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The search giant is planning to bring its streaming dongle to a number of international markets, according to Google's product management VP Mario Queiroz in an interview with Gigaom. He added that people will be "pleasantly surprised" by the scope of the expansion.
The idea is to persuade app publishers around the world to make their apps Chromecast-compatible, so that users will be able to access more content using the device.
"There will be an expectation from consumers that any and every app will be 'castable,'" Queiroz said.
To that end, an open SDK will be launched during 2014. Right now a preview is available to developers, but it's not yet possible to distribute apps with the functionality.
Source : Wired UK
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Acer rolled out the C720 Chromebook lineup back in October. At the time that meant the C720-2800 which had a price tag of $249.99. Well, flashing forward a little more than a month and there is now a second model in the lineup. This latest is the C720-2848 and it brings a similar set of specs with a lower price point.

The Acer C720-2848 Chromebook is priced at $199.99. This one sports and 11.6-inch ComfyView HD display with a resolution of 1366 x 768 and similar to the earlier model, it is powered by an Intel Celeron processor based on the Haswell architecture. In other words, this one should still hold the same mix of performance and battery life. Acer suggests the C720-2848 will be able to provide up to 8.5 hours of run time.
Other specs for the C720-2848 include 16GB of SSD storage, 2GB of RAM, WiFi 802.11 a/b/g/n, HDMI and a dual speaker setup. There will also be one each of USB 3.0 and USB 2.0 ports. The model will weigh in at 2.76 pounds and measure in at 0.75-inches thick. Similar to other Chromebook models, both from Acer and other manufacturers, the C720-2848 will come with some extra perks.
These extras include 100GB of Google Drive storage (free for two-years), Google Play Music All Access and 12 free Gogo Inflight passes. That all having been said, the Acer C720-2848 Chromebook is available beginning today and can be found with retailers to include Best Buy and Amazon.
Looking forward, this model will also be available direct with Acer, however the notebook is not expected to arrive in the Acer Store until December. There wasn’t specific mention of Play Store availability, but based on previous Acer Chromebooks, we expect this one will be sold direct with Google.
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Acer is trying to push down the prices of Chromebooks, announcing a new laptop with Chrome OS priced at $200.
The Acer Chromebook C720-2848 has an 11.6-inch screen, and is targeted at those who do most of their computing on the Web. The lightweight laptop offers 8.5 hours of battery life and runs on an Intel Celeron processor based on the Haswell microarchitecture.
A new wave of Chromebooks, running the latest version of Chrome OS, have hit the market starting in October. The latest Chromebooks are priced above $200, and the new Acer laptop and could spark a price war.
The low price will hopefully make Chromebooks attractive to more buyers, an Acer spokeswoman said in an email. Most laptops today have Windows.

The Chromebook C720-2848 weighs only 1.25 kilograms, is extremely thin, and boots up in a matter of seconds, Acer said. It has 16GB of solid-state drive storage and 2GB of DRAM, with 100GB of free Google Drive online storage for the first two years.
The screen can display images at a resolution of 1366 x 768-pixel resolution.
Other features include a webcam, 802.11 a/b/g/n Wi-Fi, and USB 3.0 and USB 2.0 ports. An HDMI port allows the laptop to be connected to high-definition TVs.
The laptop is available immediately in the U.S. Information on worldwide availability was not immediately available.
Source : PCWorld

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There's no shortage of Chrome OS devices out there to choose from, and save for the Chromebook Pixel they all pepper the lower end of the market. The Chromebook 11, a smaller (as in 11 inches) ARM-powered follow up to the larger Chromebook 14 from earlier this year, is yet another inexpensive Chromebook from HP and Google that builds on the same strategy as the devices before it.
Put together a small and portable form factor, fill it with inexpensive components and sell it on the cheap — it's a recipe for topping the sales charts for a laptop on Amazon, but is it really a product to get excited about? No matter where you stand on the merits of using a Chrome OS device, there are more than a few things the $279 Chromebook 11 has going for it. Read along after the break and see what HP's latest inexpensive Chromebook is all about
Glossy, creaky plastic
HP Chromebook 11
When you spend $279 for an 11-inch laptop, it's hard to expect too much in the way of materials and build quality. Given the pricing, the HP Chromebook 11 is actually built quite solidly. It seems as though the real shortcuts were taken in the materials themselves — this is a build primarily of very flimsy and creaky plastic. No matter the color choice (we have the black one here, of course) you'll get a very thin glossy plastic around every inch of the Chromebook 11, and while the seams are tight where materials meet, it just doesn't have the rigidity of a more expensive laptop.


Because this is an ARM-powered machine, you'll notice that there are no vents or fans on the entire build, which likely helps a bit with rigidity. Between the lack of fans and inclusion of SSD storage there are no moving parts, meaning it should hold up to bumps a bit more than your average cheap laptop with a spinning HDD.
 HP Chromebook 11
The Chromebook 11 does seem to hold up against external wear pretty well, at least. In a few weeks of using it, we only picked up a single scratch on the lid and no other dents or blemishes. For a laptop that's likely to get tossed around a lot, it's good to know it'll take a bump or two. The hinge and lid seem to hold up as well, and although the screen may not tilt back as far as you'd always want, it doesn't creak and holds in place even when you move about. The size and weight are great as well — at just 2.3 pounds (feels lighter in our hands) with an 11.6-inch display, it's amazingly portable, as it should be.
In the end it doesn't feel as though the Chromebook 11 is ready to fall apart or is poorly made, but rather is constrained so tightly by its price that you don't really have much room for advanced engineering. You're getting a $279 laptop, no doubt about it, but as a second machine meant to be used casually you're not going to be upset with the build quality. 

Display and speakers

HP Chromebook 11
A really nice display with good brightness and colors
HP has loaded up the Chromebook 11 with an 11.6-inch 1366x768 (that's 16:9) IPS display that has a purported 300 nits of brightness, and given the price you're actually getting a really nice screen here. If you're not bothered by the physical size and "short" aspect ratio as a combination (most laptop screens are 16:10 nowadays), you're in for a solid viewing experience on the Chromebook 11. Brightness, viewing angles (HP claims 176 degrees) and colors all seem solid, and considering you won't be doing any kind of serious picture or video editing on it nor will you ask anything more than "how does this web page look?," you're going to get along just fine with this screen.
Like many modern laptops, the HP Chromebook 11 doesn't have dedicated speaker grilles but rather blasts sound up through the slots in the keyboard. Google says the speakers are "digitally tuned," but they're actually just cheap and tinny speakers with no low end — again, just as you'd expect in this price range.

Keyboard and touchpad

HP Chromebook 11
Few things are more important on a laptop than the keyboard and touchpad. A bad experience in these two areas can kill the entire feeling of a laptop, and we unfortunately have to say that the results on the HP Chromebook 11 are mixed. Let's kick things off first with the keyboard, which is actually quite good for the size.
The keys themselves are full sized and properly spaced, which can be a concern on some smaller laptops. It takes some getting used to the "Chrome" keyboard layout, which uses the function row for dedicated actions for browsing the web as well as brightness and volume and replaces the caps lock key with a search key. Once you get used to where everything is, you'll have no issue typing on the Chromebook 11 if you've ever spent time on recent laptops with chiclet-style flat keyboard. Key travel is good, the keys are a bit mushy but springy enough and we had no issue jamming out emails, social network posts or full-on articles on Android Central.
 HP Chromebook 11
We mentioned that the combination of keyboard and touchpad give mixed results. The bad side of the pair is the touchpad, which comes up dramatically short of what we want to see on a laptop in 2013. We come back to the shortcomings of building a computer that retails for $279, but even taking this into account the Chromebook 11's touchpad just doesn't offer a very good experience.
This is a modern-style "clickpad" where you press down on the bottom half of the pad for mouse clicks (and hold two fingers down to right click), and while it's decently large for an 11-inch laptop the feel and tracking speed leaves a lot to be desired. Your finger doesn't glide across the surface very well, and even after turning down the touch sensitivity it never felt natural to move the pointer around.
In the end the touchpad is usable, and like with any laptop you get used to it over time, but don't rip open the Chromebook 11's box thinking that you're going to get a great touch experience — you'll need to spend a bit more money for that.

Chrome OS

HP Chromebook 11
Now to the elephant in the room — the Chromebook 11 of course runs Chrome OS as its operating system. If you've only used Chrome the browser and not Chrome OS, you're not far off from the experience here. Using Chrome OS is basically like using the Chrome browser, but with a few differences. First you'll have to get used to Chrome-specific keyboard layout, which in the end makes using a browser-based operating system much simpler to use. Next is navigation — it takes some time to get the rhythm down of managing windows, tabs and apps but there really isn't a steep learning curve here considering how few things the system can do outside of browser windows.

Daily life with the HP Chromebook 11

HP Chromebook 11
But is Chrome OS running on an ARM processor and 2GB of RAM actually a good experience in the end? Unfortunately we have to say that it isn't. Even with a very lightweight OS, the Chromebook 11 struggles to handle anything but the most basic of Internet tasks.
The real hamstring is in the number of tabs you can realistically have open — each tab in chrome is its own process, meaning that anything over two tabs on a dual-core ARM processor is going to tax the system heavily while the tabs "wait in line" to load or respond to your input. Our daily usage of Chrome on other laptops consists of about eight pinned tabs and two to 10 more at any given time throughout the day, and after waiting several minutes for the Chromebook 11 to try and load our default tab setup we quickly realized we would have to scale back our usage.
HP Chromebook 11With five or more tabs open, the Chromebook 11 is sluggish, unresponsive and stuttery in scrolling, typing and interacting with pages. Even Android Central, which isn't the heaviest site out there, chugged along. When you drop things down to just two tabs, with maybe a third open playing Google Play Music, the situation improved dramatically. This laptop is one you throw in your bag when you just need to casually browse a webpage here and there, edit a Google Doc or catch up on Gmail while listening to music or a podcast — ask anything more of it and you can hear the Exynos begging for mercy under the hood.
With sluggish performance coming from an ARM processor you'd expect great battery life as a tradeoff, right? Again we were disappointed in this aspect as well. HP and Google quote the 30Wh battery at six hours of "active usage" on the Chromebook 11, but we found ourselves getting about four hours of mixed usage, five if we took things very lightly. That's just not enough to make the bad performance worth it in our book — we expect at least double that nowadays.
The upside of this equation is that the Chromebook 11 charges off of Micro USB — just like your phone or tablet — rather than a traditional laptop power brick and proprietary connector. The included charger is a 5.25V 3A unit that is about twice the size of your average phone charger, but has a healthy-sized cord (about six feet long) and charges the laptop in about two hours. You can charge the Chromebook 11 off of a 2A charger as well, like you may get with some tablets, but you'll probably have to sleep or turn off the laptop to get it to charge at any meaningful rate.
The nicest part of a USB charger is being able to use it for any phone or tablet that supports the port. We could leave the house for a day or weekend with just the Chromebook, a phone and a single charger, and not have to worry about a big tangle of cords or the extra heft of a regular laptop power brick.

The bottom line

HP Chromebook 11
The Chromebook 11 isn't meant to replace your daily computer, nor is it meant to be a picture editing or multimedia powerhouse. This is a $279 laptop that gives you complete access to everything you normally do on the web and every one of Google's services, wrapped up in a durable and light case with a nice screen and keyboard that charges off of a standard Micro USB charger.
Source : Android Central
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Tor is a network designed to offer a layer of anonymity by routing your traffic through several other computers before exiting to the open web. I would strongly suggest doing some additional research on how Tor works if you’re not already familiar – while initially overwhelming, it can be a fantastic tool to use.
Chrome OS currently offers support for several VPN connections, but no way to connect to the Tor network natively from the stock network interface. That isn’t meant to imply the team hasn’t considered it – a ticket first opened in July 2011 has a project member calling to combine Tor with incognito mode. In fact, work started on that very feature until it was abruptly marked as “WontFix” in September 2012. The reason cited was not related to a change of heart, but rather internal disputes over user experience and workflow challenges.
Luckily, and perhaps unsurprisingly, users of Tor are often eager to create workarounds that circumvent silly things like whether a feature exists or not. One such workaround was noted in a tutorial shared by Jose Mendoza that requires nothing more than an Android smartphone and two specific apps.That ticket has recently been revived by a couple of comments from project members interested in exploring what needs to be done. A member of the Tor project also chimed in to vocalise that they would be more than happy to help where possible – a fantastic step in the right direction. Unfortunately, even if the Chrome Team opts to start working on Tor integration as a mainline feature, there will still be a period of time before support hits a stable build.
While the original tutorial can be found here, it assumes some advanced technical knowledge. For the purposes of clarity and ease of understanding, I’ve rewritten the tutorial with the blessing of the original author. Let’s take a look at what configuration is necessary to start using Tor today.
Note: This tutorial will quickly establish a Tor connection, but is not a full solution. For example, .onion sites are not accessible using this method. There may be other flaws as well, so please exercise caution.

Tutorial: Using Tor on Chrome OS

Requirements:

  • A Chrome OS device
  • An Android device (no root required)
  • Orbot app from Google Play (see below)
  • Proxy Server app from Google Play (see below)
In this walkthrough we will be installing and configuring the Android apps to work with each other, directing all traffic targeted at a specific port through the Orbot app (and thus into the Tor network), and finally updating our Chrome OS proxy settings to use that connection over the local network. You will not need any cables, but you will need both devices to be on the same local network (WiFi works well).

Installing and Configuring Orbot

Orbot is the official Android app for the Tor project. The initial installation should be straightforward, you may select the default settings for all prompts (simply click “Next”).
Installing and Configuring Orbot (1 of 2)
Installing and Configuring Orbot (2 of 2)
Once you’ve completed the initial setup, you’ll be shown the start screen. In order to activate the connection, you will need to long press the “power icon” in the center of the screen. That icon will glow green once successfully connected to the Tor network. Do not be concerned if the initial connection takes some time (5 – 10 minutes).
Long Press to Connect

Installing and Configuring Proxy Server App

In this tutorial we will be using an app called “Proxy Server”, but almost any Android app that creates a configurable proxy server will work. The initial installation should be straightforward, and will land you on a screen with a menu bar. On that screen, click “add” followed by “proxy server”. Now we will configure the settings.
  • Server Name: Tor Project
  • Run on Port: 47433
  • Enable the “Forward all requests to the same host” Option
  • Forward to Host: localhost
  • Forward to Port: 8118
  • Click the Back Button, Save Settings
Note: When configuring the Port as 8118, I had issues with only being able to type 3 digits. To solve this, I clicked the “back” button, saved my settings, and then edited the server listing I had just created. This allowed me to add the final “8″ to the port number.
Proxy Server App Configuration (1 of 2)
Proxy Server App Configuration (2 of 2)
Once you’ve saved your settings, you’ll be redirected back to the main screen where a new item titled “Tor Project” will have been created. Click on it to invoke the menu, then click “Start”. You’ll receive a prompt informing you that the server has started.
Lastly, you’ll want to click the “Info” icon in the top menu bar. This screen will display information about your device’s connection. Pay careful attention to the “WiFi IP” address – you’ll need this in the next step.
Make Note of The WiFi IP Address

Configuring Chrome OS

Chrome OS makes it rather easy to add and remove proxy servers, so this should be a breeze. Simply visit your settings page (chrome://settings/), click on your WiFi connection and navigate to the Proxy Tab. From there select “Manual Configuration”, then in the HTTP proxy field enter the WiFi IP Address from the Proxy Server app and the Port from the Proxy Server App (47433). Once completed, you’re on to the next step!
Configure Chrome OS to Use The HTTP Proxy

Verifying a Successful Result

As a final step, you’ll want to make sure that everything is working properly. The easiest way to check is to visit a site like What’s my IP and see if the reported location differs from your actual location. You may also check the notification tray of your Android device for Orbot’s ongoing traffic rate.
Orbot's Ongoing Traffic Rate

Final Thoughts

Regardless of whether the Tor project is of use to you, there are thousands of people around the world that rely on it for safe web browsing. At the moment, those people are turning to other operating systems to get the job done.
Image : OMG Chrome
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