Premium Asus Chromebook 2-in-1 is coming, FCC lets slip
12.5-inch laptop will have a Full HD display and Intel Core M processor
At the weekend we heard that Samsung has a premium Chromebook in the works (one that comes with a stylus) – and apparently Asus doesn’t want to be left behind, with the vendor planning a higher-end 2-in-1 device with possible pen support.
The Asus Chromebook C302CA, as it’s currently known, was spotted by Notebook Italia thanks to its FCC certification over in the US, and the fact that it’s apparently been listed by several European retailers.
Details of the spec have been spilled via the FCC. The machine is a 12.5-inch Chromebook with a 1920 x 1080 resolution IPS display, while the processor is a Skylake model, Intel’s Core m3-6Y30 – a dual-core CPU which has a base clock speed of 900MHz with Turbo to 2.2GHz – backed up with 8GB of system RAM and 32GB of flash storage (eMMC).
You’ll also get 802.11ac Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.0, and as mentioned there are hints of a stylus – or at least there seems to be a slot for one on the aluminum chassis. It also looks like the laptop will carry USB-C ports, although neither this or the stylus are listed in the actual leaked spec; rather they’re what Notebook Italia has observed from screenshots it's seen.
Flipping marvelous
Like the existing Chromebook Flip convertible we saw from Asus last year, the device will flip right around 360-degrees, so you can use it in stand, tent, or tablet modes (when the display is fully folded back against the keyboard section, it’s effectively a thick tablet).
So this appears to be some manner of follow-up to the Flip, a laptop we very much appreciated back when we reviewed it – the machine got brownie points for its premium chassis, and incredible battery life.
This new offering won’t be a particularly affordable Chromebook, with the price rumored to be pitching up at around €700 to €800 – that’s about £620/$770 to £715/$890.
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Of course, we can’t get ahead of ourselves just yet – after all, this notebook has yet to be officially announced, let alone given a recommended price. But it certainly seems one destined for the more premium end of the market, as opposed to last year’s Flip, which was far more temptingly priced at the lower-end of the Chromebook scale.
Via: Digital Trends
Image Credit: Notebook Italia
- Here’s our pick of the 10 best Chromebooks for 2016
Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - 'I Know What You Did Last Supper' - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).