Chromebook? Windows 8? Need some advice

Discussion in 'Blazers OT Forum' started by Run BJM, Jun 6, 2013.

  1. Run BJM

    Run BJM Heavy lies the crown. Staff Member Global Moderator

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    My Dell Latitude 500 is on its last legs. Probably really has been for a few years now. Unfortunately I'm not in a position to drop several hundred dollars (let alone anywhere near $1000+) on a new computer.

    The Chromebooks appeal to me somewhat because I wouldn't mind dropping $200-300 on a decent computer that will last a couple years until hopefully I'll have more money to invest in a high end lap top. I'm already pretty Google integrated with my android phone, gmail, google calendar, and since I graduated college last year I only use Google docs for word processing anyway (and I don't type much these days anyway). Pretty much all I need a computer for now is casual browsing, streaming sports (can anyone tell me if firstrowsports.eu works well on a chromebook), and netflix? Also need to be able to hook it up to my TV but it has an HDMI port so that shouldn't be an issue.

    But it also looks like some low end Windows 8 laptops aren't much more expensive. I've never used this OS, is it any good? Is it even worth the money to go with a low end lap top if the OS will be slow, or get slow? I like that the Chromebooks are highly streamlined and read they really don't slow down over time.

    Any other options I don't know about for a lightweight computer user on a tight budget? What little I've used of Windows 7 I actually liked, would a used older Windows 7 laptop be worth investing in?
     
  2. Denny Crane

    Denny Crane It's not even loaded! Staff Member Administrator

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    Get a tablet if all you want is browsing. The battery life is really good, and they're really portable.

    Apple to announce new laptops next week?
     
  3. Run BJM

    Run BJM Heavy lies the crown. Staff Member Global Moderator

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    I like having a keyboard, and perhaps this is a dumb question but do tablets have an HDMI output or something I can stream sports/netflix/etc. on my TV? Would they perform as well with streaming video? Seems like Chromebooks actualy have similar hardware to a lot of tablets...

    Can't imagine they're releasing anything in my price range, nor do I think any subsequent drop in price for the current generation of hardware will drop to my price range.
     
  4. Denny Crane

    Denny Crane It's not even loaded! Staff Member Administrator

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    Apple TV is $99 and you stream from tablet to it via wifi.

    You can Bluetooth a keyboard with a tablet for when you need it.
     
  5. EL PRESIDENTE

    EL PRESIDENTE Username Retired in Honor of Lanny.

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    Get the Samsung chrome book for $250 unless you skype or do video editing.

    hoop fam
     
  6. TradeNurkicNow

    TradeNurkicNow Resident OT Section Crank

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    Windows 8 is GAR-BAGE

    Dunno about Chromebooks. Considering I haven't heard shit about them since they came out, I assume they're pretty meh.

    You can get a pretty decent Lenovo with Windows 7 on it for under 400.
     
  7. JFizzleRaider

    JFizzleRaider Sad Panda Global Moderator

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    Just buy a $200 acer chromebook. If it sucks, youre only out $200. I'm sure it will do the things you stated above.
     
  8. EL PRESIDENTE

    EL PRESIDENTE Username Retired in Honor of Lanny.

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    my brah brah has the Samsung Chrome book. its really fast starting. works great. I was considering getting a chromebox...they have dual monitor outputs I believe.
     
  9. HailBlazers

    HailBlazers RipCity

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  10. Run BJM

    Run BJM Heavy lies the crown. Staff Member Global Moderator

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    So I ended up buying a Chromebook on Saturday. Absolutely loving it so far. I already covered that I'm a lightweight computer user but so far the Chromebook has performed well with all of the things I ask of it.

    I went with the Acer C7 (16 GB SSD version) instead of the Samsung Series 3 primarily because RAM can be added and it has a better processor. The SSD version just came out and was only available at Best Buy and I really wanted the SSD instead of the HD because I value the speed and efficiency more than the extra storage space. Battery life is inferior to the Samsung but I almost never have a reason to take my computer out of my house- anything I do on the go can be done on a smartphone. The Acer also has an extra USB port (though no 3.0), VGA, and ethernet port, and the SD card slot holds the entire SD card within the computer while the Samsung has the SD card sticking out a little bit. Not deal breaking details but nice bonuses. I was really sold on the combination of ability to upgrade RAM, better processor, and has an SSD.

    So far the thing runs like a champ. Its a joy to browse the web and it runs live sports streams and Netflix beautifully. Bought an HDMI cable yesterday and everything looks great on my TV. The fugger is ready to go right when I open it up or boot it. There is some stuttering when I run Pandora and have a bunch of other tabs open, though I've read this improves when more RAM is added (which I plan to do, though it runs pretty damn impressively for 2 GB of RAM). It feels like its got more juice than a tablet, with my only real point of reference on this being my sisters' mini Ipad.

    My biggest complaint is the keyboard. Its not-quite-full size and the keys just aren't tremendously responsive. I've never used a chiclet style keyboard fulltime so maybe there's an adjustment period. Trackpad is great though and the screens pretty dope though sometimes you get some glare because its a gloss screen. Chrome OS is obviously lacking in a lot of functionality, but it suits me quite well. I can see a lot of people getting one as a secondary device for casual browsing or for their kids. Obviously its only been 3 days but the thing seems stable as hell and performs well for what it does at $200 (even factoring in a RAM upgrade you're talking less than $250).
     
  11. BigGameDamian

    BigGameDamian Well-Known Member

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    No just go to Costco and look at there Laptops.
     
  12. TradeNurkicNow

    TradeNurkicNow Resident OT Section Crank

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    So do Chromebooks have HD storage, or is it supposed to be all on "the cloud"?
     
  13. Nikolokolus

    Nikolokolus There's always next year

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    All Chromebooks that I've seen have at least a 16 GB built-in flash drive, but some come with a 320GB mechanical drive too.

    I'm seriously considering picking up the Chromebook Pixel, which is more like a true tablet computer (touchscreen, 1 TB of google drive storage space, etc).

    EDIT: I say this realizing that all I really ever do on my laptop any more is browse the web, watch videos, use google docs for work and stream music through my headphones. If you need MS orifice, or some Win32 apps that only run on windows then you should probably steer clear.

    EDIT 2: Re windows 8. I participated in the beta and it's a piece of shit unless you have a touch-screen enabled device. Task switching is a pain in the ass, the tile based desktop gets in the way and it just feels like MS trying emulate Android OS and IOS. On a tablet it's probably OK, but I haven't used it in that environment.
     
    Last edited: Jun 11, 2013
  14. mook

    mook The 2018-19 season was the best I've seen

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    I bought a Toshiba with Windows 8 earlier this week. Man, Windows 8 fucking blows. What a goddamned train wreck.

    However, a nice compromise I've found is downloading ClassicShell (http://www.classicshell.net/) for free. It basically restores all the nice functionality of Windows 7 and gets you away from the retarded Start screen.

    Why buy a laptop with Windows 8, only to bolt on something that reverts it to 7? Simple economics. Manufacturers just aren't making much Windows 7 stuff anymore, and what is available seems overpriced for the specs you get. Besides, Windows 8.1 is supposed to cure some of the defects.
     
  15. Run BJM

    Run BJM Heavy lies the crown. Staff Member Global Moderator

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    I have very little hands on experience with any Windows OS after XP, but it seemed like they straightened out the Vista fiasco with Windows 7; why did they abort that OS so quickly? Seems like they only half decent OS they've produced in a decade and they dumped it to go full tablet/touchscreen mode, even when it makes no godamn sense for the hardware.

    The Pixel is a beast, seems ridiculously powerful given the OS its running on but all the user reviews I read of it are very positive. Seems like most of the people who buy it are big time Linux users and/or programmers.
     
  16. EL PRESIDENTE

    EL PRESIDENTE Username Retired in Honor of Lanny.

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  17. Natebishop3

    Natebishop3 Don't tread on me!

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  18. magnifier661

    magnifier661 B-A-N-A-N-A-S!

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    So it seems the PC is becoming obsolete
     
  19. EL PRESIDENTE

    EL PRESIDENTE Username Retired in Honor of Lanny.

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    physical computers are becoming obsolete.
     
  20. Natebishop3

    Natebishop3 Don't tread on me!

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    In favor of metaphysical computers?
     

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