Chromebook just got serious: Microsoft has to feel the threat

Chromebook Pixel
Expensive, yet threatening: Chromebook Pixel

Under the surface, Chromebook Pixel is just another Core i5 laptop, albeit with a rather special screen. But it's what it represents that's most stunning.

Previous Chromebooks have been rather tepid affairs, lacking both power and failing to acknowledge that although we increasingly use cloud apps and services, we just don't "live in the cloud" as yet.

But Pixel sees Google getting serious; this is a powerful machine, make no mistake, complete with Gorilla Glass touchscreen, 4GB of RAM and premium touches such as a backlit keyboard.

What's more, Google wants to go right to the heart of two companies it has so far bettered in the mobile space but hasn't matched on other hardware – Microsoft and Apple's core PC business.

I use 'PC' because that's what we're talking about here. Despite the addition of an LTE version in the U.S., the Chromebook is still a very traditional product in the sense that it's a laptop, like a MacBook or a Windows Ultrabook. Tablets are Android's domain.

Chromebook Pixel

It costs a pretty pixel, but it may be worth every pixel

While Apple claims to be post-PC yet still makes them, Microsoft could be the real loser here. The opportunity is there for Google to steal a march on Microsoft as it struggles to contain the threat to Windows from mobile operating systems and the increasing disinterest from corporations as they look for cheaper substitutes for Windows and Office. Chromebook offers this alternative. This device also turns a corner, as we get a little amount of flash storage (32GB or 64GB).

Acknowledging Chrome OS deficiencies

What's more, Google is now starting to show that it knows Chrome OS has faults – it recently bought the excellent QuickOffice to sit in Chrome OS and provide a workflow that not only plays nice with the company's apps on iOS and Android, but also offers a genuine alternative to full-blown Microsoft Office.

More corporations are also looking at Google Apps as a way to move away from Microsoft for email systems, too. Again, for companies that have opted for that, Chromebooks now looks like they could be a decent alternative to the corporate laptop.

But Pixel itself is too expensive for general business use. The laptop is, shall we say, a premium product and it will be hard for Google to justify the GB£1,049/US$1,299 asking price. It might be substantially cheaper than a Retina MacBook Pro, but it's more expensive than a MacBook Air or many Ultrabooks.

Can you really see yourself buying this instead of a MacBook Air or Windows Ultrabook despite the better screen? Answer honestly now.

But the point stands; this is a new beginning for Chromebook – and for Chrome OS. As if it wasn't already, Microsoft is getting squeezed.

TOPICS
Contributor

Dan (Twitter, Google+) is TechRadar's Former Deputy Editor and is now in charge at our sister site T3.com. Covering all things computing, internet and mobile he's a seasoned regular at major tech shows such as CES, IFA and Mobile World Congress. Dan has also been a tech expert for many outlets including BBC Radio 4, 5Live and the World Service, The Sun and ITV News.

Latest in Pro
A trough sensor at Overbury farm
“It's wildlife working for you” - how Agri-Tech can help revolutionize British farming as we know it
Epson EcoTank ET-4850 next to a TechRadar badge that reads Big Savings
I found the best printer deal you won't see in the Amazon Spring Sale and it's got a massive $150 saving
NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition
Nvidia's most expensive Blackwell card gets massive price cut but it is not the RTX 5090
Microsoft Copiot Studio deep reasoning and agent flows
Microsoft reveals OpenAI-powered Copilot AI agents to bosot your work research and data analysis
Group of people meeting
Inflexible work policies are pushing tech workers to quit
Data leak
Top home hardware firm data leak could see millions of customers affected
Latest in News
Buzz Lightyear Space Ranger Spin Rennovations
Disney’s giving a classic Buzz Lightyear ride a tech overhaul – here's everything you need to know
Hisense U8 series TV on wall in living room
Hisense announces 2025 mini-LED TV lineup, with screen sizes up to 100 inches – and a surprising smart TV switch
Nintendo Music teaser art
Nintendo Music expands its library with songs from Kirby and the Forgotten Land and Tetris
Opera AI Tabs
Opera's new AI feature brings order to your browser tab chaos
An image of Pro-Ject's Flatten it closed and opened
Pro-Ject’s new vinyl flattener will fix any warped LPs you inadvertently buy on Record Store Day
The iPhone 16 Pro on a grey background
iPhone 17 Pro tipped to get 8K video recording – but I want these 3 video features instead