I am headed off on a long trip abroad this summer, and I did not want to be bringing my $2500 macbook pro with me, so I decided I wanted to look at what the current chromebook offerings were. To my surprise I ended up picking up a Samsung Chromebook Plus. It is not in the "throw-away" price zone of the $200 chromebooks, but the 12" screen, real (albeit a little cramped) keyboard, touch screen, and 360 degree flip screen, plus the ability to run Android apps in addition to Chrome web apps sold me. That and the fact that it weighs 2.38 pounds, and is about as thick, in both pieces as two iphones,
So, I've had the Chromebook Plus for a few days. I put a 128gb microSD card in the slot, and began playing with it. Chrome OS and Android are definitely in beta. Some android apps run great, some are buggy. Android apps running on Chrome OS run in their own sort of sandbox, and have their own settings (as if it was a Android tablet). You can't manipulate the fonts and text size nearly as much in the apps as you can in Chrome OS. BUT the idea, while more beta than I would like, is a good one, and is in many ways what we are slowly seeing in the Mac OS and iOS convergence.
What Android gives to Chrome OS is a LOT of expansion opportunities, and makes it a much more appealing OS. For example, I have the Android Outlook app - works just like Android on my iPhone/iPad, and is far easier to deal with than the web version of Office 365. Evernote is the full app too, not just Evernote web client. The New York times and Washington Post apps are very good, particularly in 12" tablet mode.
I will be traveling for 24 days starting mid-June and was really nervous of being gone that long without my Mac. I am now quite confident that I will do fine with the chromebook plus and my iPad. (I could probably go without the latter if I wanted or just bring my older iPad mini -- but I will be taking a lot of notes, and I like to use the iPad Pro and its pencil in notability. Plus AudioNote for iPad is just a phenomenal app.
If you are checking out chromebooks, do take a look at the chromebook plus. Nice form factor, 4gb ram, 32gb storage, plus capabilty of a 256GB micro SD card to expand it. Laptop and tablet. With a real keyboard.
So, I've had the Chromebook Plus for a few days. I put a 128gb microSD card in the slot, and began playing with it. Chrome OS and Android are definitely in beta. Some android apps run great, some are buggy. Android apps running on Chrome OS run in their own sort of sandbox, and have their own settings (as if it was a Android tablet). You can't manipulate the fonts and text size nearly as much in the apps as you can in Chrome OS. BUT the idea, while more beta than I would like, is a good one, and is in many ways what we are slowly seeing in the Mac OS and iOS convergence.
What Android gives to Chrome OS is a LOT of expansion opportunities, and makes it a much more appealing OS. For example, I have the Android Outlook app - works just like Android on my iPhone/iPad, and is far easier to deal with than the web version of Office 365. Evernote is the full app too, not just Evernote web client. The New York times and Washington Post apps are very good, particularly in 12" tablet mode.
I will be traveling for 24 days starting mid-June and was really nervous of being gone that long without my Mac. I am now quite confident that I will do fine with the chromebook plus and my iPad. (I could probably go without the latter if I wanted or just bring my older iPad mini -- but I will be taking a lot of notes, and I like to use the iPad Pro and its pencil in notability. Plus AudioNote for iPad is just a phenomenal app.
If you are checking out chromebooks, do take a look at the chromebook plus. Nice form factor, 4gb ram, 32gb storage, plus capabilty of a 256GB micro SD card to expand it. Laptop and tablet. With a real keyboard.