ComputerWorld - When I first learned about Google's Chromebook Pixel, I had the same reaction a lot of folks had: "Man, that's an expensive device." Even after I got my hands on the laptop and saw how impressive its hardware was -- the body, the keyboard and trackpad, and by God, that screen -- I still wasn't convinced it was worth 1300 bucks.
The Verge:
My mother loves Steve Jobs so much she got a little teary when I gave her a Chromebook Pixel for Christmas. She didn't open the box for almost 10 minutes, because the idea of having a tech product that didn't come from Jobs bothered her so much.
Brandon Chester of AnandTech reviews the new Chromebook Pixel.
HotHardware: Earlier this year, Google did something almost ground-breaking when it introduced the Chromebook Pixel. Sure, the Chromebook line as a whole has existed for a few years, but the entire premise of such a range of notebooks revolved around only a couple of design goals. One of those was accessibility, and almost by default, the other was affordability. The original Chromebooks were priced at $500 or less -- in some cases, far less. The reason seemed obvious: Chrome OS was a great operating system for those who did little more than browse the Web and connect to cloud-based services such as Evernote, but it served less of a purpose in the productivity-minded "real world."
*looks up from playing new Tomb Raider* WTF? No sale