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Why the Google Chromebook will fail?

So Google finally announced the Chromebooks and first units will be shipping in the US and Europe by June 15. Both Samsung and Acer are set to ship out their own variants of the Chromebook.

Here are the two models with their listed specs. They’ve omitted how much HDD storage and RAM will be included in the units.


Samsung Chromebook
Intel Atom Dual-Core Processor
12.1″ (1280×800) 300 nit Display
3.26 lbs / 1.48 kg
8.5 hours of battery life
Built in dual-band WiFi and World-mode 3G (optional)
HD Webcam with noise cancelling microphone
2 USB 2.0 ports
4-in-1 memory card slot
Mini-VGA port
Fullsize Chrome keyboard
Oversize fully-clickable trackpad
Price: $429


Acer Chromebook
Intel Atom Dual-Core Processor
11.6″ HD Widescreen CineCrystal LED-backlit LCD
3.19 lbs | 1.45 kg
6 hours battery life
Built in dual-band WiFi and World-mode 3G (optional)
HD Webcam with noise cancelling microphone
High-Definition Audio Support
2 USB 2.0 ports
4-in-1 memory card slot
HDMI port
Fullsize Chrome keyboard
Oversize fully-clickable trackpad
Price: $349

The biggest draw of the Google Chromebook is its full integration with the Cloud — all the time, anytime.

And that’s where it might just fail.

  • The Cloud does not have 100% uptime guarantee. Amazon’s service recently went down, Google’s Blogger also had an outage the other day and we all know GMail also suffered a number of outages before. People don’t trust the cloud as much as they trust physical hardware.
  • Internet connection is unreliable so your ISP will also play a big role in the over-all user-experience with the Chromebook. And we all know how “unreliable” all our local internet service providers are.
  • The Cloud is expensive. The Chromebook assumes you have unlimited data. In the Philippines, that’s an additional Php1,200 per month. If the life span of your Chromebook is 2 years, that’s Php28,800 on top of the cost of the unit making the total cost of ownership (TCO) much more expensive.

But that scenario is just from a Philippine perspective. It might be totally different elsewhere. So the question is — will you buy a Chromebook instead of a regular netbook?

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Avatar for Abe Olandres

Abe is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of YugaTech with over 20 years of experience in the technology industry. He is one of the pioneers of blogging in the country and considered by many as the Father of Tech Blogging in the Philippines. He is also a technology consultant, a tech columnist with several national publications, resource speaker and mentor/advisor to several start-up companies.

35 Responses

  1. Avatar for techguy techguy says:

    Look what happened to Sony, Amazon, and the like. Cloud service is at it’s infancy. ISP service here is unreliable and a better subscription package doesn’t mean better service. Anyway most people here will just use Facebook and other social networking sites. If people are complaining for a 999/month subscription. How much more if you’ll pay the additional $20/month for the cloud service? For now, the Phil has to pass the buck. This is not a practical choice

  2. Avatar for jangelo jangelo says:

    If Google were to lease the Chromebook under subscription, then that would certainly be an attractive offer. $20 per month for a Chromebook for students or $28 for business users is certainly an attractive offer, especially if it will include the data subscription.

    Google has promised to enable some sort of offline functionality to the Chromebooks (perhaps via Sync or cache), so these can be used to some extent, even when there’s no connection.

  3. Avatar for rhyan rhyan says:

    i agree with deuts, it’s too early to tell

  4. Avatar for deuts deuts says:

    Too early to tell. We don’t exactly know yet what this OS has to offer.

  5. Avatar for Joshua M Joshua M says:

    I’d rather go with a tablet. I’m sorry…

  6. Avatar for Alexandrious Alexandrious says:

    to those saying na they’d probably get this or this is for people who just “surfs” the net, then why not just buy tablets?
    mas mura pa and mas madami pa ang apps available for android and ipad…

  7. Avatar for xaos xaos says:

    yah this will fail here in philippines. imagine our ISP’s 10x more expensive and 10x slower than ISP’s in other countries. Maybe our ISP’s our just too corrupted. XD

  8. Avatar for rene rene says:

    after one or two years of chrome os use google suddenly wants to be paid for the services…

  9. Avatar for Teknisyan Teknisyan says:

    With the kind of quality ISP have there in PH, Chrome OS powered Notebook will surely fail. Of course thing may be different in S. Korea, where it is considered as the country that has the fastest internet connection in the world.

  10. Avatar for jor jor says:

    mahal naman yata ung price para sa specs. ewan ko lang:)

  11. Avatar for Messie Messie says:

    First thing na naisip ko is that they might have intentionally omitted HDDs for these. If they are 100% cloud dependent, then the OS will be run via cloud. Thus, you cannot run this chromebook without internet connection. Baka sa BIOS pa lang, nagcoconnect na siya with Google’s cloud server to launch the OS. All the apps to, including the browser, document editing, games, etc. will be run via cloud na rin siguro.
    Hmmmm.. true, this is very futuristic, pero baka this is too ahead of it’s time pa.

    • Avatar for Benchmark Benchmark says:

      yup, i agree with you….masyado pa syang futuristic…pero maybe yan din reason why Smart launches their fast LTE (am i correct) network…maybe google requested that :)

      Pero I suggest they develope first SSD, para bumaba na yung price, at bumilis na yung drive access :)

      Plus make their OS simple installations…as in kahit di ka geek sa computer, eh ma-install mo…but then again, it depends talaga sa user yun. :)

  12. Avatar for Anne Anne says:

    People expect something unique…might be this would reach

  13. Avatar for AAnon AAnon says:

    Which is why they’re doing offline access for google docs, gmail, & calendar: http://goo.gl/Is9xB

  14. Avatar for Jhay Jhay says:

    If I were living in South Korea or some other country with a fast and reliable Internet connections then I’d consider getting a Chromebook.

    But here in the Philippines? I’d wait for a couple decades at least!

  15. Avatar for Marcus Marcus says:

    I’d like to see how Google will handle security, since this is a critical aspect of having all your data in the cloud. We’ve seen lapses in security lately (*cough* Sony *cough*) so being able to ensure users that all their personal data are safe is of the utmost importance.

  16. Avatar for plsburydoughboy plsburydoughboy says:

    Let me go in as one of the few for it. We have to buy the additional PH P 28,800 if we use internet regularly anyway. For the majority of people who only use their PCs for Facebook, and webworkers like me, this may be ideal.

    Of course, Google might seal the deal locally if those hardware/data/service contracts they’re offering to universities in the States now would be rolled out here too.

  17. Avatar for techguy techguy says:

    Cloud computing will be the trend of the future. But as of this time given the current situation of our country this concept is very challenging if not impossible. Perhaps 10-20 yrs from now.
    For now nothing beats the good ‘ol computing.

  18. Avatar for Jam. Jam. says:

    This will be useless especially when you’re on vacation and the internet is not available on that region

  19. Avatar for aron aron says:

    i feel it will fail talaga kasi mas manda pa yung specs ng netbook na naka windows at sa mahal nya, sana naglaptop ka na lang na multifunction kesa sa dito.

  20. Avatar for Charles Charles says:

    Palagi ako nag iinternet at 85% ng oras ko sa computer ay sa internet na. Given the specs mukhang mahal to pero kung nasa 24k-29k ang price maybe!

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