Vulcan Post

6 Months with a Chromebook: The Good and the Inconvenient

6 months ago on an uneventful weekend, I was looking for  a new computer. My old laptop had finally croaked and the Nexus 7 tablet was feeling tiny in my hands.

I was looking for something with a decent screen size, light weight and preferably with a keyboard. Tablets are great for flipping through news on Flipboard and watching YouTube but they are really lacking when it comes to typing things on them. I was looking for a lightweight cheap laptop which would satisfy my basic needs of typing and browsing.

Every electronic shop and megastore in Singapore seemed to push you to buy Windows 8. Firstly, I hate laptops with touchscreen which would just get covered by layers of oil from my finger and even now the Windows 8 interface does not manage to excite me. In one of those “Electronic Megastores” in Singapore, hiding quietly was something which looked like a smallish “Macbook Air” but running only the Chrome browser. Turned out it was the Samsung Chromebook running the much intriguing Chrome OS.

Chromebook Photo: Alex Washburn / Wired

Asking the non enthusiastic salesman did not help, as everyone in Singapore would know they mostly do not care about what they sell and will try to push for the most overpriced overrated product to earn a commission. Messing around with it, what struck me was how light weight it was (later I found out it weighed 1.1 kg almost the same as the Macbook Air 11 inch model) and the fact that it booted up as fast as a tablet, unlike those clunky Windows machines which just take forever.

At the end of the day, all I do with a laptop is mostly to browse the internet, write stuff on some of my blogs and maybe watch a few videos on Coursera and Lynda. For this purpose, the Chromebook was perfect. I told myself that worst case scenario it is a loss of S$449 and I end up with another discarded piece of electronics in my house.

Chrome OS

Impressions

The Inconvenient

6 Months Later, and I am still fond of it

I am still fond of it thanks to the light weight and decent battery life. It is worth every dollar of the S$ 449 and it is still fast as the first day I bought it thanks to the absence of manufacturer installed bloatware. The keyboard makes me choose it over a tablet anyday.

Guess what I just wrote this entire article on my Chromebook too.

Also read: Apple to increase app store prices, pressured by tough competition?

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