My new computer

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Pale Rider

Legendary Member
I am the recent but so far pleased new owner of an Asus Chromebook.

Mine is 11.6", plenty big enough for my portable web surfing and emailing needs.

It's surprisingly thin - shades of a MacBook Air - and light.

Plenty of connections - no shades of anything Apple - including full size and mini usbs.

Quaint I know, but I like to use a usb mouse.

Start up time is literally a few seconds - by the time I've typed in my Gmail password I'm online.

Shut down is even faster, only marginally slower than turning off a lightbulb.

Best of all for me is battery life.

I've used it connected to my mobile's wi-fi hotspot for two working days, each time it used about half of the battery.

It will need charging most days, but being able to leave it on and use it all day is very convenient.

Presumably, the Chrome OS is limiting in some respects, but I can't think of anything I want to do that can't be done in a web browser.

There's a handful of apps installed, most of which I will never use, although Gmail offline might come in handy.

The cost of all this personal computing loveliness was just £149.

http://www.argos.co.uk/product/5993923

Here's a few pics of the computer in its natural habitat.

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Vapin' Joe

Formerly known as Smokin Joe
Quaint I know, but I like to use a usb mouse.
I'm with you there. Those touch pads drive me up the wall and I use a wireless mouse on the laptop.
 
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Pale Rider

Pale Rider

Legendary Member
That's a superb price. My current laptop is on its way out so I may have to look at one of those.

Certainly worth a squint.

The limiting factor may be everything locked down to the Chrome OS and browser.

That has lots of features now, and I suspect many laptop users are like me - they don't do much else other than web browsing, email, maybe watch the occasional vid, all of which a Chromebook will do.

No doubt there are some things a Chromebook can't do.

In your case, you'd need to check you can do your modding duties without any special programs in addition to a standard web browser.

Storage isn't enormous - 32gb on mine - not a problem for me as I don't want to store lots of stuff, but some people like to store hours and hours of video which takes up lots of space.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
My missus has a Chromebook. She loves it, and for general surfing, emailing, and note taking it's not proven deficient in any way.
 

Hill Wimp

Fair weathered,fair minded but easily persuaded.
Certainly worth a squint.

The limiting factor may be everything locked down to the Chrome OS and browser.

That has lots of features now, and I suspect many laptop users are like me - they don't do much else other than web browsing, email, maybe watch the occasional vid, all of which a Chromebook will do.

No doubt there are some things a Chromebook can't do.

In your case, you'd need to check you can do your modding duties without any special programs in addition to a standard web browser.

Storage isn't enormous - 32gb on mine - not a problem for me as I don't want to store lots of stuff, but some people like to store hours and hours of video which takes up lots of space.
My technical computer knowledge can be written on a postage stamp.

All I need my laptop for is surfing,skyping, and the odd letter.
 

Hill Wimp

Fair weathered,fair minded but easily persuaded.

mjr

Comfy armchair to one person & a plank to the next
That's could be the killer for me as I need to be able to have the video and the sound.
Shame:sad:
Time to move from Microsoft Skype to discord, spreed, Talky, Jitsi Meet... heck, even Facebook video calls are more open. Unsurprisingly, Microsoft Skype prefers Microsoft systems. It'll probably end up punished by the EU market competition regulators again eventually, but it would be better if users punished it first IMO.
 
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Pale Rider

Pale Rider

Legendary Member
I tried to fire up Skype on the Chromebook.

Seems to work OK on voice in what I believe is called a web app.

There's some stuff online about video being in the pipeline, and it appears Chrome OS and Android is moving ever closer together.

Seems likely at some point all Android apps will work on Chromebooks.
 

Chris S

Legendary Member
Location
Birmingham
Can you install another Linux OS on a Chromebook, either by itself or as a dual-boot?
I need to do a remote desktop connection to my computer at work. This is easy using Remmina but would be difficult using the Chrome software.
 
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