Anonymous wrote:In addition to everything above, be aware that Google Drive is not completely secure. Cloud storage is actually physical storage on Google servers. That storage is open to the Internet. It is encrypted in transmission between your computer and Google, but the data is transmitted back and forth. In addition, it is more vulnerable. If anyone breaks into your Google account, they can access anything on your drive.
If you have any information that should be secure, such as personal information, information pertaining to your identity (address, phone, SSN, financial information, etc), you want to be careful about storing such information on the cloud. When on a laptop, the information is stored on the local drive and someone would need to be able to break into your computer or get physical access to your computer to read that.
Additionally as pointed out above, chromebooks can only run apps that are designed for chromebooks or the web. There are some and more being created, but the number of applications that are designed for computers (whether Windows or Mac) is far larger than those designed for Chromebooks. Anything designed for Chromebooks can be run on laptops, but not vice versa. Chromebooks can run less than 5% of the software that is available for laptops. Fancy games, custom software, analytical software, financial software, custom graphics packages, desktop publishing design tools are just a small subset of the wide variety of categories where there may be a few basic tools available to chromebooks, but there are far more including the more advanced versions that are available for laptops. And many of those will not be available for chromebooks because you need either local storage space or local computing power that chromebooks will not have access to.
Anonymous wrote:Essentially, you can't install anything on a Chromebook that is not configured to run with a Chromebook. I would never buy one. Spend an extra $100 and get a low level "real" laptop.
Anonymous wrote:+1 If you need to be able to send a letter as a Word doc then a Chromebook is not for you. If you want to be able to save documents and access them without using the internet, then a Chromebook is not for you. There is a wider level of functionality in Excel that doesn't exist in the Google version of Excel online. In general a laptop will be a better fit for an adult than a Chromebook imo. The downside of a laptop is that you will need to purchase an Office software package in order to be able to use the laptop for office types of uses like Word, Excel, PowerPoint.
I have a work laptop and a work Chromebook. 999 times out of 1000 I will use the laptop before the Chromebook.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know, it’s confusing. A Chromebook is basically a web browsing machine. There is no desktop or folders—it’s ONLY a Chrome web browser. As long as you only use Google sheets and Google pages, it’s fine. But you can’t save files on it, you save them to your Google drive. You can’t run Word. It’s great for what it is, and it doesn’t get glitchy like a laptop. Kids can’t really screw it up.
+1 If you need to be able to send a letter as a Word doc then a Chromebook is not for you. If you want to be able to save documents and access them without using the internet, then a Chromebook is not for you. There is a wider level of functionality in Excel that doesn't exist in the Google version of Excel online. In general a laptop will be a better fit for an adult than a Chromebook imo. The downside of a laptop is that you will need to purchase an Office software package in order to be able to use the laptop for office types of uses like Word, Excel, PowerPoint.
I have a work laptop and a work Chromebook. 999 times out of 1000 I will use the laptop before the Chromebook.
It's cumbersome but can't you write something in google docs and save it as a word file? Or better yet, a pdf?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know, it’s confusing. A Chromebook is basically a web browsing machine. There is no desktop or folders—it’s ONLY a Chrome web browser. As long as you only use Google sheets and Google pages, it’s fine. But you can’t save files on it, you save them to your Google drive. You can’t run Word. It’s great for what it is, and it doesn’t get glitchy like a laptop. Kids can’t really screw it up.
+1 If you need to be able to send a letter as a Word doc then a Chromebook is not for you. If you want to be able to save documents and access them without using the internet, then a Chromebook is not for you. There is a wider level of functionality in Excel that doesn't exist in the Google version of Excel online. In general a laptop will be a better fit for an adult than a Chromebook imo. The downside of a laptop is that you will need to purchase an Office software package in order to be able to use the laptop for office types of uses like Word, Excel, PowerPoint.
I have a work laptop and a work Chromebook. 999 times out of 1000 I will use the laptop before the Chromebook.
Anonymous wrote:I know, it’s confusing. A Chromebook is basically a web browsing machine. There is no desktop or folders—it’s ONLY a Chrome web browser. As long as you only use Google sheets and Google pages, it’s fine. But you can’t save files on it, you save them to your Google drive. You can’t run Word. It’s great for what it is, and it doesn’t get glitchy like a laptop. Kids can’t really screw it up.