Lenovo Introduces Expensive Chromebook Under ThinkPad Line for Schools Kids
Other specs include 16GB of on-board storage, an HDMI port, two USB 3.0 ports and one USB 2.0 port. For a while, Google’s Chromebook was a single device to show off what its cloud-based OS could do. Now Lenovo marks the third manufacturer, after Acer and Samsung, to make inexpensive laptops running Google’s software. Like its competitors, ThinkPad Chromebook comes with Google Apps for Education and all the management features common to Chrome OS, such as seamless updating and ability to move a student from one machine to another simply by logging in. An expensive Microsoft Office license isn’t required here. The X131e will be available February 26th, for US$430. For the price, we wonder if most schools should consider a iPad mini instead. Touch is the future, and Lenovo’s Chromebook has none of it.