Tech Advisor

Google is working to solve the Chromebook’s support problem

If a Chromebook goes out of support and doesn’t receive browser updates, some sites won’t give it access.

- MARK HACHMAN reports

PCs have no expiration date. Chromebook­s do. However, executives at Google recently revealed they’re working with Chromebook makers to ensure you won’t end up buying a Chromebook that will go out of support anytime soon.

During a press briefing to mark the 10th anniversar­y of Chrome OS and Chromebook­s, a reporter asked the

Google executives on the call about a typical Chromebook experience: once a Chromebook’s support window expires, it won’t receive updates. If a website or service requires an up-to-date browser to access it, does that mean the unsupporte­d computer is now worthless?

One of the distinctio­ns between a PC and a Chromebook is that support window. Microsoft stops supporting Windows versions at some point, but it doesn’t stop supporting the PC surroundin­g it. Assuming your PC isn’t ancient, you can upgrade to the latest Windows OS. After your Chromebook passes its support expiration date, it no longer receives security patches and browser updates, quickly rendering the entire system useless. This certain death will affect more and more users over time, as the Chromebook ecosystem grows. Google executives also revealed that its partners expect to ship 50 new Chromebook­s during 2021.

Alexander Kuscher, director of product management of Chrome OS, said Google began taking steps in 2019, when it began extending the support window to eight years. “For most purchases of a Chromebook, they’re looking at a long life of support,” Kuscher explained.

What Google has little control over is customers who buy used or older Chromebook­s from a reseller, who may be attempting to unload inventory through substantia­l discounts, perhaps around the holiday season. Google said it’s taking pains to work with Chromebook makers to avoid this, too.

“I think we’re absolutely working with manufactur­ers, the PC OEMs, to not ship Chromebook­s that have that don’t have a long support life,” Kuscher argued. “And so we’re working on commercial agreements with our OEMs, that are essentiall­y incentives to for that not to happen. So we expect that that will be increasing­ly unlikely or almost impossible to happen in the future.”

Kuscher added that Google is “working under the hood” from a technical and architectu­ral perspectiv­e to ensure that all Chromebook­s have the latest updates at a browser level, if not the actual OS level. “[It’s] nothing we can particular­ly announce at this time; let’s just say that we’re 100 per cent focused on it and it’s a big push from us.”

MORE CHROMEBOXE­S

Google executives also said they’re revisiting form factors that have been de-emphasized in years past, with the exception of Chrome OS tablets. John Solomon, vice president and general manager of Chrome OS, said the company prefers an experience with

at least a detachable keyboard. But the post-pandemic work-from-home experience will be more of a hybrid environmen­t, he said, with multiple Chrome OS devices in households.

“People increasing­ly are going to have dedicated workspaces at their home, even if they aren’t going into the office a few days a week, and so we’re just seeing an enormous interest from users and from our OEM partners to build out more and more of these Chromebox experience­s and all-inones,” Solomon said.

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