Re: Has anyone here tried a Chromebook?

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Author: Nathan England
Date:  
To: Main PLUG discussion list
Subject: Re: Has anyone here tried a Chromebook?

And the battery in the laptop (if you leave it in, which I typically do) works
as a battery backup should power go out... Net tops don't have that!

Nathan

On Monday, January 14, 2013 14:14:42 keith smith wrote:



That would work, however they cost more than a netbook.

------------------------
Keith Smith

--- On Mon, 1/14/13, Stephen <> wrote:


From: Stephen <>
Subject: Re: Has anyone here tried a Chromebook?
To: "Main PLUG discussion list" <>
Date: Monday, January 14, 2013, 2:50 PM


sounds like a net top would be perfect for you then. they are a netbook
without the keyboard battery and screen. install centos on it and leave it
alone.


http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Description=nettops&Submit=ENE




On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 2:39 PM, keith smith <> wrote:



I think they have more value than just browsing the web. I am a LAMP dev. I
use a cheap HP Laptop as my dev server. It is not much better than this
Chromebook and I'm using a HP Pavilion g6 (cheap and on sale) for my
workstation - very bottom of the line.

For instance, a fellow PLUG member was walking me through setting up a virtual
machine. He was using a netbook with the Intel chip that was prior to the
Intel Atom N455 and he was beating me. I am running an AMD A4-3300 running at
1.9GHtz and 4GB RAM. I think his netbook was running at 1.3GHz and it
probably had only 1GB RAM.

I think these cheap Netbook are more powerful than they might seem. I would
not use one if I were a designer because they might not have enough power.
However I find them to be very useful and they are cheap.

I know they are way more powerful than my old broken down 11 year old laptop
running a 1Ghz Celeron w/256MB RAM. 2 years ago I loaded CentOS on it and
configured it to run as a mail server using Qmail Toaster. It was only a
test, however it ran just fine.

I've been toying with configuring a Netbook as a public facing LAMP web server
for testing.

The Tucson Free Unix Group (TFUG) used a laptop for a couple years to serve
their website. Not for an active website, however it worked just find. AND
it served the mailing list.

For me the computer is waiting most of the time for me to type so these small 
cheap computers work well.  If I were compiling C or C++ all the time I would 
want something substantially faster, however I am not.     


Anyone else using Netbooks or cheap laptops in a production environment?     


------------------------
Keith Smith

--- On Mon, 1/14/13, Stephen <> wrote:


From: Stephen <>
Subject: Re: Has anyone here tried a Chromebook?
To: "Main PLUG discussion list" <>
Date: Monday, January 14, 2013, 12:02 PM


The Pros are its cost/performance. They generally run very well for what they
do. The battery life is pretty good also.
The cons you cannot fall back to Firefox for sites that will not allow chrome,
and you are using a small net-book that is 100% purpose built to run just a
browser.


Within that there are a number of tools giving you a great deal of
functionality inside the chrome browser as a plugin. One of my favorites of
these is an SSH client. they also have RDP and VNC clients as well. so in a
pinch you can remote someplace and get something done..



On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 11:41 AM, <> wrote:


Thanks for sharing this, Keith.
Seems like a Chromebook might be excellent for travel.
One can readily see some good "pros" ... what are the "cons"?

https://play.google.com/store/devices/details?id=chromebook_acer_c710&utm_campaign=en&utm_source=en-
ha-na-us-gdn-acer&utm_medium=ha

How superior is Intel Atom N455 dual core performance than Intel Celeron
dual core?

Seems like the Samsung Chromebook at $249 is better in a lot of ways.
Longer battery life and perhaps better construction.




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Stephen

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Stephen

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