SourceCode: Riding the Chromebook Cloud Part 1
Thursday, September 8, 2011 at 8:57AM
Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla in Buyers Guide, Cloud, First Looks, Google Chromebook, Lifestyle, Mobile, OS, Public service, Samsung Chrome, SourceCode


By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla

Ever since Google came out with the CR48 Chrome-browser powered notebook, trying out a cloud connected OS had become something of an obsession for me. The idea that all your data was secure (or not) in the cloud regardless of what hardware you are using is not only revolutionary but clearly the future of computing itself. Well we finally managed to get a Google Chromebook  (Samsung Series 5) and here are our initial impressions.

Chrome is powerful as a web browser and it is also fast. On our daily driver MacBook Air and our ThinkPad X61, Chrome is the de facto browser although with Lion on OS X, Safari's performance has been slightly better and faster. 

All the Google Chromebook (made by Samsung) runs is Chrome and everything you do on it happens within the browser. The benefits are incredible boot-up and shut-down speed and less failure due to fewer moving parts/ The current state of your work is always saved in the cloud (i.e. you never have to save your Google Docs document) and apps appear as tabs. Here are our first impressions so far.

 

Stay tuned for more as we actually use the Chromebook as our main computer for one week to see how it fares.

 

 

 

Article originally appeared on Reviews, News and Opinion with a Canadian Perspective (https://www.canadianreviewer.com/).
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