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        Google Expands Chromebook Laptop Line, Updates Chrome OS
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- May 31, 2012
Google on Tuesday announced the expansion of its Chromebook laptop line and some improvements to its Chrome operating system, potentially setting the stage for a battle against the traditional PC model.
Chromebook laptops,  which launched in June 2011, are mostly aimed at the consumer market and run exclusively on Google's Chrome OS. The laptops connect to Web applications stored  in the Internet cloud. 
According to a  recent Google blog post, the company has released "eight stable updates over  the past year" to the cloud-based OS. Due to the Chromebook's automatic update capability, Google claims  the laptops are "always new."
On Wednesday, Google partner Samsung announced that it is  offering its latest Series 5 550  Chromebook laptop, as well as the Series 3 Chromebox.  The Chromebox is a new way to run Google Chrome OS via a portable box-like  device that has connections for a keyboard, mouse and monitor. 
Acer is another  Google hardware partner offering a Chromebook, with the Acer AC700 laptop being  currently available.
    
    
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    | The Samsung Series 5 550 Chromebook (left) and  Acer AC700 Chromebook  (right). | 
In addition, Google announced yesterday that Chromebooks and  the new Chromebox devices can be ordered through certain U.S. and U.K. online retail partners. Those  outlets include Best Buy stores in the United   States and PC World and Curry stores in the United Kingdom,  with other outlets to come in "select countries." As for online  outlets, Samsung's U.S.  announcement indicated that the "Chromebook and Chromebox are only  available at Amazon.com, Tiger.com, NewEgg.com, BestBuy.com and BHPhoto.com." 
The Samsung Chromebook and Chromebox both use Intel Celeron  867 Dual Core processors with 1.3 GHz clock speeds and 4 GB of RAM. Google  claims that the new Chrome OS-based devices using Intel's Core processors  "are nearly three times as fast as the first-generation Chromebooks."  Chromebooks are available for either 3G or Wi-Fi wireless access, but the  Chromebox only supports Wi-Fi access. The 16 GB storage space available in the  devices is minimal because users don't install programs on the devices. Rather,  they access Web apps stored remotely. The products use solid-state drives that  facilitate boot times of about seven seconds. Google supports a unique  keyboard with Chrome OS-based devices, as well as a touchpad  with gesture capabilities.
 Google said that it added a new  user interface in the latest Chrome OS, which looks a lot like a pinned-sites  browser model in which applications are launched from the bottom of the screen.  Google also announced a new Chrome  Remote Desktop beta that promises to allow Chromebook or Chromebox users to  connect with their PCs or Macs. The Remote Desktop service can be used for  remote access to files or for ad hoc support, according to Google's description.
 Chrome OS does come with some assumptions. Users of the  devices are expected to have access to either 3G or Wi-Fi wireless service to  access many applications. However, some Web apps will work offline without a  connection, as listed here at the Chrome Web Store. 
 Google's Chrome OS poses some challenges to the traditional  OS-centric models adopted by Microsoft and Apple -- at least in the consumer-oriented  personal computing world. For instance, with nothing to install, Google  promises greater security from malware. Google claims that anti-virus software  isn't needed on Chromebooks. The firmware on a Chromebook will verify the boot  process and the machine can be restored to its last known good state. Data are  encrypted and can be accessed anywhere a user can sign into an account. Still, Google's  approach is not all unique. The use of app stores and software as a service has  become commonplace in the industry. 
Additional Chrome OS capabilities can be expected in the  near future, according to Google. The company plans to integrate the file  manager in Chrome OS with Google    Drive, which is Google's new cloud-based data storage  service that was announced  in April. Another addition to Chrome OS will be offline support for Google  Docs, which is Google's hosted productivity suite. That offline support is  planned for a rollout "over the next few weeks."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.