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Samsung Chromebook Series 5 Review

snydeq writes "InfoWorld's Neil McAllister takes an in-depth look at the Samsung Chromebook Series 5 3G and finds the device comparatively lackluster. 'The Chromebook is lightweight and inexpensive, and it offers a full-featured Web browsing experience. But its low-end hardware, lack of versatility, and primitive support for commonplace computing tasks such as printing, file management, networking, and media playback make it a poor choice for everyday use, particularly in a business setting,' McAllister writes. 'All in all, the Samsung Series 5 is an average-quality netbook with a large screen and a higher-than-average price tag, while Chrome OS itself feels more like a proof-of-concept project whose time has not yet come.'"

2 of 136 comments (clear)

  1. Chrome OS = thin client all over again by eobanb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Remember when thin clients were all the rage, guys? Remember Bill Joy telling us the network is the computer? It was true!

    Well, kinda...

    As it turns out, internet access isn't ubiquitous, at least not yet. In the age of 4G smartphones and tablets we'd like to think it's ubiquitous, but you really only notice that it's not when you have a system like a Chrome OS laptop that literally does not function at all without a network connection.

    Even if it were available all the time (airplanes, underground, in the wilderness) it's still not fast enough. And even if it were fast enough, presently we have to deal with usage caps.

    Chrome OS is an idea way too far ahead of its time. Right now there's no reason to ditch native software that works perfectly well.

    --

    Take off every sig. For great justice.

  2. Re:Right tool for the job... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The issue with this "Chromebook", from my perspective, is that it manages to be as or more expensive(and no better in terms of battery life or weight/build quality) than an equivalent netbook/cheapie laptop.

    If I can save money by buying something else and just running Chrome in full screen on Ubuntu or something, or don't get it.

    I find Google's experiment conceptually interesting, and its continued evolution will be something to see; but in its present state(while I wouldn't turn a free one down) it doesn't seem to be worth any premium over whatever netbook is winning the knife-fight-in-a-telephone booth on price/performance today, just running a web browser most of the time.