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The Lenovo Chromebook: Another Nail in Microsoft's Coffin
The Lenovo Chromebook: Another Nail in Microsoft's Coffin
By Anton Wahlman 01/15/13 - 06:00 AM EST The Street And Microsoft is only one major target. "NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Many of us have had one. In fact, for those working for corporate America, we have been issued one every three or so years for the better part of the last 20 years. I'm talking about a ThinkPad laptop, of course. It was first made by IBM and in the last decade Lenovo. It was black, had a great keyboard, a matte screen, and it remains the most reliable Windows laptop around. Each of those millions of Lenovo ThinkPads ran the latest version of Microsoft's Windows. One could argue that the Lenovo ThinkPad was Microsoft's face of corporate America on the road. In other words, Microsoft and the ThinkPad laptop were locked in arms against all PC challengers of the past, from Sun to Linux to Apple's Mac. Brothers in arms, locked together in that sturdy black box residing on traveling corporate America's lap, it was Microsoft's Chinese defense wall. This is about to change. In 2013, Lenovo will break with its Microsoft Windows exclusivity and start offering PCs -- laptops and desktops alike -- based on Google's PC operating system, Chrome OS. Such laptops and desktops are commonly called "Chromebooks" and "Chromeboxes," respectively. Why is Lenovo doing this?" The Nail Gun |
I don't really see it being much of a nail, considering Chromebooks are almost more useless than tablets for doing anything beyond entertainment/gimmick work.
I mean, sure if you're buying a laptop to use Facebook. Vendor exclusivity sailed ship a few years ago. |
Cool; more competition is better.
What I'd really like to see is a Chromebox priced in the $199~$249 range. |
I would definitely buy a Lenovo Chromebook. I rarely use any programs that won't work in a browser and so long as I can open an SSH session, i'm happy.
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These devices may have a place in corporations, but the article itself is hyperbole. My favourite was the bit about zero support costs. Greatly reduced, perhaps, but any asset will incur costs to acquire, manage, and dispose of. The bit about Office was hilarious too, since it completely misses the point: people use Office for interoperability. No viruses or malware, well that got a few giggles. As soon as a product is worth targetting, someone will find an attack vector.
The Chromebook may or may not be a wonder machine. I don't know. What I do know is that particular article lacks credibility based upon the arguments presented within it. |
I have a Chromebook and like it, but I don't see why it has to be a nail in Microsoft's coffin, I'm not "Team Chromebook". I wouldn't count out Microsoft. Linux hasn't toppled Microsoft. The Chromebook seems to be selling well, but I don't think it is a "there can be only one" situation.
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But who would click on that story? :p |
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I watch this closely
big question is connection wifi 3G if have connection then many uses dont need MS or Apple or Intel hardware with 3G no need spreadsheet docs database in cloud backup automatic sharing automatic updates automatic virus prot automatic no connection then question on how operates my question yet unanswered will it work over sat phone? |
Wow, servers and work stations, i.e., the Cloud and Chromebooks. What goes around comes around.
I think I'll stick to my stand alone device that will still work even if I don't have broadband. It would even work if I only had, gasp, dial-up. :) |
The Chromebook seems more like the final nail in privacy's coffin --- everything online only. Thanks, but no thanks.
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And if the machine storing your important data is offline, you are screwed if you really need access now.
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