
Chromebooks have been quite popular in the education market in recent years, and Asus has announced a new set of ruggedized hardware intended to capitalize on the trend.
The four new systems two standard laptop form factors, a flip convertible, and a tablet target a variety of feature sets and price points.
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The C214 is listed as using Gorilla Glass 3, while the other two laptops don’t make this distinction. With the additional cores, the C214 is clearly the premium offering of the three (relative to Chromebooks, obviously).
Finally, there’s the new Chrome tablet. The CT100 is a 9.7-inch device with a 2048×1536 display, hexa-core OP1 ARM CPU. OP is a new brand created by Google that’s specifically used for advertising chips to be used in Chromebooks
In this case, the OP1 is built by Rockchip, but that company’s branding is nowhere on the actual product.
You could think of this as the exact opposite of “Intel Inside.” The only thing Google wants you to know is that an “OP” chip is capable of running ChromeOS.
Manufacturer and other specs are considered irrelevant, though Asus does at least disclose that this is a six-core chip with a brace of Cortex-A76 CPUs and four Cortex-A53s, with 4GB of RAM and a 32GB storage pool.
Unlike the other devices, the CT100 tablet is explicitly and directly intended for children; Asus’ copy makes reference to ruggedizing the device so it could be used by five-year-olds, with a chassis just under 10mm thick (for easier gripping) and stylus input support. Only one USB Type-C port is provided, with a microSD reader and audio combo jack.
All models feature 802.11ac Bluetooth and wireless support. Pricing details have not yet been disclosed, but Chromebooks have a reputation for being affordable, Google Pixel notwithstanding.


