![]() ![]() £108.00 Buy now Lenovo IdeaPad 3 Chromebook review: Keyboard and touchpadįirst impressions of the keyboard and touchpad aren’t great. Sure, you’re not getting the absolute fastest ports, but do you really need them on a budget Chromebook? It’s much the same with the wireless connectivity, and you can’t really moan about 802.11ac with 2x2 MIMO at this price. Bar the massive bezel below the screen, it’s not a bad-looking device.Ĭonnectivity isn’t a problem, either, with two USB 3.1 Type-A ports and two USB 3.1 Type-C. The all-plastic construction feels cheap, but there’s a nice two-tone textured effect on the lid, which itself isn’t as weak and flexible as on some budget Chromebooks. In terms of the physical design, Lenovo has made the best of a limited budget. READ NEXT: Acer Chromebook Spin 713 review Lenovo IdeaPad 3 Chromebook review: Design Suffice to say, if you’re tempted by the Lenovo, you really need to shop around first. If that doesn’t quite hit the spot, then HP, Dell and Acer also have some strong contenders for around £200 to £230. If you can find an extra £20 in the kitty, then the Asus Chromebook C223 (£200) will give you a slightly more elegant thin-and-light design and a decent HD screen – although it doesn’t have a vast amount of processing power at its disposal. ![]() This might be a super-cheap Chromebook, but you don’t have to spend a whole lot more to find some competition. So, is the IdeaPad 3 Chromebook 11 the Chrome OS bargain of the century or a cut-price duffer we should warn you of? Inevitably, the truth lies somewhere in-between. READ NEXT: Lenovo IdeaPad Flex 5 review Lenovo IdeaPad 3 Chromebook review: Price and competition Here, you could argue that what matters more is Chrome OS’s minuscule start-up times, hassle-free upgrades, baked-in security and overall ease of use. It’s a strictly frills-free device: it has a conventional clamshell design, an 11.6-inch screen and a Celeron processor, so nothing unexpected in the slightest.Īnd while it hasn’t got much in the way of processing power or storage – you get a tiny 32GB eMMC flash drive – these things matter less on a low-cost Chromebook, which is designed primarily to run a browser and lightweight, web-based apps. Just like its predecessors, the IdeaPad 3 is very much an entry-level Chromebook – in fact, it’s one of the cheapest available in the UK. £108.00 Buy now Lenovo IdeaPad 3 Chromebook review: What you need to know ![]()
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