Samsung 12.3" QHD Touchscreen Chromebook-Plus
$339.99
Condition: Factory Reconditioned
Screen Size: 12.3"
Top positive review
859 people found this helpful
Great little tablet/laptop
By Bill Wood on Reviewed in the United States on February 12, 2017
*Update March 17, 2017* Having used the Samsung Chromebook Plus every day since I got it, and mostly ignoring my MacBook Pro with 15" Retina Display, I believe that the Plus is the first real "iPad killer" I've come across. By that I mean, it fulfills the promise to replace a laptop for almost all uses while addressing the shortcomings of tablets. The keyboard is built in, there is a track pad and touch screen with stylus, no separate case is required, and the rotating screen provides genuinely useful orientations. It's fast, battery life is good, charging is quick, the screen is fantastic, it can drive external displays, and it's reasonably light. The Chrome browser is first rate, and it can run thousands of apps! I've been using the Plus extensively at home and while traveling - for browsing, watching videos, taking handwritten notes (see update on LectureNotes below), email, photos, reading Kindle books, music, maps, games - you name it. The Plus and others like it are the portable do-it-all devices of the future. *Original Review and updates* I've had a few days to play with the Chromebook Plus and so far I love it! I've been looking to replace my Samsung Tab Pro 12.2" tablet (the Note Pro without a pen). The Chromebook Plus seemed perfect as it can be folded over to be a tablet, and can also be used like a regular laptop. Plus it runs Chrome and Android apps. Overall I really like it. It's size is just right, a bit heavier than the Tab / Note Pro and a bit squarer (see attached comparison pictures). The screen is really good and I only need to put it on 1/2 brightness. It's aspect ratio is 3:2 which is perfect for browsing and using as a tablet. The touchscreen works very well. I love that I don't need a special case to prop it up; the 360 degree hinge allows you to situate the screen at whatever angle you choose. Chrome runs very well. It's about twice as fast as the Tab / Note Pro tablet (see attached "Octane" benchmark image). Having windows is great and I have more than 20 tabs open in 4 windows with no issues. Windows are only available in laptop mode. In tablet mode it makes every app full screen. I'm expecting tablet mode to get windows when the underlying Android subsystem gets updated from Marshmallow to Nougat. Android apps generally work really well. The Kindle app is great. Google photos, Google Inbox, NY Times, all work fine although often I find no need for an Android app if there is a Chrome web version of the app. Google Maps is much better on Chrome because it shows you the 3D satellite view. Google Inbox is faster on the app version though so I use that. Sonos does not work as of this writing, as it could not find my Sonos system. I've opened a ticket with them. *Update May 25, 2017* Sonos works now. I loaded up the "Asphalt 8" road racing app and it was very responsive. I didn't see any stuttering as seen on some of the online reviews of the Chromebook Pro. Go figure! Battery life is good, I'm getting between 7 and 9 hours. Apps that uses the CPU a lot can reduce that quickly. To see which tabs / apps are using the most CPU, you can bring up the task manager by pressing the "search" and "esc" keys. I've found that tabs that aren't visible don't use as much CPU. Amazon often uses a lot of CPU when it's tab is visible, so I close it or switch to another tab when not using it. For some reason the Google Hangouts extension was eating a lot of CPU, so I disabled it. The keyboard works well, although it is somewhat mushy and the delete key is too small so I often press = by mistake. The touch pad works well for two finger scrolling and you can enable "tap and drag" in Accessibility settings. It has a slight rebound when two finger scrolling down a web page; when you lift your fingers the page scrolls goes back a tiny bit in the opposite direction that you were scrolling. I hope Google/Samsung can address this soon. *Update Feb 18, 2017* This was fixed by a recent update, there is no longer any "bounce back". The Samsung Chromebook Plus seems like a real keeper! Some here have suggested waiting for the Chromebook Pro, but I'm not sure that makes sense as the Plus is here today, is fast and reliable, and is a joy to use! *Update Feb 18, 2017* I am having Bluetooth issues. Sometimes it cuts in and out while playing music on the Google Music web site. Or it will stop playing through the Bluetooth speaker and start playing through the built in speakers, even though the Bluetooth connection is still established. Hope this can be fixed soon! *Update Mar 4, 2017* This is supposed to be fixed soon in ChromeOS 57. *Update May 25, 2017* Bluetooth is working fine now. I found a very nice note taking app that responds to pressure from the stylus, called Squid. There is a toolkit add-on for $2.99 that gives more features like geometric shapes. *Update Feb 21, 2017* I'm finding that I can have many Chrome windows and tabs open, many more than suggested in reviews. Right now for instance, I have 41 tabs in 13 windows open. *Update Feb 22, 2017* For those of you who like to keep lots of tabs and windows open (tab hoarding), I found this great Chrome extension called The Great Discarder. It automatically suspends idle tabs to reduce Chrome memory usage using Chrome's native tab discarding. When you do visit a suspended tab it automatically reloads. With this extension you can have as many tabs open as you want! Get it at the Chrome web store. *Update Feb 28, 2017* I installed the Android version of Skype for Business to attend work meetings. I found that clicking web links to Skype meetings did not work. The link is opened in the Chromebook's Chrome browser, which doesn't know how to send it to Skype, since Chromebook's Chrome is not an Android app. I found a work-around, which is to install Chrome for Android. Now when I click on a Skype web link from an Android app, I can choose whether to open it in the Chromebook's Chrome or in Android's Chrome. Opening it in Android's Chrome, it then gets passed properly to the Skype Android app. *Update Mar 4, 2017* I looked at some of the note taking apps on the Play store, including Squid, INKredible, SketchBook, HandWrite Pro Note and Draw, and LectureNotes. LectureNotes isn't as flashy as some of the others, and the interface is not as pretty, but it is very comprehensive in how you set it up and use it. Pressure sensitive stylus, custom pencils and eraser, draw with stylus / erase with finger, basic geometric shapes, very good selection tools, layers... about the only thing it fell down on was it doesn't go full screen in the tablet portrait mode. LectureNotes was the only one that let me import a PDF and then select, copy, cut, and paste from the PDF itself as opposed to just drawing over it. To get PDF import functionality you have to download the developer's PDFView app.
Top critical review
10 people found this helpful
Continuous issues upon issues
By Bryan W. on Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2017
Update 2: Ok, so I hate writing reviews. I hate updating reviews. I hate updating updated reviews. So, the fact that I'm compelled to update this review less than a year after I both bought the item and updated it the first time should say something. I would strongly advise anyone looking for a Chromebook to look elsewhere. While I stand by my assessment that Chrome OS is more than enough OS for most people and that the OS is actually surprisingly developer friendly (I'm compiling C++ on it without issue, so the OS is definitely a capable Linux system), the hardware is utter garbage. So, as I had mentioned previously, there was a phantom tap issue that was fixed in on of the updates a long time ago. Well, recently the phantom tapping started up again. So, my first thought that it was a bug like last time and that it'd go away after a few updates. However, it did not. The issue increased in frequency as the last month has gone by. I started getting concerned. Well, it turns out the wiring to the touchscreen itself is actually damaged! Fantastic! Less than a year old and I've now had to disable the touchscreen just for the system to be usable. The singular feature I actually wanted out of this has now been rendered unusable. The issues don't stop there. Since about 6 months into this adventure, this Chromebook has had nearly daily wifi issues. Generally, after about 24-48 hours of uptime, I have to restart the Chromebook, otherwise, it'll start dropping wifi at an increasing rate. It also appears that Bluetooth has entirely failed in the Chromebook and it always throws a "Cannot connect" error any time you attempt to use Wifi. Like a good Chrome OS user, I thought maybe a powerwash would fix these issues. Unfortunately, this was not the case. The issues have become so unbearable that I'm having to look for something to replace this "fantastic piece of machinery" with. Generally bad experiences stick out the most. I don't want to say all Chromebook Pluses are garbage. It's very likely I just lucked out. However, I do advise caution when choosing between this and other Chromebooks. Update: So, after giving this little bugger another week (give or take a few days), I've got to say I'm enjoying it far more than I had been that first week. I've found that popping this bad boy into the "Beta Branch" actually produces significant stability improvements. Android apps no longer crash the entire OS now, but are still in a state of near inoperability. The rest of the OS, however, has become extremely stable and hasn't crashed at all since switching branches. On top of the stability, there seems to be at the very least a small improvement to performance. Be warned, though, switching to the beta branch and then switching back to the stable branch WILL erase all of your data on the Chromebook. Keep this in mind before deciding to switch which branch you're using. I definitely think it's a worth purchasing chromebook for those willing to embrace the beta branch. For those of you who aren't as tech savvy or are only looking for Android support, I would say it's still best to hold off. Original Review: I bought this Chromebook as a replacement for an old and quickly dying laptop that had a battery no longer able to hold a charge. As a mostly PHP developer, my first thought was that I didn't need too much power for what I'm doing. If I needed anything more than what the Chromebook had, I could simply remote into my desktop using Chrome Remote Desktop and I'd be golden. I've definitely made both the right and wrong choice here. So, I'm definitely correct in assuming I don't need as much power as I went for with my last laptop. This Chromebook most definitely does everything I need it to do. I can easily browse the internet in comfort, there are plenty of SSH clients for Chrome that I can use to remote into servers, Chrome Remote Desktop works what I consider shockingly well. As well, I'm loving everything about Chrome OS's UI in comparison to Windows 10. The Bad (skip this if you're wanting to know what the pros of this device are. This section is bound to change over the next few weeks/if an update fixes the issues found): You're probably now wondering "why is this individual giving a product they clearly like a 2 out of 5 review!?" Believe me, this is not the score I want to give it. I definitely love the device. In the week I've had it, I've had an extremely pleasant experience with it for the most part. However, there are multiple issues I've encountered that, until fixed, can't allow me to give it a score above 2 stars. To start with, opening more than 3 or 4 pages with any sort of moderate javascript (here's looking at you, countless banks that seem to think you need to load up 20MB worth of javascript every time you're loaded) will cause lag, so keep this in mind "interweb power users". This is ignorable in most cases and something I expected considering this little beaut is equipped with an ARM CPU. Nothing new there, ARM CPUs aren't powerhouses, they're power savers. If you get up to the 7 to 8 range, things start to slow down and they slow down substantially. Again, this is to be expected, it's an ARM CPU. The issue here is that things also start to become unstable at that point. Multiple times now the entire OS has locked up on me, requiring a hard reboot, roughly when I hit 9 pages open. I want to reiterate, I'm well aware of the limitations of ARM CPUs. I don't expect for this to perform just as well with 9 pages open as it does with 3 or 4 pages open. What I do expect, however, is for the OS to gracefully kill processes if it feels that things are getting too overloaded. This is a common task of OSes and something OSes do without issue. As someone that frequently deals with *nix systems, I'm well aware of how well Linux (what Chromium OS and thus Chrome OS use for their kernel) can perform and how well it can handle issues that might pop up during run time. I've had a web server running BSD stay up for a little over 2 years now without hiccup or issue. *nix OSes are reliable. They're stable. Even on ARM CPUs, they're able to handle even the most abusive tasks. However, Chrome OS seems incapable of handling of this. I'm not entirely sure if this is an issue with Chrome OS itself or potentially the big.LITTLE ARM package they've opted to use for this Chromebook. While big.LITTLE has been a common steeple of the ARM CPU and mobile device arena for a very long time now (many modern Android phones use big.LITTLE ARM packages) and is supported by the Linux kernel, it's always possible that there's a hardware issue occurring when Chrome OS calls for the big (the high powered CPU) cluster to activate and take on some tasks. This could be due to a defect with my particular unit (this is something I plan to contact Samsung about and, once I've talked to them, my rating may change), or an issue with the current version of Chrome OS's handling of these situations (same as before, if an update for Chrome OS is pushed out that fixes this issue, my rating may change). Another issue I've had revolves around the trackpad. While not a "horrible" trackpad, it's definitely inferior to pretty much any trackpad I've ever used in the past. It seems to have an issue where randomly it decides I've placed 2 fingers on it even though I've only placed 1 finger on it, causing it to switch into scrolling mode. This seems to be an on and off issue, one that I thought was potentially caused by something sitting on top of the trackpad along with my finger that registered as a finger. However, when this occurs, even wiping off the trackpad doesn't fix the issue. The Good: So, with all of the negativity out of the way, here are the things I love about this Chromebook (I bet you didn't see this coming)! First off, the keyboard is extremely enjoyable to use. I'm a huge fan of chicklet keyboards and this one really takes the cake. It's quick to type on and (because I'm relatively weird as many developers are) it makes a super delightful clicky noise as the keys are tapped. I've always been a fan of the noise keys make when being pressed anyway, but this has to be one of my favorite sounding chicklet keyboards. As well, the touch screen is an absolute godsend. Everything about it is great. It's extremely responsive and feels very natural to use while derping about on websites. The Chromebook is packaged with a fairly simple (though very awesome) drawing app that takes advantage of the screen and pen's pressure sensitivity that really shows off what could be done with this device. While I'm not really an artist, I will definitely say that this app will become a common part of my weekly routine for stress relief. Something about drawing really clears the mind. Another thing I really love is the Android/Google Play Store app compatibility (I address this further down so, if you're new to Chrome OS, please read the disclaimer further down the review). I've got quite a few apps that I use very frequently on my cellphone such as Andchat (IRC app) and Timely (alarm app). These apps work almost flawlessly in Chrome OS. Timely runs in the background as one would expect, syncing up with my phone's alarms. Andchat is just as buggy as it is on Android itself (it has some issues with crashing when losing focus if it's connecting to a server) but overall is a treat of an experience when used on this Chromebook. Finally, I can't emphasize how much I love everything about the Chrome apps. Chrome itself has been my browser of choice for years now, and seeing what people can do with apps through HTML5 and Javascript through the Javascript API the OS provides (direct file access, file system access implementations such as mounting SMB shares, Dropbox accounts, Onedrive accounts, etc) is truly amazing. There's so much potential that I'm really looking forward to Chrome OS growing. The Ugly: This is separate from the rest of the review so, if you've made it this far and you have experience with Chrome OS, you're free to go! As a warning to people that want to purchase this Chromebook purely for it's Android app support, it's clearly a very early beta and the Chromium Project (the group responsible for maintaining the open sourced Chromium OS which Chrome OS derives from) explicitly mentions this fact. Do not expect all of your favorite apps to be compatible, there's a good chance they aren't. As well, do not expect all of your apps that claim to be compatible to run correctly or at all. Many of them, especially those that use OpenGL (pretty much anything with "pretty graphics"), can and will cause the Chromebook to lock up. This is bound to change in the future as the technology advances and improves, but if that's your only reason for wanting this Chromebook, you're far better off just getting an Android tablet.
Sort by:
Filter by:
Sorry, no reviews match your current selections.
Try clearing or changing some filters.Show all reviews
Show more reviews