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View Full Version : HP Chromebook 11 review: Google gives the low end some much-needed luster



cdmagurus.com
10-12-2013, 02:00 PM
Update: This article was updated shortly after posting with battery-life results.

The HP Chromebook 11 could have been just another low-cost container for Google’s browser-based OS. But Google stepped in to make it special—and maybe even spare it the mockery of PC snobs who can’t wrap their heads (http://www.pcworld.com/article/2030096/how-i-survived-7-days-in-chromebook-exile.html) around the Chromebook concept.
Realistically, you can’t expect much from any sub-$300 machine, and most Chromebooks reside in this underwhelming hardware space. Nonetheless, Google’s 2012 partnership with Samsung on the Chromebook 3 (http://www.pcworld.com/article/2019245/samsung-chromebook-3-cheaper-more-productive-alternative-to-a-tablet.html) proved that a manufacturer could do a good job with low-level components, and then Google itself pulled-out all the stops a few months later with the launch of the gorgeous-Chromebook Pixel (http://www.pcworld.com/article/2030228/review-google-chromebook-pixel-is-an-expensive-curiosity.html). If nothing else, the Pixel, replete with a beautiful touchscreen and elegant industrial design, sparked a heated (and slightly bizarre) debate about whether the Chrome ecosystem deserved a machine so high-end.
And now we have HP’s Chromebook 11, a laptop that attempts to add some industrial design finesse to the low end of the Chromebook space.
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