-
16 votes
-
Chromebooks will get updates for ten years
23 votes -
“Gaming Chromebooks” with Nvidia GPUs apparently killed with little fanfare
11 votes -
Purchase a Chromebook or "regular" laptop?
I'm looking to buy a new device and have started to look at chromebooks to see if it would be a suitable option. My use cases are pretty mundane: Online banking and other similar services Emailing...
I'm looking to buy a new device and have started to look at chromebooks to see if it would be a suitable option. My use cases are pretty mundane:
- Online banking and other similar services
- Emailing
- As a tool for GMing RPG campaigns (probably managed through some online service)
- Stream video while traveling (eg Netflix, YouTube)
- Note taking & drawing (possibly with a stylus)
- Occasionally ssh to remote machines
Arguably the heaviest of these would be streaming, but I guess most devices can handle that decently. Since I won't be doing any gaming or heavy dev work (on the actual machine) I figured I don't really have very high hardware requirements. As such perhaps a chromebook would be a good option. There are some downsides, mainly for me that it is heavily tied to the Google ecosystem. Can chromebooks be easily jailbroken and run a lightweight window manager on Linux? If so does the device retain its battery life okish? Could I still use a stylus with the device? Would I be better off buying a cheap laptop and install linux on that?
Finally I've read that Google cancled their Pixelbook 2 last year. Has there been any updates or rumors of it coming back (I tend to like Google's hardware)?
24 votes -
The best Chromebooks for students (and how to choose the right one)
4 votes -
A Danish city built Google into its schools – then banned it
12 votes -
Denmark bans Chromebooks and Google Workspace in schools over data transfer risks
25 votes -
Google said Steam had arrived on Chromebooks, but now says it’s ‘coming soon’
11 votes -
Google acquires Neverware, a company that turns old PCs into Chromebooks
13 votes -
Breaking up is hard to do: Chrome Web Browser separates from Chrome OS
11 votes -
Geforce NOW Beta on Chromebook - play.geforcenow.com
6 votes -
Google has made significant progress toward developing its own processor to power future versions of its Pixel phones and Chromebooks
11 votes -
Google is working to bring official support for Steam to Chrome OS
12 votes -
Google and Dell team up to take on Microsoft with Chromebook Enterprise laptops
8 votes -
New Chrome OS will add support for Linux apps
13 votes -
$600 Chromebooks are a dangerous development for Microsoft
16 votes