11 June 2019

Chromebook Experiment Results

This is a followup to my Chromebook Experiment post from November of 2011.

I did purchase a Chromebook a few years ago. A Samsung Chromebook 3. Overall, I'm pretty satisfied with it. Yes, it can be slow (it uses a Celeron processor and has 2 GB of RAM), but as far as limitations imposed by the OS, I haven't really found any. To be completely honest, it's faster than the little desktop computers provided by my employer.  It's not by any means usable for more than casual gaming, like Solitaire, but it does what I need it to do, it's lightweight, and has incredible battery life. I have two users set up on it, and I'm thinking about adding a third one (don't ask 😆). I can access pretty much any document I need to, and I haven't really found a website that won't work with it. Granted, I miss MS Office, since we use it heavily at work.

The main thing I miss is good design programs. But, I'm not doing nearly as much design work as I used to, and if I need to I can use my desktop at home. So, my verdict?

I don't regret getting it. It suits my needs, although I sometimes think about getting one that's a little more powerful. As long as you understand it's limitations and can work with them, It's an excellent little laptop. I love the way I don't have to worry about updates. Chrome OS just does them, and if I need to restart, it tells me (which, btw, is a lot faster than restarting Windows or Mac OS X). If you're on the fence about Chromebooks, and you can find it at a good price (mine was about $150 US), I think you'll be pleased with it.

Review: Hidden in Snow (Viveca Sten)

  Snow. Cold. Mountains. Darkness. You find these things a lot in Nordic Noir. And while Viveca Sten isn't usually included in lists of ...