Every Upcoming Chromebook Will Run Android Apps (laptopmag.com) 71
Google announced last year that it will be bringing Android apps to Chromebooks. The company has now announced that moving forward all the new Chromebooks will have access to the Google Play Store, the marquee store for Android apps. From a report: The news comes from a single line of text in Google's list of Chromebooks that can support the programs: "All Chromebooks launching in 2017 and after as well as the Chromebooks listed below will work with Android apps in the coming future." We knew this would eventually come, and now isn't terribly surprising timing. There are more Chromebooks with touchscreens than ever, including the Asus Chromebook Flip C302CA and Samsung's upcoming Chromebook Plus and Pro, all of which were announced at CES in Las Vegas.
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Chromebooks are cheap Linux laptops without the Microsoft Tax. What's not to like, except for the lack of meta key?
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If I were Google, this is where I'd put emphasis (Score:2)
Why not make an office suite that *is8 actually a pleasure to use? I mean a suite that would give Microsoft's "365" product a run for its money?
I am yet to find serious office users that find Google's offering that appealing. Is there any?
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Nope, Google's offering is not appealing as you never know when they'll stop supporting it. I'd prefer open source office software suites to anything Google might put out.
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You seriously think Google is going to drop Docs?
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Given the still-shitty importation and no signs of it improving any time soon? Yes.
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Re:If I were Google, this is where I'd put emphasi (Score:5, Interesting)
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And why is that exactly? Please spell out precisely why using Google Docs will lead to this company's demise?
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Well, you are Netflix so you would expect everyone to use web based technologies and keep their data in the cloud.
We are not a Fortune 500 company but I try to use Google as much as possible because it eliminates compatibility issues. We have some spreadsheets that do engineering and software development calculations, for example.
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And use Google's influence to make Linux on the desktop a reality.
You can - simply flip your Chromebook into developer mode, add the crouton extension and script, and following a few simple command line steps you can start downloading a linux chroot to run the apps you want. Best part is the ChromeOS stays up in parallel, so you can flip between your custom linux environment and the user-friendly backstop of Chrome.
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LUDDITE Linux doesn't run appy app apps! It only runs LUDDITE software!
There is a flavor of Linux devoted to smashing large format knitting frames? How oddly specialized. But then again, I guess Open Source software is truly extensible to meet user needs, so why not?
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... and who's going to pay for that?
More ways to spy on you. (Score:1)
That is all.
The Coming Future? (Score:4, Funny)
Too far out. I guess it is better than the retreating future. Let me know when they can narrow it down to the present future.
Google Store? What About F-Droid? (Score:1)
F-Droid capable or no deal.
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I see a problem with this (Score:3)
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On linux they appear as a standard joystick which can be used to do anything.
Eclipse app and a usable terminal app (Score:2)
In the 5 min before installing a proper Linux dist (Score:1)
Chrome OS Systems Support link (Score:1)
ARM Chromebooks? (Score:2)
If this is the plan, then can't they make Chromebooks even cheaper by making them from ARM CPUs, and maybe up the RAM and storage a tad?
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The first Chromebook was on ARM I think. Another one had the Celeron 847 (x86, sandy bridge, dual core dual thread), it was the Acer C7. Real hard drive (320GB), 2GB built-in RAM and a SO-DIMM slot where you can drop another 4GB or 8GB. So regarding cost (sort of), storage and RAM this little thing did it a bit over 4 years ago.
less confusion (Score:2)