A couple of weeks ago I invested in a Chromebook. We have two laptops, mine is pretty much kaput, and full to bursting with work stuff. It's also missing a space bar thanks to the toddler. The husband's laptop was running very slowly, the battery has gone so it has to remain plugged in and it is missing quite a lot of keys (toddlers like to break everything). I was hesitant about buying yet another laptop, for the keys to be ripped off and for it to be on it's last legs within a couple of years.
I needed a laptop as I struggle with the small screens on phones when trying to navigate crochet patterns. The size of the iPad screen is ok, but I'm doing a lot of typing for my blog, business and writing crochet patterns so really need a proper keyboard. It's also full of Peppa Pig games and videos for the kids, so not a lot of storage space left.
I had come across Chromebooks but written them off as husband told me it's just a browser. But then, that's all I do....browse! Well, not just browse, I use browser based software too. I have found that since ditching my iPhone for an android powered HTC phone, my digital life has been taken over by Google. They now look after my email, my photos, my documents, my music, my blog... And all for free too. Hmm, maybe a Google based laptop wouldn't be such a bad idea.
So, I bit the bullet and parted with £199, with the warning from my husband not to expect much.
It arrived a few days later, the box ever so slightly bashed but the packaging was just a plastic packing bag, no padding whatsoever. It was well packaged inside so no damage caused. I unpacked and checked all components were present and correct. There was a quick start guide which I dutifully followed. Basically, plug it in, switch it on and follow the on screen instructions.
After logging on to the network, it asked for my Google log in ID and password, gave me a quick tour and we were good to go! I went straight to the Chrome store, to get those all important apps, Facebook and Twitter. Turns out, they are basically just a bookmark. Clicking the Facebook button simply takes you to the Facebook page. Ditto Twitter. So it truly is browser based.
- It's very quick to start up, ~ 7 seconds apparently, although I usually just shut the lid and reopening it boots it up instantly.
- The battery life is impressive. I've only charged it three times in the last 12 days.
- My husband and daughter have since added their Google IDs to it so we can just log on as ourselves and not have to search through all the browser tabs to find what we were last looking at.
- It's almost impossible to get a fingernail under the keys, so hopefully the toddler won't ping them off! I say almost, I can't rule out that the toddler won't destroy it yet.
- It comes with 100Gb of Google drive storage, free for two years. This is fab because I can always access things that are on my phone and vice versa.
- It's always up to date.
- The build quality on this model is excellent. It's thin and light but feels robust. There are two USB ports, a HDMI port, an SD slot and a headphone port.
A couple of issues I've had..
- The wifi has randomly dropped out once or twice. This has been remedied by that old solution, switch it off and on again.
- There isn't a caps lock but alt + the magnifying glass button puts caps lock on.
- I can't find a delete button. There is a backspace which deletes but this means putting the cursor after the thing you want to delete. I expect the delete key involves some kind of multiple button combo that I am yet to find.
That's it. I am really pleased with it and even the husband is.
If you have any comments or questions, are a fellow Chromebook convert or just want to say hello, please leave me a comment below.
On my laptop (not a chrome book) it also doesn't have a delete key - only a backspace key. However if you press "fn" and then backspace, it does a delete action! I'd be interested if that works for you!
ReplyDeleteTim
No "fn" key here but tried "alt" + backspace and it worked! Thanks Tim.
Delete