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Phil Shapiro says 20,000 Teachers Should Unite to Spread Chromebooks (Video)

Phil Shapiro often loans his Chromebook to patrons of the public library where he works. He says people he loans it to are happily suprised at how fast it is. He wrote an article earlier this month titled Teachers unite to influence computer manufacturing that was a call to action; he says that if 20,000 teachers demand a simple, low-cost Chromebook appliance -- something like a Chrome-powered Mac mini with a small SSD instead of a hard drive, and of course without the high Mac mini price -- some computer manufacturer will bite on the idea. Monitors? There are plenty of used ones available. Ditto speakers and keyboards, not that they cost much new. The bottom line is that Phil believes Chromebooks, both in their current form factor and in a simpler one, could be "the" computer for schools and students. Maybe so, not that Android tablets are expensive or hard to use. And wait! Isn't there already a Chromebox? And even a Chromebase all-in-one Chrome-based desktop? In any case, Chrome-based computers look pretty good for schools and libraries, especially if and when prices for the simplest members of the family get down to where Phil thinks they should be. (Alternate video link)

4 of 101 comments (clear)

  1. this Chromepost smells Chromefunny by globaljustin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Chrometeachers need laptops, sure but it's not the essential tool of Chromeeducation.

    For some Chromereason, I feel like TFA is taking benefits of ***USING ANY LAPTOP*** and recasting them as Chromebenefits of using one company's product

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
  2. Stay away from my school please by KalvinB · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Chrome laptops are consumption devices. They are not creative devices.

    Schools need computers that you can hook Arduinos up to or Raspberry Pis or install Apache, MySQL, PostgreSQL, PHP, Ruby, Visual Studio Express, etc. on. Computers you can install Gimp or Photoshop on.

    They do not need fancy TVs.

    The iPad failed in LA, not because it was expensive, but because it was a very dumb idea.

    We need to get people involved in schools that at least have some clue about technology and what would be most useful to kids.

    And frankly, until we get that sorted out, you'd be better off buying the students $200-400 worth of notebook paper and pencils.

  3. Nooooo. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why do people think that relying on a corporation's cloud for all of their computer use is a good idea?
    I'm fine with the idea of demanding low-cost computers, but why must it be Google's spyware'd up version of Linux? Why not some other solution?

  4. Re:Phil has no idea what he's talking about. by edremy · · Score: 3, Informative
    $250 for a decent Chromebook? How about $200 for the Acer 720p? Find me a Windows laptop with specs anywhere near it for $200- and it better include a SSD because the 10 second boot on a Chromebook is pretty essential. I can't even find a new Windows laptop on Amazon for $200, and the few used ones have Atom processors, 10" screens and Windows 7 Basic.

    Yes, it's not a great development device. But it boots in seconds, needs no antivirus (or even maintenance), has a 8-10 hour battery life, a 13" screen and a decent keyboard and trackpad. Stick Linux on it if you want to hack away

    --
    "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"