Quote:
Originally Posted by MTI
Most devices have the capability of net access 24/7 . . . what are you referring to?
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Speed and availability are greatly variable based on location. A good ecosystem of offline apps vs doing virtually everything in a browser is a Godsend. ChromeOS can do some things offline, but it pales as compared to Android in that respect.
This is just time-share computing by another name -- this paradigm got its throat slit in the 70s when the PC came around. For good reason.
Of course the real problem I have with ChromeOS is that it rams Google's ecosystem up my anus forcibly. With Android, I can do most things with a private server and give virtually no data to Google without loss of functionality. Not so with ChromeOS if you want a remotely usable system.
I think I'll keep using the used Thinkpad X201 that I bought last month, upgraded to SSD. Fast, functional, can dual-boot Win 7 and Debian for the best of all worlds
And it cost under $300!