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posted by martyb on Monday September 03 2018, @07:05PM   Printer-friendly
from the good-fast-cheap;-pick-two dept.

$600 Chromebooks are a dangerous development for Microsoft

Among the new hardware launched this week at IFA in Berlin are a couple of premium Chromebooks. Lenovo's $600 Yoga Chromebook brings high-end styling and materials to the Chromebook space, along with well-specced internals and a high quality screen. Dell's $600 Inspiron Chromebook 14 has slightly lower specs but is similarly offering better styling, bigger, better quality screens, and superior specs to the Chromebook space. These systems join a few other premium Chromebooks already out there. HP's Chromebook x2 is a $600 convertible hybrid launched a few months ago, and Samsung has had its Chromebook Plus and Pro systems for more than a year now. And of course, Google's Pixelbook is an astronomically expensive Chrome OS machine. These systems should cause ripples in Redmond.

[...] Lenovo reps told us that its new Chromebook was developed because the company was seeing demand for Chromebooks from users with a bit more disposable income. For example, new college students that had used Chrome OS at high school and families who wanted the robustness Chrome OS offers are looking for machines that are more attractive, use better materials, and are a bit faster and more powerful. The $600 machines fit that role.

And that's why Microsoft should be concerned. This demand shows a few things. Perhaps most significantly of all, it shows that Chrome OS's mix of Web applications, possibly extended with Android applications, is good enough for a growing slice of home and education users. Windows still has the application advantage overall, but the relevance of these applications is diminishing as Web applications continue to improve. A browser and the Web are sufficient to handle the needs of a great many users. No Windows necessary, not even to run the browser. Second, this demand makes clear that exposure to Chrome OS in school is creating sustained interest in, and even commitment to, the platform. High school students are wanting to retain that familiar environment as they move on. The ecosystem they're a part of isn't the Windows ecosystem.

Finally, it also shows that Chrome OS's relatively clean-slate approach (sure, it's Linux underneath, but it's not really being pushed as a way of running traditional Linux software) has advantages that are appealing even to home users. The locked down, highly secure Chrome OS machines require negligible maintenance while being largely immune to most extant malware. And the platform's cloud syncing means that even chores like backups can be largely avoided. Microsoft may be trying to offer the same with Windows, in particular Windows 10 S-Mode, but it's going to take a rather more radical change to Windows to really rival Chrome OS in this regard.


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  • (Score: 2, Troll) by The Shire on Monday September 03 2018, @11:32PM (3 children)

    by The Shire (5824) on Monday September 03 2018, @11:32PM (#730028)

    It's widespread becase 1) It's exceptionally business enterprise friendly in ways Linux and OS X are not, 2) It's a better gaming platform than Linux or OS X (though that is rapidly changing with Metal and Vulkan), and 3) It has incredibly broad hardware support which OS X definitely does NOT.

    Primarily Windows is a business OS and that means commodity hardware gets created for it which in turn makes the cost of entry for the consumer lower. This as opposed to the costly and limited hardware you see available for OS X. I can load Windows on a very old machine, I can't load OS X anywhere but on Apple hardware and only recent Apple hardware. Linux, like Windows, has very broad hardware support as well, but it lacks in software and it's a massive pain to manage as a desktop OS in a business setting.

    Basically, Windows is a general purpose OS which is why it is widespread. OS X is primarily used by those in the design world and people who like the smell of their own farts. Linux works best as a server OS and as a neckbeard workstation. If you want to talk about marketing and exclusivity you need to be poking at OS X with a stick, not Windows.

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  • (Score: 5, Funny) by SpockLogic on Tuesday September 04 2018, @12:39AM (1 child)

    by SpockLogic (2762) on Tuesday September 04 2018, @12:39AM (#730050)

    OS X is primarily used by those in the design world and people who like the smell of their own farts.

    There was me thinking I was a smart feller but you have demoted me to a fart smeller. Oh the shame.

    --
    Overreacting is one thing, sticking your head up your ass hoping the problem goes away is another - edIII
    • (Score: 2) by The Shire on Tuesday September 04 2018, @12:50AM

      by The Shire (5824) on Tuesday September 04 2018, @12:50AM (#730053)

      Hey, I'm not judging you for your tastes. You be you!

  • (Score: 2) by stretch611 on Tuesday September 04 2018, @01:29AM

    by stretch611 (6199) on Tuesday September 04 2018, @01:29AM (#730061)

    OS X is primarily used by those in the design world and people who like the smell of their own farts.

    Does the fact that I enjoy my farts and desire to freely share them with as many people as I can make me a good linux user?

    Linux works best as a server OS and as a neckbeard workstation.

    I use linux on the desktop, but I have what is described more as a goatee than neckbeard.

    --
    Now with 5 covid vaccine shots/boosters altering my DNA :P