The upcoming Googlebook is a quiet confession that Chromebooks never truly worked

by · Android Police

I've never owned a Chromebook, though I once wanted one for its lightweight approach to computing.

My view changed when I realized much of the experience depended on the cloud. It's something I've grown wary of as I move toward self-hosting and owning my data.

Looking back, I don't feel I missed much.

Chromebooks served their purpose, but weak Android app support and interoperability held them back.

Considering Android is Google's platform, it's only now that Google seems to be building the laptop Chromebooks were meant to be.

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By  Ben Khalesi

Things were so bad you had to look outside the ecosystem

It's Google's fault I'm in Apple's arms

It's been over 15 years since Google launched Chromebooks. I think it's a strange moment for the product line because it's still alive to see its own replacement.

The Googlebook's concept is oddly premium and deeply integrated with Gemini.

Google said it's an intelligence-first computing platform, where Gemini is the operating system's foundation. So, it's not another traditional interface with an AI assistant on top.

In particular, the hype around Gemini in 2026 is no small feat for the company, and it's rightly deserved.

At Google I/O in May 2026, the company revealed the Gemini app had crossed 900 million monthly active users. It more than doubled from 400 million a year earlier.

There's no doubt that the brand finally had the confidence, and the user base, to build its dream PC.

The Googlebook could be a test to gauge fan appetite without risking the existing segment ChromeOS owns. Basically, it's another Andromeda project.

From 2015 to 2017, Google was reportedly developing Andromeda, which was an internal project to merge Android and ChromeOS into one hybrid platform. There were rumors of hardware in the works too.

Then Google shelved it because folding Android apps into ChromeOS was messier than expected. Plus, they were already successful individually.

Googlebook is Google's second attempt at Chromebooks

If it didn't work out the first time, try again

ChromeOS's founding bet was that you didn't need a complete OS. A browser and cloud connection would be enough.

But if there's an off chance you need specialized software or something else outside a browser tab, expanding beyond it is hard.

Much of its Android app support was poorly built from the start. Android apps run inside a sandboxed container layered on top of ChromeOS rather than integrating into it.

Files saved by an Android app and files saved by a native ChromeOS app live in separate storage spaces that don't connect.

So, you'll manually move files between the two instead of accessing everything from one shared location.

It's one big reason my Apple iPhone and Apple MacBook are my daily work drivers, with the clutter of drafts, screenshots, and voice memos scattered across both devices.

They're instantly accessible no matter which one I picked up last.

Also, macOS runs select iOS and iPadOS apps natively.

Agreed, there were hardware wins where Google's Pixelbook Go with a Core i5, 8GB of RAM, and 128GB storage had better spec-to-dollar value against an equivalently priced Apple MacBook Air.

But the software isn't doing it justice. The same Apple laptop beats the Pixelbook on macOS alone even though it costs up to $300 more.

I guess winning on chips and design is the easier half of competing with tech giants.

To its credit, Google is trying to make good on the original bet. But it's doing so with a different tool.

If a browser alone can't carry the weight of a full operating system, maybe Gemini's broader capabilities can finally close the gap.

Googlebook runs on Aluminium OS, which is a rebuilt version of Android 17.

Because it runs the software natively instead of emulating it inside a browser shell, apps from the Google Play Store work as they would on your phone.

The new Google computer for everyone is AI

Because why shouldn't Gemini control your PC?

It might surprise you to know that schools weren't originally the target market for Chromebooks.

While I'm sure Google cares about the educational sector, the truth is the first Chromebooks in 2011 were for everyday consumers.

They were marketed as "the computer for everyone." However, critics called them underpowered netbooks with a browser bolted on.

They ended up appealing mainly to schools where cheap and durable enough for a classroom was enough.

The age of the Googlebook is ushering in inclusivity that's not so much about price as it is about access.

Anyone can use Gemini, whether they're a student pulling together a project or a professional managing five things simultaneously.

Its integration with Acer or Lenovo hardware unlocks access to next-level features.

Magic Pointer turns your cursor into an AI agent. You can wiggle it toward anything on screen, and Gemini offers contextual suggestions based on what you point at.

Create My Widget builds desktop dashboards from a single prompt and pulls entries from Gmail or Calendar to assemble an itinerary automatically.

It's also pretty cool that there's now a Glow Bar that lights up whenever Gemini is active.

Interestingly, Google could have easily called the Googlebook the ChromeOS 2.0. But it would be admitting that the OS was the obstacle all along.

The things that ruined it are baked into its foundation and don't go away with a patch.

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By  Jon Gilbert

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While I thought I'd be more excited to see an Android laptop, the reality is a little lackluster.

AI has dominated almost every product launch this year. So, the Googlebook doesn't feel any different from other machines racing to use Gemini.

Drawn as I am to the open source ecosystem, I won't ditch my MacBook. Aluminium OS still seems closer to a desktop mode than a full OS.

Besides, Gemini is coming to Mac anyway, so Googlebook's AI-first pitch isn't a strong reason to switch.