlaps with the same “purpose” as Chromebook, only with more potential for doing things with apps, works with keyboards, and so much more.
I like it. I bought a new one for $250. It's 17.3" it streams at the highest resolutions just fine, 10+ hours of battery life, I can get linux. I don't need to do much with it, just homework, youtube, and other web stuff.
I've been a staunch Windows user since the mid 90's and never used anything else. I have a desktop PC at home that runs Windows 10 and serves me well....I use it for 'heavy lifting' applications like Photoshop, video editing etc and it does the job. I was looking for a laptop that I could use in the bedroom, or away from home and my needs were lightweight - surfing, checking emails, YT, the usual.....I got looking at Chromebooks and - even though I had doubt in my mind about them - eventually dived into the deep end, into the unknown - I bought a secondhand (pretty much nearly new) Asus C433T Flip Chromebook from Amazon. It is brilliant!! It's speedy, lightweight, serves my lightweight needs online. It is well built, premium and the screen flips right over to be used as a tablet etc. It does everything I need it to do. I've also just bought a secondary portable , super slim monitor to go with it too. Just plug into the USB-C port and away you go. Just a decade ago, if you needed to do simple basic work on a PC, Windows or a Mac was our only real choice. Chromebooks aren't for everyone, and eveyones needs are different, but for me (and perhaps most peoples General Purpose needs) a Chromebook will fit the bill. If I had to introduce an elderly relative to the internet, I'd get them a Chromebook. Surfing, shopping, paying bills, email, video calls etc....superb! Windows will always have its place, but for lightweight stuff, a Chromebook is worth a look at. Sadly, I find that Windows OS's do slow down over time for one reason or another, but with my Chromebook, that has NEVER happened. It just keeps on running, no questions asked. Love my Chromebook, never looked back.
I tend to recommend Chrome books to people if they answer a simple question a certain way. The question is, can you do everything you need to do on your phone? Do you really just want a much larger version of your phone? Some answer with, yes but I like to play games too. So ok do you play the games from the Google Play store? Is that what you mean by "I want something better for gaming" lol
So, Apple cancelling features and even removing features from their older computers is OK? Or, is it because Google will at least tell you when updates stop, and Apple just decides when they want you to buy a whole new computer without telling you. *Looks at Mac Pro users who just dropped $10K on a computer 1.5 years ago that is now obsolete due to M1*
Have had Chromebooks from the beginning, but never as a primary computer. They are a great, affordable (mine have averaged
And for most of us, they're a perfect solution for all of our needs, since most of us don't have specialized needs like music production, photo/video editing, etc.
I need to investigate how to remote into my Mac. Thank you 😊
There's one going for $79 on Amazon right now
$400 ? Mannnn you can get a way cheaper Chromebook for about $150 that can easily do and run UA-cam and Netflix, shop online, browse, and all that lol smh $400 to do the basics. COME ON MANNNN 🤦♂️
@@davidhardcore704 True, I just picked up a decent spec Chromebook for $180. Prices have come down with better spec over the years. Obviously memory, resolution, touch screen, etc play a factor and can lead to price creep.
I learned Windows, MacOS, Linux, because 10-15 years ago that's what home computing was; having a powerful local system and locally installed programs. Once I thought about how I use a home computer in 2021 I'm doing everything in a browser. So I got a Chromebook just to try it and I love it for all the reasons stated in the video. As a geek the hard part is going down in processor and storage. My brain thinks I need an i5 and 256gb but not on chrome you can comfortably go down a step or 2 and be just fine.
So I’m debating about getting this Lenovo thinkpad chromebook but only has 4gb of ram. U think it’s worth getting? I never owned a chromebook but I think it should be at least 8gb of ram …..I also hate that it’s only 32gb of storage but I can upgrade it by micro SD
@@mikeyg9833 I would go with 8GB just to “future proof” a little bit.
That's me, i'm in the market for a Chromebook, because i was so impressed how ChromeOS flex made my laptop (in which Windows always crashed) a better computing experience, it's faster, performs better under a much heavier load, such as typing documents, streaming on youtube, watching high resolution videos locally and having lots of tabs open in chrome, no issues like an update crashing your system, can set my brightness and sound up much higher and my battery lasting longer.
Now i want a full on Chromebook, my mind keeps telling me, i need a powerful Cpu and a lot of Ram, but then i remember that with Chrome OS, you don't need a very powerful device.
wow your so gbite, i get you so much, perhaps we can melt our plastic brains together and become a total plastic doll? 😂
@@dawoodwilliams3652but CrOS Flex is more reliable, as it does not factory reset automatically when a fault is detected.
I’ve had a Samsung chrome book 3 11.6” and I’ve had it for almost 5 years. My battery health is 90%, which it lasts 7 hours and 13 minutes on a full charge. I haven’t had any problems out of it whatsoever.
Does it run games?
@@iwanna_xry Yes via Android apps and streaming services like Google Stadia.
I got a Chromebook this year (Lenovo Flex5) and currently, I'm very happy with its performance (Battery life, keyboard, and operation) for the things I'm doing with it, is it competition for MacOS or MS-Windows? My reasoning is: No, the Chromebook is a very capable personal computer solution, and an alternative for some of the common tasks done on a PC, and definitely not a toy.
Perfectly Explained ...........
I just bought a Chromebook. It will let me avoid the dumpster fire that will probably be Windows 11 at release. My windows PC needs a rebuild but hardware costs way more than I want to spend right now. For gaming, I switched to an Xbox. A Chromebook meets 95% of my computer needs and will do nicely for the next few years.
My chromebook exploded when I tried to install roblox
I like Chromebooks but when the price starts getting north of $300 it doesn't make much sense when comparing to a windows laptop.
or even an ipad.
Actually, it does. And, hear me out:
I have a Pixelbook Go. It was $650 for an M3 with 8GB RAM. INSANE?? RIGHT??? Well, not really. I have never had one app do anything strange or slow down a tick. Ever. Running 20 tabs? Check. Netflix? Sure. Every Google Office service? Yep. Stadia? Yep. Even been looking at other game streaming services.
But, the build quality and screen quality... you may not think it's important, but after a long day at work, staring at a crappy screen vs a nice HD screen has more impact than you think. The build quality of the keys and the machine itself... super light, super durable. It is literally no worry of breaking a thing. It feels as premium if not more so than my Surface Pro or my iPad Pro for work. And, it is just simple and no compromise to use. Don't need a keyboard case or extra bits to type or watch stuff on. It always works, and last at least 12 hours on one charge. It even connects to my phone and all of the features automatically. Any picture I took during the day is right on my laptop, and I can even post to instagram from the device. Zero lag. And, the camera blows away every device I own, including the iPad when dealing with video calls.
Are there $300 chromebooks that can do all that? Well, they can definitely do all of the functions, but there are limits. Speed. Resolution. Then there is typing on those cheap machines... bleh. Then, there are the update cycles. I am not talking about how long will they get updates, but can you live with the cheap plastic machine for 5 years? Will it hold up as our demands increase? Imagine trying to buy a computer in 2015 knowing what 2020 would require? Your shopping needs and desired features would not resemble what they did back when you bought a computer then.
Is that a definitive "I'm right/You're wrong"? No. But, it depends on what you value. It is like saying a Chevy Spark is superior to a Chevy Camaro because it is cheaper and does what a car does. That is true... a Chevy Spark does the same basic things as a Camaro, and even has the same infotainment features for a bit of luxury. But, to some people, there is no matching what a Camaro can do, even if it is not necessary or if it seems "too much" to some.
*Full disclosure: I do own a Surface, a Mac Mini M1, an iPad Pro and a Pixelbook Go. And... a Chevy Spark, which I love dearly.
I have to disagree.
For me, the $300 or less Chromebooks often have mediocre or poor displays, speakers, keyboards, processors, features, etc.
I want something more premium which I could get at $500. And at that price, I can get a good convertible Chromebook which works great for typing, writing on the screen, or as a tablet. And Android app support is a HUGE selling point for me too.
I love my Windows Surface Pro 4 but even at $1,000, it's not great to use as purely a tablet or writing notes or other stuff that Chromebook does well and has a million apps for.
that's when it makes even more sense, $300-550 windows laptops are straight up trash.
Mine was a Chromebook Acer 311 for $239🌍 I paid for mine✌️.
With the Linux support, Chromebooks have become incredibly capable devices. If we had more developers focusing on more offline browser based software, Chrome OS could be more competitive against Windows and macOS. I believe they have huge potential.
It cant load google docs without crashing
@@odzergaming interesting. A reset, or "power wash" as google calls it, should resolve the issue.
@@brents2500 I did it is still crashing
@@odzergaming very strange. Chrome OS is a Linux distribution so it's a pretty light weight OS. If a reset didn't correct the problem then it's an account or hardware issue. Which model chromebook do you have?
@@brents2500 No, that happens to literally every single chromebook.
I've been using them since 2013 and just got a new one a week ago. I got several of my friends and family members to use them and they've been using them ever since.
I started looking for one and need help choosing. Which one did you buy? Can you give me your top 3 choices? THXS
I love my Chromebook! I've always been a PC user, but before the pandemic hit, I bought a Chromebook to work remotely on weekends. I too had dismissed these as toys for years, but was amazed by what I could do! Fast forward to today and I can use online tools for creating 3D prints and then converting from stl to gcode - all for free, I might add. Also, no moving parts in the CB! I can add external media (i.e. hard drive) via USB, print over my network, and remote desktop works flawlessly. I've been using Android since the Galaxy S4, so I was accustomed to the layout. Then add Google Drive and Sheets - it's almost a no brainer! Don't get me wrong, I still love the power and versatility of my laptop, but my Chromebook has definitely become my go-to.
I can do all that and more with my Linux laptop. So who are you trying to impress?
@@LUCKO2022 not trying to impress anyone, just my opinion! Trying to help people make an informed decision. Not everyone has the ability to set up a Linux box. I would imagine a lot of people reading the comments and watching the videos are senior citizens trying to figure out what to buy. I'm just saying there is an $80 option that can help people be productive instead of buying a $500+ laptop.
Again, my comment was intended to help, unlike yours, and the fact you replied shows that you're the one trying to impress someone, not me. Stay happy! 😁
@@LUCKO2022 until it crashes or freezes cuz the apps aren’t fully optimized . Sorry, but the Linux overall distro is pretty much a headache for the average consumer. When it comes to chromebooks, google simplified and optimized everything. It’s just overall better.
This is coming from a past Linux user. (And Linux distro hopper).
What kind of Chrome book do you have?
, I'm on SS,67 years old and I want something small and not expensive. For picstures ,movies.
E mails. Small games
Chromebooks are fantastic. I got one for school and it has been incredible. It cost me 350 and has lasted me through my first 2 years with no issues. Paired with stadia for gaming its been a really great purchase
What kind of chromebook did you get?
@@JepoyIgana Try with Pixelbook Go. It's the best Chromebook experience straight from Google. It goes great with my Pixel 6 Pro.
Install only 5 android apps and, oh boy, let me tell you... You will take back that "Chromebooks are fantastic" statement right away.
@@1tsMichael If you buy one that's "potato" specs...
I bought the Spin 713 and I love it for productivity, its fast and my workflow with the Google suite is seamless and they boot right up. Im an Apple guy and have a macbook air as well but prefer the Chromebook for work from home I love it and this is my first time using a Chromebook also my airpods pro work seamlessly with it as well for video conferencing. Chrome OS just keeps getting better and better.
How is a chrome book better than a MacBook Air? A MacBook Air usually runs stuff better and has a better screen, better speakers, and much better build quality (trackpad, no keyboard flex)
@@gmdrandom6287 the 713 has no keyboard flex and is zippier as it’s 8gb compared to 4gb MacBook Air. And the google workspace for work is great it all meshes together well. 713 is good build quality except the speakers they suck but glass track pad aluminum top and bottom. The deck is plastic but sturdy.
@@gmdrandom6287 for working I prefer chrome book I do telemedicine etc, assessments. If doing digital art or protocols etc then I use a Mac. 👍🏻
@@mjthethird1 oh wait. I thought you meant a newer MacBook Air as those ones are really popular (2016+
Chromebooks are fine for most needs when I set aside my bias for Google and view them objectively. There are ways to install ChromeOS on old hardware which I’ve done, making for a cheap alternative.
You hit the nail on the head when you asked the question: "what do you need a laptop for?" There are millions of people who spend the VAST majority of their time surfing the web, checking their emails, and consuming content like movies, UA-cam, etc etc. For them, a Chromebook is a great, fast, and affordable machine. BUT......if your needs include heavy-lifting productivity programmes, a CB (still) won't be a good fit. So.......what do YOU need a laptop for.....??
I'm totally a browser/web guy, and the CBook changed my life. I fought with a Windows laptop to the point of meltdown, took it back, and had a CBook running in 4 minutes. Game over. I have four, including two high powered Samsung Plus's (OCTANE benchmark 25,000+) and I can run native gmail faster than a local cooy of Outlook Express. Game over. I do everything with this puppy, am online almost all day. Granted, I don't run many apps or games. Rather, I do financial research. I do laugh when people ask me antiquated questions like what security software do I run? Huh??? My advice is to buy a fast one, check the benchmarks, spend $500 or more. Has HD, and I run Chromecast as well as use it as a music server. Cant forget the youtube connection. How do I really feel?
My advice is that a sub $200 chromebook can do what you describe with little penalty.
Hahaha that is what sold me also. The boot speed an app launch speed. I use to click edge/explorer and count to 15 because that is how long it took my windows laptop to bring up the browser.
I don't do anything major on my Galaxy Chromebook. Web browsing, video warching and some minor picture editing are done with no issues at all and I really enjoy the experience. It connects to my phone too so that's a bonus. I don't see myself buying anything else than a Chromebook from now on unless my needs change.
I am an audio and acoustics engineer who not only runs a venue but works as a consultant and even does a bit of my own music production. This definitely puts me in the category of "power user"/artist (Sorry, but I REFUSE to use the term "creative" or "content creator", as those are very much corporate terms for someone who churns out product, but that is just me).
What do I use? All of it. Including ChromeOS.
Windows runs the administrative side of everything at the university venue. Microsoft 365 is just so damn good at being the go to office software! For media production, so many video editors, DAW's and the like pander to Apple so desperately that you have no choice but to be forced into their Ecosystem, paying premium prices with the hope that the $2k to $10k machine doesn't get the dreaded "vintage" status after only a couple of years. While the M1 chip has changed the game, it also backstabbed so many developers who were blindsided by how much the new ecosystem didn't work with the current software, and gave small developers zero time to adapt. Even with Rosetta II, it has been carnage on the music production side for the last 6 months, with it only getting better just recently. Not "good". Just... better.
And, I use ChromeOS for everything NOT music or administrative related.
What does that entail? Well, any and all of my freelance documents actually live well in Google's Docs/Slides/Numbers environment. Is their word processor as powerful as MS Word? No. But, it isn't bad. Same with all of the other office apps. I use Gmail for all of my non-day job communication. Same with the calendar, although I do have my Outlook calendar from the day job imported to make sure I don't double book. I use Google's business web tools to maintain a webpage, keep track of freelance contacts and to maintain a professional side hustle.
Outside of making money, ChromeOS fits the bill for normal life. A web browser full of extensions is perfect for shopping, personal finance, watching movies, writing and even the occasional light gaming with Stadia. It lives right in the middle of the Google Nest devices, and having a Pixelbook Go and a Pixel 4a, it is like everything I do on my phone is seamless to my computer. It is literally so easy to live at home and the road with Google's Chrome/Android system that I even switched to Google Fi, getting even more perks like upgraded Drive storage and such. I literally never touch my iPad or Mac Mini unless it is to record or edit music.
The hidden advantage to this is that I KNOW my private life and my freelance life is separate from my work life. There are no conflicts of interest using university software or equipment for personal gain. There are no questions if my personal emails in a work server could cause me or someone else grief. There is no legal way some opinion or action that I do on my own time will impact my work or compromise the people I work with. I don't feel that I do anything nefarious, and I am very boring. But, you never know who may find something you are doing to be in conflict with your work when you have a state job. It could very well be as simple as being accused of using state resources because you wrote up a phone list for a city council political campaign you were volunteering on for the weekend.
So, better to be honest and a responsible citizen by respecting that division.
And, lastly, ChromeOS is made for the AVERAGE person, which means it does the daily stuff so well, and allows you to sandbox yourself with a level you are comfortable with. Can I open Microsoft documents on a chromebook? Of course! But, I have a choice to *not* do so, and that means work stays over there, and my personal life stays over here. I don't have to run slack on my chromebook. I don't have to run Zoom, but still can use Google's Duo or Chat to speak to friends, family or for parent/teacher conferences. It allows me to not only have a home computer, but a home environment. To literally turn work *off*, yet still be connected as much as I want to.
So, ChromeOS of 2021 has a vital role in society, since we are all having to work and live online more than in person these days. And, it is keeping me sane.
Thanks! You're reply is really
helpful toward my decision to
purchase or not purchase a
Chromebook.Very informative!
The never ending updates for both Windows and Mac can get annoying, even phones need endless updates nowadays, a device that boots up fast and has minimal updates is a welcome change, I don't do much with my laptops anyway
Chromebooks will update monthly. But the update process is so imperceptible that you may have to check the version number to confirm that it happened.
Windows devices can boot fast too. Just add in something called a “solid state drive”.
Either you're insulting my intelligence or you're insulting your own intelligence
@@js5-76a2 Honestly i agree
I used Windows from it's early iterations back in the 90s thru 2014 when I switched to Chrome OS. Chrome covers all of my needs as it will for most others. The OS runs very fast, even on the most modest hardware, because it's so efficient. Windows requires hardware with a lot of horsepower because it's essentially a flawed, bloated mess that is constantly vulnerable to malware. And Chromebooks seamlessly update themselves in the background, and you don't have to buy a security program for them. Chromebooks just make a lot more sense for the overwhelming majority.
you should have done this video instead.
You said it all Amigo! I Love Chromebooks, & DETEST Windows O.S. along with that Fraud Bill Gates. (I'm adding that other fraud on this list: Dr. Anthony Foul cheese! :( :(
I said it once, and will say it twice, install only 5 apps from the Google Play store and BOOM! $600 wasted!
@@1tsMichael What does this even mean?
@@craig2web It's my way of saying that it can't handle much.
I'm writing my third book in Google Docs on this Chromebook (Acer 15").
I originally got interested in Google because of Google Drive (centralised storage) but when I realised they had a 'save offline' function I bought my first Chromebook.
And haven't looked back.
Even now, Windows is only just _considering_ a cloud-based shareable system.
Got myself a chromebook and really happy with it.
im not less than a year and its already falling apart and i treat it like its made out of gold
@@CxAgar Maybe you got a defective Chromebook :( I have been using my chromebook for three years without major problems. My chromebook model is HP x360 14'.
@@ToanMQSong it ain’t that since that hardware sort ware is all fine
It’s the keyboard and the hindge
I love Chromebook, but I have a real problem with retailers who do not include the auto update expiration in the specifications for the Chromebook.
I currently use a Mac, but I used to have a Dell for a secondary laptop. This video is somewhat moving me to get a Chromebook.
I've been using Chromebooks since they first came along and when people were saying they're nothing but a web browser and are useless even back then you could save articles save manuals for different things "I haven't kept a paper manual in years" download movies at home and watch em from a sd card or thumb drive run spreadsheets and docs all while being offline in my Chromebook I never got why people always said they are useless unless you're online a good percentage of the apps will run offline also. what I can't run on Chrome OS I try with Linux and for apps that only run on Windows I keep a laptop around "boy I dread going there with the updates and ads" I also would rather run the cheaper chromebooks you don't need an I3 or I5 for Chrome OS I prefer the lower powered processors without the fans it still runs faster that a windows machine with an I7 Chrome OS is a very resource sipping OS doesn't take much to run it fast
Throughout the most of my working years, I wrote programs using Microsoft languages, tools and technologies. But I've also always loved Linux and had some version of Linux running at home for some 17 years or so. Now, I am learning Java programming on my Acer Spin 713 in Linux mode (Debian on Crostini), and it runs IntelliJ Idea community edition IDE just as well as my windows desktops and laptops do. If it weren't for MS Visual Studio/SQL Server and all those tools and if it weren't for music production DAWs such as FL Studio and all the VST software instruments (like my beloved Korg M1 synthesizer emulation), I probably wouldn't even need to run Windows at home since I also find myself spending more and more time in a browser. But what I love about Chromebooks is that they're this amazing intersection of Chrome OS apps, Android apps, Linux apps, web apps and cloud apps. And with all these browser extensions, there's just so much a person can do on these nifty little devices.
Chromebook is perfect for the average user. Everything now is internet base anyway. If I don't have internet, I can't do much for my work no matter if I use a PC, Mac, or chromebook. I have all 3 types at home, but the chromebook is the go to one for daily use. Since it's my daily driver, I have no problem spending extra for better hardware (nicer screen, better keyboard/touchpad), the important things for interfacing with the internet.
I think this is the big takeaway. Does every car need to be a Ford F350 super duty because it is the "only" truck that can do real work? It is ok to have the base model nissan pickup that costs $40k less, because you can still haul a 1/2 ton of stuff, and a dent here and there on that doesn't worry you.
Do you HAVE to get the cheapest base model 4 cylinder econobox, or would you rather have a Mini? Yes, it is only 4 cylinders and is the same size as the econobox, but having leather seats, a turbo and a cool paintjob is just fun.
Value depends on the user, and options are what makes the user experience overall better. When I am not at work, I do not need to mix and master 128 tracks of audio and sync that with 5 hours of concert footage. I just want to watch Netflix, buy a new guitar pedal on Reverb and order a pizza. I just happen to want to have a nice 4K screen to watch my shows on with good battery life, so I'll pay extra for that bit.
Love the Acer Chromebook 514. The 8GB of RAM, the slim design, and the mediatek processor offers an amazing experience.
Does it work now
I feel like chromebooks are very reliable if you just wanna surf the net or submit an online project because it only relies internet and not on the system os itself which is why its eco friendly
Google's Productivity tools like Docs, Sheets and Slides are useful but limited. Therefore, like Apple's Mac OS, Google's Chrome OS too needs a native version of MS OFFICE. Google should deal with Microsoft and get them to launch a version of the MS OFFICE for Chrome OS. MS OFFICE should come pre-installed with the Chromebooks. It's the only thing that I miss the most on my Chromebook.
Everything is web based now. Chromebooks has the security, ease of use, and can play games. Most people just have a computer to browse the web and send emails. Plus Chrome OS gets years of updates. But who really keeps a laptop for over 5-7 years.
I do... :€
No ease of access, can't get 80%of games(can't run steam or any pc games store) can't even do simple tasks like just running Google earth
Slow most of the time, really bad bluetooth connection(from painful experience) And chrome have large battery life because it can't run any thing
@@monikamyszko5512 That was probably a couple years ago. I'm good on not having Steam. I have other options to play games. i have no issue with connecting bluetooth devices. Chrome is less power hungry now. Chrome OS boots up in under 5 seconds on my 5 year old machine.
And even if they keep it for that long chromebooks get 7 - 8 yrs of updates.
Wdym it can play games?
Oh yes it can but at 10fps cough cough roblox
Chromebooks are the best turnkey solution for people that need to access the cloud/web.
That's true
For what I need, mine is great!
Bought an Acer Chromebook in 2014. I took it to the Edinburgh Fringe for a month. It was a steep learning curve but became my principal computer for years. I had to buy(refurbished) a Windows laptop to connect my insulin pump to the web but just this month bought a new Asus Flip C434. It's amazing!
I just watched this on a Lenovo IdeaPad 3 and it runs like a dream it's quick does all the things I want, like writing in google docs, listen to music, watch netflix, youtube browse the web. unless you need a pc for pro business reasons, i think chromebooks are more than capable enough
Problem with Chromebooks is that some school software does not support chomeOS for exams.
@Thot Patrol USA Try Google Stadia on your chromebook
Chrome OS is now updated every 4 weeks,, normally for 5 years,, Recent exceptions,
$270 4/32GB ACER 2 in 1 Acer Chromebook Spin 311 (CP311-3H) -- 8 years
$270 4/64GB Lenovo DUET Chromebook Tablet - 8 years,,
..... the DUET is also comparable with the USI pressure stylus & with a USB C HUB can drive an external monitor
ChromeOs has evolved into everything Linux was meant to be.
It's like to say: "Empire has evolved into everything the Republic was meant to be." by Palpatine/ Darth Sidious.
Chromebooks are low end garbage computers
Not true. Linux is about privacy, freedom and open source software. Chrome os is the completely the opposite.
@@adminpro875 Agreed on privacy front and all. On the functionality front though, I can run any Debian stable open source app I want on my ChromeBox and hundreds of stand alone .Deb binary packages.
I do think Google knows entirely too much about me. If you own an iphone or and android and use the services those companies provide privacy become s very difficult. In the end I have to decide what companies to trust.
Currently wathcing this on my chromebook. I purchased my chromebook for school, and for my needs it perfect for what I needed. Battery life on the one I have is perfect, I no longer need to look for an outlet everywhere I go.
I bought one 10yrs ago and hated it. I got one last week and have been super impressed. That being said I have a Pixel and my home ecosphere is Google-it integrated effortlessly. Still do real design work on my MacBook Pro. But, everything else is easier on Chromebook for a Google Household.
My chromebook handles all my personal computer needs. I use a Series X for gaming.
I love my chromebook. I paid less that $200.00 for my current one two years ago, Amazon refurbished. It's four years old now and I do want to get a new one, but for $700.00, might as well just buy a laptop. I won't pay more than $300.00 for CB.
My chrome book is for traveling. My Mac laptop got dropped and I couldn’t afford another. I bought a chrome book and I can check my email and surf the web. I love it that I can watch the UA-cam videos. I wish that I could get visual studio code for the chrome book and I haven’t found something to replace my program. I have a Mac mini at home where I can use VS code and rip my music to put on my iPhone. So when I travel, I can’t work, is that a bad thing?
What I don't get is, how can we be sure of what we need when we buy a laptop. People generally use laptops for a long time and the needs might change leading to another purchase. Isn't it better to buy a laptop which can do many things apart from just the things we think we need at that point of time?
As a minimalist both philosophies make sense to me: getting fewer and more functional things, vs getting fewer and low maintenance things. In this case I'd lean toward the latter because day-to-day benefits (like battery life, simplicity, security etc. which make the device itself less of your focus) are more important to me, plus Chromebooks can do nearly everything.
Agreed to an extent, though with many people I would say it's easy to predict that how demanding their individual tasks will barely change. There are cases where it's foreseeable, for example with university students, but otherwise it would be hard to make a decision considering that there are tradeoffs (battery life etc vs more capable OS)
i need something for uni is this good
@@Usman34210: What do you study? Do you need any particular software/programming languages etc? It's impossible to give a definite answer, but while they'll work for many courses, there are some where they're better/worse than others.
@@fetchstixRHD i do accountancy and finance so i dont need anything crazy just the typical office stuff google and just something with a decent battery life tbh
I use my android phone and dell optiplex destop. I brought tv tuner for my pc and phone. I need to watch local tv without internet, play dvd , play some steam game, writing or open documents, like windows for my pc and android for my phone. If you have phone with you all the time and pc at home then you don't really need chromebook.
I got a Lenovo one as a gift for christmas and its actually not that bad. My current daily driver is a 10 year old MacBook thats staring to show its age so the chromebook is a nice secondary laptop to have.
Even though this video is two years old, I began recommending Chromebooks to a lot of people who just want to browse the web, check their email and other web-related activities. I'm retired now, but during my IT career, we used Windows. I was used to that, but after I retired, I no longer wanted to hassle with all of the Windows updates, antivirus and things like that. I purchased a Chromebook for my wife and later I purchased one for myself! I'm very happy with the Dell Chromebook that I purchased two years ago! My wife and others are very happy with their Chromebooks are also very pleased and do not have any problems!! I agree with the review!
I am a college student and I like chromebooks for online school since they have a long battery life
Loved my Chromebook, last me for the last 6 years. During the pandemic, gave it to my sister for class and she was happy with it for the year. However, the charging port is loose and has a hard time charging. I do not think I am getting another Chromebook, as I want an iPad with a nice screen and easy to carry. But for anyone that wants something simple, especially for school use then a Chromebook is really great. I might get a cheap chrome just for typing use.
I like my iPad which is why I haven’t bought a Chromebook. Bought the Magic Keyboard for it which is great even though it costs as much as several Chromebook offerings.
@@WaywardPondering even an iPad is better than a chromebook, good decision for getting one
Never looked back after getting rid of windows. Never slow, had 30 tabs open before whilst working. It does have limitations and not for everyone if you want to do any heavy gaming or design work but for most people as a family computer it does a good job. At work I still have windows and often you get the dreaded 20 minute update before you can do anything and it constantly slows. Now most things are cloud based they make sense more.
What is your chrome book model?
I recommend chromebooks to all of my students...especially since we're using the Google Classroom learning environment for our virtual classes.
I tell people about my Duet & they laugh
But I look at them like "dude. I'm not trying to game on this. I'm getting work done"
Not everyone needs some _over the top_ laptop or PC that ends up costing me four digits just to get office work done. I literally paid only $300 for the thing, plus the $35 for the USI stylus. I don't regret my choice
But now that I've seen that new Galaxy Book Go, I think I'm gonna try trading this in or selling it to get that 😅
That thing looks marvelous!
yeah its good for non-Tech guys obviously . who just want to do basic tasks
is it competition for MacOS or MS-Windows? My reasoning is: No, the Chromebook is a very capable personal computer solution, and an alternative for some of the common tasks done on a PC, and definitely not a toy.
@@silentnomad84 it's not that I'm a "non-tech guy". I just prefer mobile tech over normal computers, as everything that I know how to do I've learned through phones, as that was all I had for the longest time. Literally the only thing that I'd ever need a Windows-enabled computer for is streaming gameplay, and I recently found out I can just flash Windows onto my Chromebook, so
At the end of the day, it's really just about me keeping my life simpler by sticking to a more mobile way of completing tasks.
@@silentnomad84 also, I wouldn't limit Chromebooks to simply a "personal computer solution", as they offer services like G Suite, in addition to the administrator options for keeping things within a cohesive network for completing work duties in a normal office
I'm not saying every company should get to saving money & buy chromebooks for the whole office, as it still needs fine-tuning for a closed ecosystem, but this could work for many, and not just small, businesses as it is now.
@jake d and I don't blame you, but I never grew up with a computer in my home, hardly ever using a computer at school, let alone using one in the library that wasn't locked to a specific program for school-related tasks. Computers were just never a big part of my life
I wish they made them with DVD & disc drives... Because I feel like the disc drive's are super annoying on the Lenovo tower version. That I have is a very stressful. Because I have had it go black screen from Puting a cd disc considering I have over 370 cds,& 700 tapes and 69 Vinyls... & probably even more now, than I did before seeing that, I bought Van Halen, ice house, Def Leppard, Starship, Paul Simons, Europe, & the best of 80's, George added to the 370 plus the extra CDs, I bought from JB Hi-Fi, and I like to transfer a lot of music to USB so therefore I can play it in the car, or on my Aldi Stereo which I have had since 2009 USB flash drive surrported... And sometimes with the new Lenovo tower that I bought from Officeworks, feels very lightweight the pop out disk drive, so you need to be extremely careful when trying to place the disc on the side in the towers DVD power to go. Also have a Chromebook and I Love it to Bits... It's just Great & Iconic but doesn't support 💿DVD📀 power to go only USB SD card & other things. So is there such thing as a DVD player or somewhat on any updated Cromebooks🌍. DVD Drive Cd player for transferring it to your USB version in 🤔Chromebook💭 Edition🤷♂️.✌️.
My dad gave me his old Acer C720 when it stopped being supported. I use it for a TV hookup in my bedroom for Disney+, Netflix, etc. It'll Bluetooth to my soundbar so it's still got decent serviceability 9 years on
I just got the Acer 314 Spin 2 in 1 it has touch screen and can turn into a tablet. it has 8gb ram 128gb storage and 6000 intel celeron processor. this is my first Chromebook and I'm enjoying it. I don't do photo editing, office work, or game on my laptops. I only paid $300 for my Chromebook. I'm enjoying my Chromebook.
I am a Chromebook "homer". I'm not a gamer, don't need a lot of storage, so it is my primary computer. It does everything I need it to. I try to stay around the $300 price tag and upgrade every two years. I see no reason whatsoever to spend $1500 for a "real" computer.
Yes, they are competition! Thank you.
A little over a year ago, I purchased a Poin2 14" Chromebook on Amazon (LT0301-01US) for $166.44 new! I love using it as I am retired I mainly use it for email and accessing the internet. Just about 11 months in, the Chromebook developed some issues and I contacted Poin2 tech support. I can honestly say I have never had such great customer service! In the end, they assisted me in returning the item for repair, keeping me advised of what the issue was all along the way, and returned it to me good as new. I have used Windows since the '80s and find the Chromebook extremely easy to use without all the Windows issues.
Chrome OS has been serious competition for awhile. Every since companies have been pushing cloud, Chrome OS has made a lot of since. Since Chrome OS runs Android apps and Linux programs, I've rarely needed anything other than my Pixelbook.
Devs have been pushing all their features into iOS and Android apps because of iPad and Chrome OS's increasing popularity as portable productivity machines for both work and education.
The Linux support on ChromeOS has made it more appealing. The only issue is that most professional software is made for both Windows and macOS. So until we see more apps come to Linux, Google may struggle to push ChromeOS out to the market. But the Linux app support also benefits Linux developers since it has increased the install base of Linux apps.
My next laptop is gonna be either Chromebook or Apple…..but definitely not Windows.
I was going to buy a Samsung Chromebook then I realized if I'm going to spend $900 I might as well get a MacBook.
Or build yourself a $900 Windows gaming PC that can run steam games, Minecraft with shaders, and possibly play VR if you have a little extra to spend.
@@supercoolmunkee I'm not a gamer so that wouldn't be an option
My condolences, especially if its a Intel Macbook.
@@blomegoog lol I have the M1 MacBook
Back around 2015 when I was using a Windows-7 laptop, my computer caught a Ransomware virus that totally bricked that device (Luckily, I had a recent backup of all my data on an external HD, so I only lost about 2 weeks of work). I bought a cheap Chromebook and opened up the same Email attachment and it was immune to that virus, so now I use a Chromebook to check my Emails. I have installed Linux MINT on another old laptop and I actually like Linux MINT more than a Chromebook. With the ability to run Linux apps a Chromebook is now similar to that of having a laptop running Linux.
I love my Chromebook and it does everything great. I am 70yrs old and I dont need a powerful computer to run a company.I spend about 300 pounds and its more than enough for what I needs.
I love my Pixel Slate I use it more for web browsing than my hefty laptop.
Ever since getting a Pixelbook Go, I almost NEVER do any non-work writing on my surface or my mac. The system is just perfect for creative writing, and that keyboard! The hush keys are literally the best laptop keys I have ever used.
@@sonicjackalopeproductions3342 yes this. I want a Go too but the Slate is still doing well. Can’t wait for the next iteration of the Pixelbook series
for web browsing, email and office programms you really only need a chromebook or android tablet/ipad with a keyboard tbh. low end windows devices just feel pointless to me except if you have to run a specific software that doesnt need the extra power.
How can a person know how long a Chromebook will automatically update, when looking to buy one? The last one I bought only updated for about a year and then it wouldn't play movies any more. I didn't know Chromebooks expired.
I recently got 2 Chromebooks (acer spin 713 as a main and hp x2 11 for school) and I love em. Switched from windows to chromeos and honestly, for what I need it for, it's perfect.
Why buy expensive laptops when you "don't need" the potential to do high end stuff?
So my friends don’t laugh at me for having a chromebook
@@mr.malcolmthegreat they're not your friends if they laugh at you for something like that
@The A team there are ones as low as $75. it's not worth spending more than $250 on a chromebook tbh
Frick chromebooks!
@jake d replying to me?
Linux for ChromeOS is coming out of beta. You can install Linux full applications on your Chromebook now.
yes.
Love It! ❤️
Gracias por su contribución aquí Carlos! Soy un usuario de Linux, y lo considero padrísimo, y bacano! Bendiciones para Ud.y su Familia. Linux Rules!
Distro?
do you recommend chrome book for day trading forex ,,stocks?
So much better value for money than an iPad or an iPad pro. I highly recommend one.
Can’t even run google docs without loading for 30 minutes
This may sound stupid. Is there a chromebook that has a SIM card slot/tray so it can function like an Android smartphone. Make/receive calls and access the internet? Thanks
I had to finally buy a chromebook (Asus 525) to experience it. The biggest set back was chrome books cannot stream audio and video files presently using zoom app just like android. It's screen starts flickering while sharing video files. So I had to sell it for a windows laptop.
Improvement suggestion: Use smooth Lighting on Video. You look tired because of the bad lighting
As the family IT expert, these things seem a lot easier to support.
Chromebooks are nice for sure, it just doesn't really fit my needs.
Okay I agree that you can do what you need with a chromebook. But if you can buy an F150 and that’s all you need and there’s an F250 for the same price then there’s no reason not to get the 250 right?
I'm a teacher and sometime i need to teach remotely, prepare my lessons, work on the syllabus, power point animations, share screen, share a video via microsoft team, big blue button, zoom etc.. I always want to keep my camera on during online classes. My question, would a chromebook fill these particular needs for online sessions? Is it equipped with a webcam?
Chromebooks have webcams and Microsoft apps like Powerpoint have web versions
Great video. Since i've started using chromebooks a few years ago I love them and try to teach other's about them, everyone doesn't need to spend Macbook money to just be on the internet lol
I am trying to figure out of a chrome book is a good fit for me but I am not that tech savvy so I don’t have a clue about processing speed or any of that stuff. I am a kindergarten teacher and I just need a laptop for those rare days at work when they want us to bring a computer to meetings and such. I just want something that has a big screen, is touchscreen (because I am visually impaired), and loads pages fast. Oh yea, and cheap hahaha!
I was going to buy one for work related stuff as I have been taking my iPad Pro everywhere but I’m worried that it gets stolen or damaged
@700 dollars I would be say go go for cheap windows based laptop or add 200 and get a M1 apple
You are talking about India, where chrome books have no penetration. In developed nations they are cheaper than $250-300. Can easily be considered an impulse buy there. Cheapest ones in India are around $500
@@hirakchatterjee5240 no he mentioned about 700 dollar chrome book. There are cheaper version chromebook available in India too, similarly 250 dollar decent i5 powered windows based laptop are also available in usa. Before commenting I searched America Amazon channel 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼 problem is that we liked the review but we don't realised the limitations of chromebook. My friend brought it by going through review and he realised he can't do office work because it lacks productivity apps such as tally, or SPSS, or arc GIS etc.
Chromebook are good for those who has a another pc in house and would like a laptop for typing some projects works. 🙏🏼
@@sudiptokumar986 exactly having another windows laptop is mandatory for most office apps. I use Citrix workspace which is fortunately available in Android. But I think even it has some limitations like able to only open one instance and not supporting multiple instance. Unfornately I have a gaming laptop with beefy Discreet graphics which weights more than 2 kg and has less than 3 hours of normal usage battery. For me a Chromebooks portability and touchscreen is enticing but the price is unfortunately out of my current budget. They need to offer it at lower prices in India.
I was looking for a laptop few years ago and considered Chromebook just as Android support was rolling out. I didn't feel like waiting and bought an hp specte x360. But realistically, currently I can do everything in browser or an android app. So I would totally consider a Chromebook. However, a premium windows laptop can be bought for basically same price as premium chromebook, think pixelbook. So if price is the same or similar, why go Chromebook? And if I need linux, I can easily side load it on my windows machine, which is actually what I have now.
I think the main reasons are simplicity, security and Android support. These make them ideal convertibles/360/detachable as Windows tablet functionality and apps remain sub-par. We see that Windows apps can run on Chromebooks along with Linux and you have a device that has it all. The monthly update cycle means it is constantly improving and no buggy Windows stuff or BSOD. If it slowdowns just reset it with a powerwash, which takes 10-15 minutes and you are as good as new (I do it bi-yearly).
@navi imandiv Yes, but takes 10-15 minutes to restore your settings and apps.
The key is to not spend the premium. $200 entry-level Chromebooks are great for most.
@@craig2web True but then it is a different class of computer. But if you are buying pixelbook or even the $700 acer in the video, the purchase starts to make less sense. I kind of see chromebooks as like netbooks of circa 2010. Oh and I was a huge netbook fan in those days while being in college and having hour+ commute to school.
Thank you! That was very helpful! Nice video!
been using only chromebooks for about 6 years. for my simple needs they are great. Be aware that support and upgrades end after about 5 years.
Really the only reason I want a chromebook is for writing screenplays, but also to play games and watch streaming sites.
"Why you should consider bullying a Chromebook"
lol thats what I thought the title was
You should bully them because they suck
Ehh they're OK computers
@@CommanderBruh wow ur verified 😀
😑
How you get verified
@@WyattBiscotti haha I'm not
As you said most of people don't need to do much and a browser is all we need. So I myself have turned to Chromebook from a few years so it gets the job done.
But occasionally I do turn back to normal windows for a bit.
Hello.. May I ask if is it okay not to shut down our chromebook just like a mac? Thank you.
Yes, I like Chromebooks very much, and of course they can replace a Windows laptop for most everyday purposes. However, if you are a professional and creative user and use software that is not available on Chrome OS, then a Macbook Pro blows it out of the water and especially for the price. If you don't actually need a portable computer, and I believe a lot of people really don't, then consider an iMac or a Mac mini. They are great value for your money too. And if the computer is the tool you use to make a living, or to pursue your interests and hobbies, then the price may not be an issue at all.
I bought my Mom a Chromebook today because it was a great deal.
Exactly, most older people don't need to do anything else other than search the web, watch videos, do some typing, and not be overwhelmed with all the potential for viruses and complications that come with a Windows Laptop. Also it's cheaper than a Mac anyday. My mom pretty much just uses the web on her $1000 Mac book 🤣.
I was apprehensive when I initially purchased a chromebook. But now I felt in love with it. I am also going to get it to my son, and run linux on it. I will never ever go back to windows. This Chrome OS is light and a breeze to work upon. And no noise on my laptop as chromebooks do not have any fans. Actually windows makes dummies out of us.
I'm still confused. I found a renewed HP Elitebook 820 G3 with Windows 10, an Intel Core i5 processor, 16GB of RAM, and 256 GB of storage on Amazon. Why should I get a Chromebook if I get a cheap, high spec Windows laptops like this one? All I do is brows the web, but why not have more options? I'm not hating on Chrome OS. I just want to know why I should get a Chromebook if I can get a Windows laptop that's cheaper and can do more than a Chromebook.
I like the concept of these devices, but IMHO it’s really hard to recommend them when the iPad exists. Overlaps with the same “purpose” as Chromebook, only with more potential for doing things with apps, works with keyboards, and so much more.
Thank you!!
You just helped me make up my mind in choosing between an iPad and a Chromebook. ☺️
I like it. I bought a new one for $250. It's 17.3" it streams at the highest resolutions just fine, 10+ hours of battery life, I can get linux. I don't need to do much with it, just homework, youtube, and other web stuff.
Does Chromebook have Microsoft office so that I do my assignments with Ms word document, Excel, PowerPoint, etc?
I've been a staunch Windows user since the mid 90's and never used anything else. I have a desktop PC at home that runs Windows 10 and serves me well....I use it for 'heavy lifting' applications like Photoshop, video editing etc and it does the job.
I was looking for a laptop that I could use in the bedroom, or away from home and my needs were lightweight - surfing, checking emails, YT, the usual.....I got looking at Chromebooks and - even though I had doubt in my mind about them - eventually dived into the deep end, into the unknown - I bought a secondhand (pretty much nearly new) Asus C433T Flip Chromebook from Amazon.
It is brilliant!! It's speedy, lightweight, serves my lightweight needs online. It is well built, premium and the screen flips right over to be used as a tablet etc. It does everything I need it to do. I've also just bought a secondary portable , super slim monitor to go with it too. Just plug into the USB-C port and away you go.
Just a decade ago, if you needed to do simple basic work on a PC, Windows or a Mac was our only real choice. Chromebooks aren't for everyone, and eveyones needs are different, but for me (and perhaps most peoples General Purpose needs) a Chromebook will fit the bill.
If I had to introduce an elderly relative to the internet, I'd get them a Chromebook. Surfing, shopping, paying bills, email, video calls etc....superb!
Windows will always have its place, but for lightweight stuff, a Chromebook is worth a look at. Sadly, I find that Windows OS's do slow down over time for one reason or another, but with my Chromebook, that has NEVER happened. It just keeps on running, no questions asked.
Love my Chromebook, never looked back.
This guy is like Pat Goss but younger and does tech reviews.
I tend to recommend Chrome books to people if they answer a simple question a certain way. The question is, can you do everything you need to do on your phone? Do you really just want a much larger version of your phone? Some answer with, yes but I like to play games too. So ok do you play the games from the Google Play store? Is that what you mean by "I want something better for gaming" lol
They added linux vm (Not Native linux) in 2020
We cannot download separate files of your word or Excel we have to view them in a place after logging in and that's a deal breaker
From Google Docs? Yes, you can. Look for the 'download as' function.
@@johnblackledge4009 yes it will download as excel sheet that too in Microsoft not in chrome.
The update expiry is the 'killer' feature. Show stopper for me.
I too felt like you. protip: github sebanc brunch
Chromebooks have 8 years of guaranteed security updates from Google.
@@blomegoog Exactly! I have brought a few EOL ChromeOS devices back to fresh/current life by using Brunch! :)
So, Apple cancelling features and even removing features from their older computers is OK? Or, is it because Google will at least tell you when updates stop, and Apple just decides when they want you to buy a whole new computer without telling you. *Looks at Mac Pro users who just dropped $10K on a computer 1.5 years ago that is now obsolete due to M1*
I'm still using my old CB that doesn't get updates anymore. I'm OK with it for viewing YT videos.
I'm looking at an Acer Chromebook Spin 311 and I found one on eBay for only 100 bucks