Priced at the upper-end of the laptop market for its release in the US on February 21, 2013, the machine featured a touch-screen which had the highest
pixel density of any laptop, a faster CPU than its predecessors in the
Intel Core i5, 32 GB of solid-state storage, an exterior design described by
Wired as "an austere rectangular block of aluminum with subtly rounded edges", and a colored lightbar on the lid added purely for its
cool factor. In addition to ChromeOS, the Pixel, as well as other Chromebooks, can run other operating systems including
Ubuntu and
Android—which in turn support more offline applications.
Linux inventor
Linus Torvalds replaced ChromeOS on his Chromebook Pixel with
Fedora 18, employing
Red Hat engineer David Miller's work. Torvalds had praised the Pixel screen but not the operating system, which he felt was better suited to slower hardware.
3:2 display Chromebook Pixel introduced a 12.85-inch display with an aspect ratio of 3:2.
The Verge praised it: But the Pixel's 3:2 display, which is nearly as tall as it is wide, makes me wonder why no one else has thought to do this — the 12.85-inch display isn't quite as wide as a standard 13-inch screen, and you do get some letterboxing above and below any movie you're watching, but the tradeoff is simply more vertical space to read a web page. The unusual aspect ratio was probably an easier decision for Google to make, because web pages comprise the entire operating system, but I wish every laptop offered a 3:2 screen. That won't happen, of course, which is only more fodder for my wanting a Pixel. In addition, a high-end Pixel LS ("Ludicrous Speed") model was made available with a Core i7 processor.
Specifications ==Reception==