Well, would you look at what showed up on our frigid doorstep this morning? 
That's right, we are now the proud owners of Google's first Chrome OS laptop -- 
the Cr-48. Obviously, we ripped open the box and got right to handling the 
12.1-inch, Atom-powered laptop. So, what does the thing feel like? How's that 
keyboard? And more importantly, how's Chrome OS looking? Stand by for our 
impressions, which we'll be adding in depth over the day. First impression: 
this thing is different. Here are some quick bullet points, one of our favorite 
formats for presenting data in a list:

Hardware
The entire body is made of a soft, beautiful matte black. It feels very 
Droid-like, just a little less rubberized.
Overall, it looks a lot like a black MacBook, including a magnetic latch with a 
split spot for getting your finger in and lifting the lid, a very similar 
keyboard, and a similar hinge design.
There's on of those large Envy-style clickpads. It has great multitouch scroll, 
and great general mousing feel (better than most Windows laptops), but it also 
has some of that Envy trouble of disliking a finger floating on the lower part 
of the pad. Basically, you have to click or mouse, you can't be doing both at 
once.
The matte screen overwhelms us with gratitude. Thank you, Google. Thank you.
There's ultra-wide ctrl and alt buttons on the left side, thanks to the lack of 
a Windows Key.
Software
It starts up instantly, and it's actually really hard to tell if we've put it 
into standby or not because there are no drive noises, and we haven't hit upon 
any fan noise yet either.
We're having trouble installing Photoshop.
Our apps haven't synced over from our desktop's copy of Chrome, which must be a 
still-forthcoming feature.
You need an internet connection for the very first setup and login, but you can 
login to an existing user while the device is offline, and access anything 
that's cached or HTML5-stored on the device -- like some of those new Chrome 
Web Apps.
The most important thing to remember is that this product is in no way designed 
for the mass market, and it's up to Samsung, Acer, and other forthcoming third 
parties to actually build the hardware we'll end up buying in the long run. 
Still, there seems to be a lot here that laptop manufacturers of all sorts 
could take note of, and generic-ified or not, the Cr-48 is pretty 
striking.Developing...
Gallery: Google Cr-48 Chrome laptop preview


Google Cr-48 Chrome laptop preview originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 
Dec 2010 11:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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