SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017
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@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
My Asus C201 has Mini HDMI, 2x USB and a headphone jack.
What more would you need?
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@gjacobse said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
My Asus C201 has Mini HDMI, 2x USB and a headphone jack.
What more would you need?
I've not found anything that I would need. A full size HDMI can be handy, of course, but it just means a different cord. It's not a device that really uses many peripherals.
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@gjacobse said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@stacksofplates said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
The one thing that did bother me was using the offline apps with a sync'd profile. If you use a profile synced across multiple machines, the offline apps will be installed on all of them. Frequently things like Caret would show up in a related search, sometimes at the beginning.
This is one of my most troubling parts - not so much just for say the ChromeOS but for Android and iOS as well.
I would like to use Smart Office - but in many cases of when I plan to use it, - I won't have internet connection. And the app won't run unless it can validate itself to their server.
What a pain.
I'm not familiar with Smart Office.
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@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@gjacobse said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
My Asus C201 has Mini HDMI, 2x USB and a headphone jack.
What more would you need?
I've not found anything that I would need. A full size HDMI can be handy, of course, but it just means a different cord. It's not a device that really uses many peripherals.
I expected as much - there are a few times that a full on NIC would be nice,... but not required, like so many different things, there is USB for that. A full sized HDMI would be nice to not have to deal with extra cables.
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@gjacobse said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@gjacobse said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
My Asus C201 has Mini HDMI, 2x USB and a headphone jack.
What more would you need?
I've not found anything that I would need. A full size HDMI can be handy, of course, but it just means a different cord. It's not a device that really uses many peripherals.
I expected as much - there are a few times that a full on NIC would be nice,... but not required, like so many different things, there is USB for that. A full sized HDMI would be nice to not have to deal with extra cables.
Ethernet could be handy, not extremely rarely for me as this is purely a mobile device.
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I just got a new ASUS Chromebook flip about a week ago. I love it, and it is my at home, no heavy lifting, consumption device of choice. I wouldn't want to do much development on it, but for a home PC it is about perfect.
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@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@gjacobse said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@gjacobse said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
My Asus C201 has Mini HDMI, 2x USB and a headphone jack.
What more would you need?
I've not found anything that I would need. A full size HDMI can be handy, of course, but it just means a different cord. It's not a device that really uses many peripherals.
I expected as much - there are a few times that a full on NIC would be nice,... but not required, like so many different things, there is USB for that. A full sized HDMI would be nice to not have to deal with extra cables.
Ethernet could be handy, not extremely rarely for me as this is purely a mobile device.
Ethernet adapter for USB 3.0? Do do you have 3.0 with that model?
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@scottalanmiller I really need to just pull the trigger on getting this....
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The last time I used one, a year ago, I really didn't like that the desktop wasn't customizable like Windows or Mac. I couldn't drop icons on the desktop. Not a deal breaker, but still frustrating.
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@Dashrender said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
The last time I used one, a year ago, I really didn't like that the desktop wasn't customizable like Windows or Mac. I couldn't drop icons on the desktop. Not a deal breaker, but still frustrating.
Maybe it's from using Gnome 3 all the time but I never put stuff on my desktop. It bothers me. The universal search is so much better.
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@stacksofplates said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@Dashrender said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
The last time I used one, a year ago, I really didn't like that the desktop wasn't customizable like Windows or Mac. I couldn't drop icons on the desktop. Not a deal breaker, but still frustrating.
Maybe it's from using Gnome 3 all the time but I never put stuff on my desktop. It bothers me. The universal search is so much better.
I was trying to set it up for a retiring doc. He had the 3 websites that he used as shortcuts on his desktop and it just didn't seem possible with the Chromebook.
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I've tried several platform including chrome OS, but I think I'll stick to a macbook (12, maybe) for now… Chrome OS is nice, supposing you'll always have some kind of connectivity; today I need a Windows VM to recover a peculiar windows-centric issue, and I have to virtualize it on my machine because internet from Telecom Italia (the national provider) went down in the whole Sicily :D.
Oh, also the cellular network was down for at least 2 hours.
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@wirestyle22 said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@gjacobse said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@gjacobse said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@scottalanmiller said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
My Asus C201 has Mini HDMI, 2x USB and a headphone jack.
What more would you need?
I've not found anything that I would need. A full size HDMI can be handy, of course, but it just means a different cord. It's not a device that really uses many peripherals.
I expected as much - there are a few times that a full on NIC would be nice,... but not required, like so many different things, there is USB for that. A full sized HDMI would be nice to not have to deal with extra cables.
Ethernet could be handy, not extremely rarely for me as this is purely a mobile device.
Ethernet adapter for USB 3.0? Do do you have 3.0 with that model?
That is not the point. That does not matter. What matter is having an adapter for when Ethernet is needed. That is not the normal connectivity for devices like this, but instead a troubleshooting tool.
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We're talking about a laptop that was designed for consumer use and using it for commercial troubleshooting. If I was to pick a device that I needed to troubleshoot with, I'm going to pick one that has most, if not all, of the necessary peripherals built in, network port included.
Something that requires an adapter, to me, isn't for troubleshooting, its for making due with something that was not thought through before.
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I'm thinking of getting a Chromebook just so I can have non-mobile (desktop mode) web access in places I do not want to have a normal sized laptop. Is 11.6" too big for that purpose?
Phone is just too small and so inconvenient for some things I want to do. I'd rather have a super small laptop just for web access and simple things.
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@NerdyDad said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
We're talking about a laptop that was designed for consumer use and using it for commercial troubleshooting. If I was to pick a device that I needed to troubleshoot with, I'm going to pick one that has most, if not all, of the necessary peripherals built in, network port included.
Something that requires an adapter, to me, isn't for troubleshooting, its for making due with something that was not thought through before.
No, if you are going to move to full portable, like a chromebook, you are going eventually be someplace without WiFi. You are going to want an adapter.
That is not even related to being in IT.
Being in IT and sometimes doing things to set devices up that have a need for a wired port. Yeah it is rare, rare enough that it is borderline on needing the adapter. But in conjunction with the point above, it is something I would always carry in the bag. Along with a video converters for HDMI and VGA. Obviously don't need HDMI if it has one.
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@Dashrender said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@stacksofplates said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
@Dashrender said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
The last time I used one, a year ago, I really didn't like that the desktop wasn't customizable like Windows or Mac. I couldn't drop icons on the desktop. Not a deal breaker, but still frustrating.
Maybe it's from using Gnome 3 all the time but I never put stuff on my desktop. It bothers me. The universal search is so much better.
I was trying to set it up for a retiring doc. He had the 3 websites that he used as shortcuts on his desktop and it just didn't seem possible with the Chromebook.
It will make the websites even easier to get to. It'll pin them to the task bar, or just open them automatically.
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@Francesco-Provino said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
I've tried several platform including chrome OS, but I think I'll stick to a macbook (12, maybe) for now… Chrome OS is nice, supposing you'll always have some kind of connectivity; today I need a Windows VM to recover a peculiar windows-centric issue, and I have to virtualize it on my machine because internet from Telecom Italia (the national provider) went down in the whole Sicily :D.
Oh, also the cellular network was down for at least 2 hours.
ChromeOS has offline capabilities as well.
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@Tim_G said in SAM's Chromebook Adventure 2017:
I'm thinking of getting a Chromebook just so I can have non-mobile (desktop mode) web access in places I do not want to have a normal sized laptop. Is 11.6" too big for that purpose?
Phone is just too small and so inconvenient for some things I want to do. I'd rather have a super small laptop just for web access and simple things.
11.6" is not very big. It's only slightly different than carrying around an iPad, but for me, way more usable.