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The Chromebook is a curious beast. The idea of a bare-bones laptop centered around the Google Chrome browser has merit: It could be very efficient at a few key tasks, such as email, web browsing and watching videos. And since it's "powered by the cloud," the machine wouldn't get slowed down by the multiple apps that creep onto our PCs and Macs.
However, we already have a device for convenient consumption of media and shooting off quick messages — it's called a tablet. The Chromebook can only justify its existence if it's good at other stuff, namely, doing actual work. Fortunately, that's exactly what the Chromebook's keyboard and productivity-facing Google apps enable. The only thing in question is how fast this thing can go.
In the case of the HP Chromebook 11 with battery such as Hp HSTNN-UB02 battery , Hp DP390A battery , Compaq PP2100 battery , Compaq Presario R3000 battery (Compaq r3000 battery ), Compaq Presario X6000 battery , Hp Pavilion ZV5000 battery (Hp zv5000 battery ), Hp Pavilion ZV6000 battery (Hp zv6000 battery ), HP Compaq Mini 1101 Battery , HP Compaq Mini 110 Battery , which debuted last week, it's a more than fair question. After all, this is an ARM-powered laptop, packing a dual-core Samsung Exynos processor, not a typical Intel-powered (or even AMD-powered) machine. You could argue it's "only" running Chrome, but have you opened your Task Manager/Activity Monitor lately to see what's slowing down your PC/Mac? Right, it's all those Chrome processes.
Given all that, I can't decide if I should have high or low expectations for the HP Chromebook 11. Most of the time you're only going to run one app, but it's the most important and demanding app you use (probably). It's meant for a few key tasks, but the "key" means those tasks need to run fast and reliably. Even the HP's price point — $279 — isn't much guidance; it's cheap as laptops go, but north of the $199 Acer C7 Chromebook.
With reliable connectivity, though, the HP Chromebook 11 is a great work companion: Since it's not as fast as a full-featured PC or Mac, it can never be your primary workhorse, but it can help you get things done as long as you keep it focused on just one or two tasks. This isn't the machine for keeping several browser windows open, each with multiple tabs to cloud services. But it is the one to grab when you need to dive into your company's online CMS, immerse yourself in a collaborative document, or perform some detailed work that just wouldn't go over as well on an iPad.
What's Good
•Beautiful design
•Can charge via common microUSB port
•Fast boot-up
What's Bad
•Slow performance
•Borderline useless with no connectivity