Rumors of Google working Samsung on a custom Exynos chip for potential phones and Chromebooks are making the rounds today. Last week, the purported specs leaked: Here they are.
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As expected, the $999 Samsung Galaxy Chromebook is available today. Should you get one? Based on early reviews, there’s a battery life surprise that you need to know about because it’s not the good kind of surprise.
In February, the Samsung Galaxy Chromebook briefly showed an April 6 release date, which was pulled. Looks like it’s back and this anticipated Chromebook arrives next week.
Best Buy is now showing an April 6 release date for the Samsung Galaxy Chromebook. Interestingly, Samsung’s own product page adds another surprise tidbit: LTE connectivity for this 2-in-1 Chromebook.
Additional details on the Samsung Galaxy Chromebook have surfaced including the number of configuration models, support for wideband audio over Bluetooth and more.
After spending 30 minutes with the Samsung Galaxy Chromebook, I think most who part with $999 for it will be happy. Battery life is lower than I thought but the display, design and performance may make up for that.
Announced at CES 2020, the Samsung Galaxy Chromebook pairs high-end hardware with the speed, security and simplicity of Chrome OS. This sleek 2-in-1 has a fingerprint sensor, stylus and 10th-gen Intel inside.
Some Black Friday Chromebook deals are still available and there are a few even better discounts for Cyber Monday. Better yet? They’re available now, a full day early. The best deal may be the Asus Chromebook C425 for $279.
Black Friday Chromebook deals abound but not all of them are good based on the device age or remaining Chrome OS software support. Here are seven discounted Chromebooks worth considering now.
The venerable Samsung Chromebook 3 has a pair of low-cost but capable successors in the sub-$300 Chromebook 4 and 4+. These look great for students, daily browsing or secondary devices.
I’ve been pondering what a Chrome Phone would look like since 2013. We’ll probably never see one but if you want to get an idea for the concept, look no further than Samsung DeX, which bridges the mobile and desktop computing paradigms.