Final Words

As far as Chromebooks go, I think the Dell Chromebook 11 is one of the better devices you can buy without spending $1000 on a Chromebook Pixel. While Intel's Celeron N2840 is more like an Atom chip, it's still perfectly sufficient for the tasks that users will perform on a Chromebook. You can certainly drop even lower in price, with Chromebooks available for $149 and even $99, but you end up making even more hardware sacrifices which significantly compromise the user experience.

Dell has definitely accomplished what they set out to do with the Dell Chromebook 11. It's more than fast enough to run Chrome OS, has an ample amount of RAM to keep your tabs open, and it has the best web browsing battery life of all the Chromebooks and tablets that we've ever tested. It's also very durable and well constructed. While the design isn't exactly stunning, it avoids looking like a bulky brick laptop that you would bring to use in a war zone.

Unfortunately, the Dell Chromebook 11 with the touchscreen faces some serious competition from Toshiba's Chromebook 2. Both of them have roughly the same internal specifications, but the Toshiba has a display that is vastly superior in every respect, without the not very useful touchscreen capabilities. Dell's pursuit of a touchscreen and a highly durable design have forced them to cut costs with the display quality in order to reach their price of $329. For your average user, I really have to give the Toshiba the recommendation over the Dell Chromebook 11 at that price point, as the higher resolution display makes everything sharper and allows much more to be seen on screen than a cramped 1366x768 display. While the Toshiba's battery life is significantly shorter due to the increased display power usage, I still think it's the better option.

Despite my feeling that the Toshiba Chromebook 2 is a better purchase for most users, the Dell Chromebook 11 doesn't lack appeal to certain segments of the market. One of the markets that I believe it will be widely adopted in will be education. While I feared that schools and other academic institutions would simply opt for the most inexpensive Chromebooks possible for budget related reasons, some investigation of the local high school in my area revealed that they already have a large number of Dell Chromebook 11 units in use. Some students don't tend to take care of electronic devices that don't belong to them, and the Dell Chromebook 11 stands up to the abuse and misuse better than other devices.

The other area where the Dell Chromebook 11 will stand above the Toshiba is any environment that isn't electronics friendly. People working in construction or in geographical areas where dust and dirt are unavoidable will definitely benefit from the rugged design and MIL-STD rated resistance to fluids, dust, etc.

There is one final consideration, and that's the non-touch model of the Dell Chromebook 11. Starting at $249 for 2GB of RAM, or $269 for 4GB of RAM, both of these configurations offer a very capable Chromebook for your money. This is actually the model I saw adopted in schools, as the $50 price increase for the addition of a touchscreen is not really worth it with how limited its usefulness is in Chrome OS. Considering that other Chromebooks with similar specifications but less rugged build quality than the Dell Chromebook 11 can also cost this much, it's definitely a Chromebook that should be heavily considered at those price points.

In closing, I'll say that users who need a laptop with the durability of the Dell Chromebook 11 probably won't be considering other Chromebooks in the first place. I highly recommend opting for the non-touch model, as the touchscreen is not very useful and increases the cost significantly. But when considering the touchscreen model my general recommendation for a Chromebook at that price still has to go to the Toshiba Chromebook 2 because of its display. Paying the $50 extra over the base model Toshiba for the 1080p IPS panel is a much better use of your money than the $50 for a touchscreen on the Dell. At $249 or $269 for the non-touch model, I would probably still encourage users to spend the extra bit for the Toshiba. But if the rugged build is necessary, or if someone really needs to keep their budget around $250, then the Dell Chromebook 11 will be their best bet.

Battery Life and Charge Time
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  • Hulk - Thursday, May 7, 2015 - link

    Can we just get to the point where anything but an IPS display or other wide angle variant is a non-starter?

    I love the fact that Anandtech devotes a whole page just to the display and tells it like it is. I'll sum it up. The display on this unit sucks.
  • RichieHH - Thursday, May 7, 2015 - link

    One can only assume the reviewer got to keep his test machine. Biased , drooling fanboi nonsense.
  • PPalmgren - Thursday, May 7, 2015 - link

    Not that it applies to this situation, but I avoid IPS like the plague because of gaming input lag. TN still has its niche there.
  • Death666Angel - Friday, May 8, 2015 - link

    Input lag is only determined by the electronics working in the background, not the display technology. What you mean is pixel response time (black to white and grey to grey), which gives TN the edge most of the time.
  • lilmoe - Thursday, May 7, 2015 - link

    Ughhhhhh.... ChromeBooks
  • RichieHH - Thursday, May 7, 2015 - link

    Once again nonsense about netbooks. "Incredibly slow" hard drives are another option to cloud storage. As for the nonsense about low resolution : depends on which you buy and when etc. Choice. Chromebooks are , for me, the Emperor's New Clothes. They can do nothing a good laptop or netbook can't do. Why limit yourself. Poor review which made clear it's bias on the opening lines.
  • LetsGo - Thursday, May 7, 2015 - link

    Again another power user who thinks everyone is the same.

    Chromebooks biggest advantage is easy maintence and ease of use.
    It is practical impossible for an user to mess up.
    I bought my Mum a netbook to do her documents etc on and had to fix it for her even though I put virus checker on it for her.

    So I bought her a chromebook to replace it. Months later I asked her how she was getting on with it.
    It comes on fast was her response I have had no trouble getting my work done.

    Chromebook type devices are the future along with tablets....
  • nikon133 - Thursday, May 7, 2015 - link

    At least with slow netbook HDD, I could dump images from my camera while away from home, with no dependence on Internet availability (or costs). Cameras get lost, stolen, dropped into sea, damaged... I found it always a good precaution to backup photos to computer.

    As it is, I'm really finding very little value in Chromebooks. A modern version of netbook, with current 4C Atom (or Celeron), HDD (that can be swapped to SSD) and full OS would be much more preferable solution. Also, something like new MS Surface 3 makes much more sense to me than Chromebook. Yes, it is more expensive, but with usable storage, much better screen, full OS (and available software library), usable 8MP camera, tablet mode and a year of Office365/on-line storage.
  • SM123456 - Thursday, May 7, 2015 - link

    I don't understand why you think you need to carry around a hot and heavy Windows laptop with a short battery life everywhere with you just to back up photos. Besides the fact that you can also save onto a Chromebook's SSD, the obvious thing that anyone with any common sense would do is to save the photos from the camera directly onto an SD card or memory stick.

    What you are doing is scroogling my friend.
  • jabber - Friday, May 8, 2015 - link

    Yeah I managed on holiday just fine with my DSLR and Samsung Chromebook. Copying photos off the SD card, viewing them on the Chromebook and backing them up to USB. All works perfectly. No need for a full blown heavy Windows laptop or Macbook.

    RicheHH/Nikon33 stop showing up your lack of hardware knowledge, it's just embarrassing.

    Plus Chromebooks are far far superior to netbooks. Netbooks were the pox.

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