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Chromebook

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Monica Chin
Sick of downloading Android apps to your Chromebook?

Chrome OS was not particularly, shall we say, present at the Google I/O event on Wednesday, but there was one neat announcement: You can now stream apps to a Chromebook from an Android phone. This is something you could already do in Windows, but it’s nice to see Chrome OS hopping on the train.

To get this set up, Google’s instructions say to make sure Phone Hub is enabled on your Chromebook and that you’re running Android 13 or newer.

A screenshot of the Uber app on Android being streamed to a Chromebook desktop.
A screenshot of the Uber app on Android being streamed to a Chromebook desktop.
Image: Google
HP Dragonfly Pro Chromebook review: a colorful competitor

Several companies have tried pricey Chromebooks with premium builds and gorgeous screens. HP’s Dragonfly Pro Chromebook is just the latest — and it’s a solid machine, but some hiccups with battery life, weight, and connectivity keep it from being a really great buy.

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Monica Chin
Google employees may now be forced to use Google products.

CNBC reports that Google is scaling back its spending on employee services, according to a companywide email from finance chief Ruth Porat. One particularly unfortunate detail: non-engineer employees will now be issued Chromebooks by default, rather than the “range of offerings, such as Apple MacBooks” that were available previously.

Does this mean we might finally get a version of Slack that works on Chrome OS? Sorry, trying not to jinx it.

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The Verge
Barbara Krasnoff
Yes, you can use Zoom on a Chromebook — you just need to know how.

If you recently tried to use Zoom on your Chromebook and it didn’t work, don’t panic — that’s because Zoom recently replaced its older ChromeOS app with a new progressive web app. If you haven’t moved to the new app yet, here’s how to do it.

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The Verge
Barbara Krasnoff
Can’t get your Chromebook’s display to rotate?

Sometimes, it’s the little things that can be the most irritating — like when you’re trying to use your Chromebook as a tablet and you rotate the screen and the picture won’t rotate with it. Here’s how to fix that.

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The Verge
Barbara Krasnoff
Once upon a time, you needed a third-party app in order to zip or unzip files.

But no more. Now, all the more popular operating systems — macOS, iOS, Windows, Android, and ChromeOS — include that ability as part of their toolkits. Here’s now you can zip and unzip files in order to save space, no matter which OS you use.

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The Verge
Barbara Krasnoff
Record selfies along with your Chromebook screen videos.

Chromebooks recently got a nifty new feature: you can record a video of your screen and easily add an audio narration and a small selfie showing you as you narrate. It’s a great way to create a presentation for your colleagues, or for a relative who just can’t figure out how to, say, attach a file to an email.
Here’s how to do that and take traditional screenshots on a Chromebook:

Steam on Chromebook enters betaSteam on Chromebook enters beta
Chromebook
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The Verge
Dan Seifert
It’s not often that a new product is worse than the one it’s replacing.

We’re accustomed to things getting better every year, but in the case of Acer’s generally-excellent Chromebook Spin, the opposite happened.

The Chromebook Spin 714 is worse than last year’s Spin 713 in a number of crucial ways, including display and battery life. Bummer.

Acer’s Chromebook Spin 714 is worse than its predecessor

The Spin 714 isn’t terrible, but it’s not the champion the 713 was

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A day with the Lenovo Chromebook Duet 3

Lenovo has made a solid budget computer — for the right workload

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The Verge
Dan Seifert
The Pixelbook served its purpose.

Earlier this week, Alex Heath and David Pierce reported that Google has canceled its next Pixelbook and moved the team elsewhere in Google, indicating we won’t see another one.

Monica Chin says that’s fine, and while she’s right, I can’t say I’m not sad about it — the 2017 Pixelbook remains a marvel of engineering to this day and I’d love to have seen an updated version (ideally with thinner bezels).

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Dan Seifert
HP’s Dragonfly Chromebook is a computer without a market.

Monica Chin published her review of the HP Dragonfly Chromebook today, a computer I’ve been excited about ever since it was announced at CES back in January.

Sadly, while the hardware is incredible, the experience ChromeOS provides just doesn’t align with the stratospheric price tag HP is asking. It makes me wonder — who does it think is going to buy this thing?

Best Chromebook 2023: The HP Elite Dragonfly Chromebook open. The screen displays The Verge homepage.
Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge
The HP Elite Dragonfly Chromebook is incredible — with one big problem

Beautiful chassis, fast processor, great screen, and software that doesn’t keep up

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