[0] https://www.techradar.com/phones/android/ive-seen-it-its-inc...
[0] https://www.techradar.com/phones/android/ive-seen-it-its-inc...
You effectively get an actual Linux distro + most of android, with a side of Chrome. It's way closer to "a real computer" than an iPad for instance, and only loses to the Surface Pro/Z13 line in term of versatility IMHO.
It really wasn't bad, my only deal breakers were keyboard remapping being non existent and the bluetooth stack being flaky.
Though having said that, in the past year I've replaced ChromeOS with desktop Linux (postmarketOS) and I love it even more now. 4GB of RAM was a bit slim for running everything in micro-VMs for "security," which is what ChromeOS does. I've had no trouble with battery life or Android emulation (Waydroid) since switching.
The "enterprise" managability and reduced attack surface is driving Google to jack up Chromebook prices. The "Chromebook Plus" models are nearing the same price as a midrange Dell Inspiron, HP OmniBook, or Lenovo IdeaPad. You may have also noticed M4 MacBook Airs can be bought for the price of an iPhone 17, and I suspect that's partially a response from Apple to the Chromebook price increases. Buying a $600 Chromebook might have been sane for someone tired of Microsoft and not interested in a $1000 Macbook Air, but in 2025, with the Macbook Air prices going down significantly[2], Chromebooks are not as appealing to regular consumers (different story for businesses).
[0] https://support.google.com/chromeosflex/answer/11513094?sjid...
[1] https://chromeos.google/business-solutions/use-case/contact-...
[2] https://www.zdnet.com/article/the-m4-macbook-air-is-selling-...
Cool if one wants to CLI stuff alongside Web and Android apps, but that is as far as it goes for GNU/Linux, with many yes but.
https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromiumos/docs/+/1792b43f...