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posted by cmn32480 on Sunday September 06 2015, @02:51AM   Printer-friendly
from the there-has-to-be-a-catch dept.

Want a free Chromebook? All you have to do is take a Linux course offered by the Linux Foundation and its yours. The offer is from Sept first to the thirtieth so if you want a Dell Chromebook with a 1.4Ghz CPU and 4GB of RAM for free? Best grab one ASAP.

Keep in mind when siging up for these courses, while the Chromebooks are free, the courses most certainly are not. According to the Class Schedule posted on the Linux Foundation site, prices range from $0 (Introduction to Linux) to $2500 and up for most everything else.

Promotion Eligibility:

This promotion is available to anyone who purchases either a scheduled or elearning Linux Foundation training course between September 1, 2015 and September 30, 2015.

The following purchases are not eligible for this promotion:

  • Free courses (such as the edX LFS101x course)
  • The India-only LFS201/LFCS Bundle
  • Corporate training
  • Linux Foundation Events
  • Discounted instances of LFS201 Essentials of System Administration and related bundles

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  • (Score: 2) by Gravis on Sunday September 06 2015, @03:57AM

    by Gravis (4596) on Sunday September 06 2015, @03:57AM (#232877)

    i dont know about the rest of you but i can't stand the small screens on these so-called computers. how can anyone be expected to do anything of significance on an eleven inch display and a cramped keyboard? did they learn nothing from the "netbooks" fiasco?

    all i really want is a machine with a bigger display, bigger battery. nice keyboard and less power sucking x86.

    Starting Score:    1  point
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 06 2015, @04:16AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 06 2015, @04:16AM (#232882)

    There are plenty of netbooks in the 13" and 15" range with 1080 displays and build quality that rival traditional laptops.

    I could get all of my non-work work done on a Chromebook (the beauty of my job is that work work doesn't follow me home). Only problem is, I already have a laptop, and I like Gnome 3. But everything else is already there: Chrome browser, Android phone, Android tablet, etc.

  • (Score: 2) by Katastic on Sunday September 06 2015, @05:06AM

    by Katastic (3340) on Sunday September 06 2015, @05:06AM (#232892)

    You mean like ... taking notes? Diagnosing Wifi problems with simple terminal commands and so on?

    I use my Chromebook C720 almost every day for work when I'm at a client. I used to dread having to lug around my P.O.S. HP laptop.

    • (Score: 2) by Gravis on Sunday September 06 2015, @05:49AM

      by Gravis (4596) on Sunday September 06 2015, @05:49AM (#232900)

      You mean like ... taking notes? Diagnosing Wifi problems with simple terminal commands and so on?

      no, nothing like that at all. debugging code and browsing the internet works much better with a larger screen.

      I use my Chromebook C720 almost every day for work when I'm at a client. I used to dread having to lug around my P.O.S. HP laptop.

      in your case it seems like a handheld andoid device would be enough.

  • (Score: 5, Touché) by deimios on Sunday September 06 2015, @05:13AM

    by deimios (201) Subscriber Badge on Sunday September 06 2015, @05:13AM (#232896) Journal

    Yeah, nobody likes small screens. That's why mobile computing never took off. It's like you go online on a PC or not at all. Nothing like waiting to get home to my PC so I can SSH into my server to reboot some poorly written webapp, couldn't do that from a netbook on the road. That would be blasphemy.

    • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Gravis on Sunday September 06 2015, @05:51AM

      by Gravis (4596) on Sunday September 06 2015, @05:51AM (#232901)

      that can easily be done on a hand held device like a smartphone. why bother with a netbook when a phone could do what you need?

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 06 2015, @01:47PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 06 2015, @01:47PM (#232970)

        Because I don't want some shitty spyphone? Cell phones are mere tracking devices, which is why I don't use them.

        • (Score: 2) by hemocyanin on Sunday September 06 2015, @02:04PM

          by hemocyanin (186) on Sunday September 06 2015, @02:04PM (#232972) Journal

          What would you call a chromebook then?

          • (Score: 2) by Hyperturtle on Sunday September 06 2015, @07:46PM

            by Hyperturtle (2824) on Sunday September 06 2015, @07:46PM (#233049)

            Somebody else's problem?

            I wouldn't use one.

            I prefer a big screen and local data and so on... but sometimes in order to get paid, I can't rightly complain about what I have been given.

            Fortunately, no one has handed me a chromebook. I am pretty clear their target audience is not for the one I am in, but clearly they fill a niche of computing that someone else needed answered. All the more (or less, as the case is) power to them.

  • (Score: 2, Informative) by SunTzuWarmaster on Sunday September 06 2015, @02:44PM

    by SunTzuWarmaster (3971) on Sunday September 06 2015, @02:44PM (#232980)

    I have a chromebook and like it a lot. I'm a soylent techie, so my story may not be universal, but here are some things that I like about it:
    1 - PRICE: You can get a chromebook for $129. ONE HUNDRED and TWENTY NINE dollars (http://www.bestbuy.com/site/acer-11-6-chromebook-intel-celeron-2gb-memory-16gb-emmc-flash-memory-moonstone-white/8610161.p?id=1219351773817). To put this in perspective, I could re-buy my phone for $150. I tell people that "this price screws with your head". You start to think things like "disposable computer" at this price.
    2 - Configuration. I use Chrome. Like, a lot. The fact that I have the chromebook set to automatically download all updates, all apps, and sync certain folders to be enabled offline is amazing. Less than an hour of total configuration and everything "just works".
    3 - Chrome. Generally, a full Chrome browser is embarrassingly better than my smartphone. It can stream tabs to chromecast, ssh into computers, configure routers, etc. A notable test is the "putlocker video test". Phone can't quite pull it off, but Chromebook can.
    4 - Battery/weight. at 13 hours of battery life and 3 pounds, it is light and strong. It can realistically be used all day. Compare this to an Ultrabook ("best laptop battery of 2015") at 6ish hours, 3 pounds, and $600 (4.6 times the cost).
    5 - Full keyboard. The keyboard is JUST good enough to matter. I can write on it for over three hours without it being a superpain (real keyboard would be nicer, but you know). I developed a Chrome app using nothing but a chromebook. It's powerful enough for lightweight software development and comfortable enough to do it. I challenge you to do that from a tablet or smartphone.
    6 - Extras. Mine came with 100Gb of storage for 2 years and 12 airplane wifi passes a few years ago. That's nice, especially at this price point.

    Generally, for $129, you can get a computer which can do anything on the web, last for over 10 hours, has a full keyboard, weighs 3 pounds, and comes with some extras. Compare this cost to an android tablet ($160, doesn't have a keyboard), an ipad ($300, no keyboard), netbook ($120 range, but isn't going to be updated/configured as well), or laptop (4 times the cost and only 20-40% more functionality, bad battery life). That price point makes it a nearly ideal travel computer (ssh into a real machine for real work), D&D computer, "writer's laptop", note-taking/E-mailing device, or generally a "treat it like crap" computer. At home I have a two-monitor supercomputer, but when traveling I mostly just need some internet and a keyboard. For bonus points, the chromebook, with a Chromecast, turns any (hotel) TV into a monitor, solving the biggest weakness.