With its low price and mammoth
Haswell battery life, the Acer C720 is one of the best Chromebooks you
can get for the money. While it might be robbed of flagship status by
the cute styling of HP's effort, and it lacks the dense display of the
MacBook Pro-style Chromebook Pixel, the C720 nicely exhibits everything you can, and cannot, do on a Chromebook.The
C720 features an Intel Celeron 2955U CPU running at 1.40 GHz. Using the
Haswell micro-architecture and built on a 22 nm process, this 64-bit
CPU features two cores and 2 MB of cache. Acer has coupled it with 2 GB
of DDR3L SDRAM. It also features Intel HD Graphics running at a 200 MHz
base frequency and 1 GHz max dynamic frequency. That is more than enough
processing power for anything the Chromebook is designed to do. It
might even be a bit of overkill for the very light-on-its-feet Chrome
OS.Your
standard benchmarks don't have much relevancy to the Chromebook user
since these machines aren't designed to run traditional applications.
Look elsewhere if you want to use Photoshop filters, do video editing,
or play 3D games. Chrome OS is designed for simple office tasks and
Web-based applications.
For
these low-intensity uses, the system is more than powerful enough. It's
extremely responsive, and since the operating system is so streamlined,
it often will do these tasks even faster than a souped-up Windows PC
loaded down with the extra baggage typical of many installs. Ever done a
fresh install of Windows on an old PC and seen how much faster your PC
ran? Think of Chrome OS as a PC that's always running a fresh install.
Using
Chrome OS takes some getting used to both conceptually and practically.
Pretty much, a Chromebook is a laptop that runs only one thing: the
Chrome web browser. There's a beautiful simplicity there, especially
since the web browser monopolizes so much of what most people do
day-to-day on their PC.
That simplicity has some great benefits.
Boot up is extremely fast. It takes as much time to type in your
password as it does for the system to boot up. It feels more like
sleep/awake than a true shutdown and bootup process. This is impressive
compared to other notebooks, but of course, Chromebooks aren't the only
Internet appliance which can offer this feature. Tablets offer similar
speed-of-access.
Chrome
OS is also tightly connected with a Google account. There is a guest
mode, but to make full use of the system, you need a Google account.
This personalizes the experience and lets you have a similar experience
across platforms. For instance, your bookmarks travel with you, as do
the files available on your Google Drive.....Buy now!!!!
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