I was a little surprised by the arrival of a brand new Chromebook with a Samsung badge on the lid. The Korean giant was a great friend to Google in the earliest days of its web-based operating system, releasing a stream of consumer-ready Chromebooks, including the first sub-$250 Chromebook worth buying.
But Samsung recently announced it would dramatically cut back its Windows laptop production, and the company even gutted its European Chromebook output. Here in the States, however, we're still getting Chromebooks from Samsung—and pretty nice ones at that.
The latest in the Samsung Chromebook line is the Samsung Chromebook 2. I tested the XE500C12-K01US model, which features a 2.16 GHz Intel Bay Trail chip, a regrettably paltry 2GB of RAM, a 16GB flash drive, and a 1366 x 768 pixel 11.6-inch display.
The hardware does not put this in the top caliber of Chromebooks, but on the plus side that power-sipping Bay Trail chip does give this Chromebook close to the nine hours of battery life Samsung claims.
The other main selling point here is the low price. Samsung is offering the Chromebook 2 for just $250, which is a good deal given the new chip and impressive battery life.
The ports on the Samsung are close to what you'll find on other Chromebooks—a USB 2.0 and headphone jack to the right, and then a USB 3.0 port, a full HDMI port, and a microSD card slot to left. The latter is somewhat unusual as most Chromebooks offer full SD card support. The micro means you'll likely need a USB-based SD card adapter to dump photos from your camera card.
On the plus side, the microSD slot has a nice cover and the card disappears into it, making it easy to slap a 128 GB microSD card in there to act as a semi-permanent second storage drive.
Samsung has done a nice job of making this thing feel solid. There's a somewhat cheesy faux-leather textured surface on the top (complete with fake stitching) but underneath that is a well reinforced frame that gives this model a sturdy feel often missing in Chromebooks.

