It looks like the simplicity is not enough of a selling point for this type of OS, which seems to be way ahead of it's time.
Google needs to make them way cheaper to get over the limiting factor of no native apps.People may not use native apps so much, but they like the feeling that they can, if they need to.
They messed up by not making any killer apps specifically for the Chromebook. Unfortunately choosing Atom means they can't really make any killer apps even if they wanted.
They need to ditch the atom processors. They should be embarrassed that their new hotness flagship product, Google+, is unusably slow on the Chromebooks. Even an individual post, which only contains the header bar and some text, is unusably slow.
I have one of the pilot Chromebooks they were sending out for free a year or so ago. It's not just Google+, it's nearly any of the cool things you'd want to do online. Watching any kind of video is unbearably laggy. Heavy sites like (new) Twitter or (as mentioned) Google+ are completely unusable due to scrolling/typing lag. I get the "release early" mantra but I use my Chromebook for light browsing only. It can't possibly replace a real notebook.
I also have a Series 5. Perhaps our tolerance for lag is simply different. For me scrolling an individual post is completely laggy. I avoid using Google+ for this reason.
The Asus Transformer Prime might be disqualified because it's not chromeos and it doesn't have a built in hardware keyboard, but it's a quad-core tegra tablet running gingerbread and soon ICS (keyboard optional).
This would be a killer feature for me. If a notebook can have a similar battery life as an iPad, that's a huge feature.
If I have a keyboard/track(pad|point) combo, I don't need/want a touchscreen. Thus I'd prefer a halfway-decent ARM chromebook over, say, a Transformer Prime, or an iPad+bt-keyboard-case (otherwise you're spending half your time with your arm raised, messing with the touchscreen)
I've been waiting for that for a while, and even bought an Efika MX Smartbook.
It's not worth it.Just buy an AMD fusion laptop. I got the Thinkpad E325 and it's much more powerful than either Atom or all current ARM chips and battery lasts for 7h+.
So is the architecture killing this thing? My Galaxy Tab 10.1 has no problem with video, Google+, or 3D gaming. It sounds that by anchoring this product to cheap netbook architecture they're shooting themselves in the foot.
The price drop - from $500 to $300 - is the most significant new 'feature' here. These devices just aren't ready to replace a conventional laptop yet for most people. I've got a Samsung one and it struggles with complex websites and sometimes hangs, too. I wonder if even $300 is too much.
These are way too expensive. For $350 you get a laptop that runs a web browser only. For the same price you can buy a laptop with better cpu, graphics, battery life, memory, and operating system.
I have a Cr-48, which should be substantially slower than those with the Samsung Series 5's, and I have no real issue with laggy scrolling. Biggest tip I can give is to disable extensions, I do that and the Chromebook flies. Then just slowly add back in the most necessary ones. This might solve your video issues too, as video works perfectly smooth for me. If you doubt this, just hop into guest mode and see how ridiculously fast such meager hardware moves when your own bloat isn't slowing it down.
On Google+ you should really scroll with the "j" and "k" keys, problem solved. :P
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[ 5.7 ms ] story [ 48.5 ms ] threadI wonder what "many" in this context means.
Google needs to make them way cheaper to get over the limiting factor of no native apps.People may not use native apps so much, but they like the feeling that they can, if they need to.
It's the flash slowdowns that bother me occasionally, but even there it's rarely unusable.
http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/09/transformer-prime-detaile...
I don't have a chromebook but I'm not sure what chromeos offers that android doesn't.
They have been 'coming soon' since May.
If I have a keyboard/track(pad|point) combo, I don't need/want a touchscreen. Thus I'd prefer a halfway-decent ARM chromebook over, say, a Transformer Prime, or an iPad+bt-keyboard-case (otherwise you're spending half your time with your arm raised, messing with the touchscreen)
It's not worth it.Just buy an AMD fusion laptop. I got the Thinkpad E325 and it's much more powerful than either Atom or all current ARM chips and battery lasts for 7h+.
For instance, http://amzn.com/B0067U9VUC vs http://amzn.com/B004Q7LHVE
On Google+ you should really scroll with the "j" and "k" keys, problem solved. :P