Sunday, June 1, 2014
Android-powered HP Slatebook 14 Announced!
As well as the new HP Chromebook 11 that was announced today, HP also announced the Slatebook 14 which is powered by Android, and obviously runs on a 14-inch display. So what other kind of specs do we expect from the HP Slatebook 14? We'll find out after the break.
New HP Chromebook 11 Now Official
Today, HP took the wraps off of a brand new Chromebook 11 as well as the HP Slatebook 14 which features a 14-inch display and Android as the OS. Surprisingly.
Thursday, May 15, 2014
HP Chromebook 11 G2 Launching this Month?
HP Chromebook 11 G2 is nearly upon us, but will it be a best seller?
Last year, the HP Chromebook 11 was a pretty popular Chromebook, well really all of them have been popular. But the HP Chromebook 11 had a microUSB port for charging, which was rather unique and different for a laptop...err Chromebook.Samsung Chromebook 2 going for £249 in the UK?
Samsung Chromebook 2 pricing leaks out on Very, for the UK
According to UK retailer, Very, it appears that the Samsung Chromebook 2 will be priced at £249 later this month when it goes on sale. The Samsung Chromebook 2 is the follow up to the Chromebook they released in 2012, with the Exynos 5 dual-core processor. It was the first Chromebook to run on ARM. And the experience wasn't the best, but since then both Samsung and Google have worked to make the experience a bit better.Tuesday, May 6, 2014
ASUS Makes the C200 Chromebook Official
Lenovo Announce N20 and N20P Chromebooks - Available this July!
Lenovo unveils their first consumer-ready Chromebooks, N20 and N20P to be available this Summer
Today, Lenovo announced a couple of new Chromebooks. These are their first ones to be available for everyone. Previously, their last two Chromebooks were only available to schools. The N20 is an 11.6-inch Chromebook with the N20P being the touch-screen variant.Thursday, May 1, 2014
Google Redesigning Chrome's Incognito Mode
Google has refreshed the Incognito Mode page in the latest dev build of Chrome
Developers, or anyone using the developer channel of Google Chrome may have noticed that there's a slightly redesigned version of the Incognito Mode page in the browser. The only real change you'll see is that it's more up-to-date with the rest of the web. Meaning it's brought into web 3.0. You can see the differences above, thanks to the folks at OMGChrome.
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