![]() Gaming is another area where the Celeron N4500 lags behind. Again, these Chromebooks come with higher prices than the basic 11.6in devices but deliver brighter, higher-resolution screens and an even more versatile design. The latter is due to be replaced soon by the new Lenovo IdeaPad Duet Chromebook 3 but this has yet to be seen in the wild. To get something better, you really need to move up the price scale to 13.3in Chromebooks such as the Acer Chromebook Spin 513 ( £400) or consider tablet models with detachable keyboards, such as the HP Chromebook X2 11 ( £480) or the Lenovo IdeaPad Duet ( £260). However, all three have slow Intel or Mediatek processors and basic HD screens. The Lenovo Ideapad Flex 3i Chromebook, the HP 11a-na0502sa and the Acer Chromebook Spin 311, all can be found for £150 to £250. It isn’t hard to find cheaper 11.6in alternatives to the Samsung Galaxy Chromebook 2 360. ![]() READ NEXT: The best 2-in-1 laptops available Samsung Galaxy Chromebook 2 360 review: Price and competition The Galaxy Chromebook 2 360 comes in two variants, with the base model rocking 64GB of eMMC storage, while the LTE version packs in 4G connectivity and 128GB of storage. If only the rest of the specification was so advanced: an Intel Celeron N4500 CPU with 4GB of RAM is the definition of bog standard. Not only is it slightly larger than the 11.6in screens we’ve seen on similar devices but it also has an abnormally high WQXGA resolution (2,560 x 1,600), which gives you a much crisper, clearer image than the 1,366 x 768 resolution you’ll find on cheaper 11.6in Chromebooks. ![]() The Chromebook 2 360 is a 2-in-1 convertible laptop with an unusual 12.4in screen. Samsung Galaxy Chromebook 2 360 review: What you need to know It’s far from perfect but it’s a fine ultraportable Chromebook that gets more right than it gets wrong. The Samsung Galaxy Chromebook 2 360 bucks that trend. Too often they’ve exhibited the worst characteristics of budget Chromebooks, from tiny, dim HD screens with massive bezels to creaky plastic shells, rattly keyboards and the slowest, bargain-basement CPUs. ![]() There’s been no shortage of small-screen Chromebooks in the past five years, but models we could recommend have been few and far between. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |