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Lenovo Unveils Chromebook for K-12, Maybe Next for Biz
Lenovo Unveils Chromebook for K-12, Maybe Next for Biz

By Barry Levine
January 17, 2013 11:27AM

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Given the brutal wear and tear of a K-12 environment, Lenovo has added features to its ThinkPad X131e Chromebook to protect the unit in case it is dropped, such as a rubber bumper around the top cover and stronger corners. The Lenovo Chromebook's hinges and hinge brackets are built to last more than 50,000 open/close cycles at school.
 



Can Google's cloud Relevant Products/Services-based Chromebook find a bigger foothold in schools? Lenovo is going to find out, with its announcement Thursday of the ThinkPad X131e rugged Chromebook designed for K-12 education. And there are reports that the company is about to release Chromebooks for companies.

Some school administrators will likely find the Chrome OS-based Chromebook concept appealing, with fast boot times, simplified software Relevant Products/Services and security management Relevant Products/Services through one dashboard, the lack of viruses, automatic updating and backups, and the ability to readily share devices between students. Chromebooks are entirely Web-based, with applications and data Relevant Products/Services stored in the cloud.

In its announcement, Lenovo cited an IDC report that Chromebooks require 69 percent less labor to deploy and 92 percent less to support.

Rubber Bumper

Given the brutal wear and tear of a K-12 environment, Lenovo has added features intended to protect Relevant Products/Services the unit in case it is accidentally dropped, such as a rubber bumper around the top cover and stronger corners. The company also said that the hinges and hinge brackets are designed and built to last more than 50,000 open/close cycles.

Jerry Paradise, executive director of product marketing for the ThinkPad Product Group, said in a statement that the company's testing has shown the X131e to be "very successful in education environments," and the ruggedness has led to "reduced failure rates in the field." The company has indicated that the devices are available only through volume bids, beginning late next month.

The model, which weighs under 4 pounds, offers Google Apps for Education and thousands of apps Relevant Products/Services in the Chrome Web Store. It offers an unspecified Intel processor, an 11.6-inch 1366x768 HD LED anti-glare screen, a low-light webcam for such activities as video conversations with students in other schools, and has Wi-Fi Relevant Products/Services as well as HDMI, VGA and three USB ports.

Lenovo Chromebooks for Enterprises?

To increase its appeal to schools, the model has several customizable options, such as custom colors, device Relevant Products/Services tagging to keep track of the units, and school logo etching.

Caesar Sengupta, director of product management for Chrome OS at Google, said Chromebooks are being used by more than a thousand K-12 schools. In December, Google offered the Samsung Series 5 Chromebook, originally with a $430 list price, to schools for $100 each through DonorsChoose.org, an online charity. The offer, good only through Dec. 21, included the device, management, and support.

Avi Greengart, an analyst with industry research firm Current Analysis, said schools "are one place where Chromebooks make sense" because of the "zero setup and maintenance and the ability to allow any student to use any unit."

According to a report earlier this week on financial journal The Street, Lenovo will offer laptops and desktops this year for corporate markets that are based on Google's Chrome OS. The report said that it is hearing from enterprises that they are ready to try Chromebooks on as many as 20 percent of their employees. With its strong brand name in companies, Lenovo's release of Chromebooks for the corporate market could change the dynamics of this thin-client offering.
 

Based on your interest in this article, here's something that may be of interest to you also:

Recommended Reading: Search & Destroy: Why You Can't Trust Google Inc. Synopsis: This is the other side of the Google story. In Search & Destroy, Google expert Scott Cleland, shows that the world's most powerful company is not who it pretends to be. Google pretends to be a harmless lamb, but chose a full-size model of a Tyrannosaurus Rex as its mascot. Beware the T-Rex in sheep's clothing.

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