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Both come with a stylus built in with palm rejection which is nice, and both have very high resolution displays (although the chromebook has a slightly higher resolution, this is not that much of an issue for me as both tablets can churn out 1440p video)
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Writing is smooth, quick, and palm rejection is very accurate about 98% of the time
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Unfortunately most drawing apps didnt have a palm rejection and neither does the chromebook, so when i would rest my hand on the device it would usually start drawing where my hand touched as well
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Both feel a bit cheap.- Pen works fine, has palm rejection, but there is some input lag.- SD card slot is a necessity since on board storage is really low.- USB-C only (for peripherals
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I understand most phones and tablets don't have palm rejection either, but their screens are much smaller, and thus easier to avoid touching
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Both feel a bit cheap.- Pen works fine, has palm rejection, but there is some input lag.- SD card slot is a necessity since on board storage is really low.- USB-C only (for peripherals
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features).This combined with the S-pen is pen, makes this a killer note taking device since it gets palm rejection from the app, and the excellent wacom backed writing supplied by the pen, IT works with any Note 3/4 compatible stylus which is pretty awesome
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I spent weeks researching Chromebooks just trying to find out about the quality of the writing with stylus and palm rejection performance
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Writing is smooth, quick, and palm rejection is very accurate about 98% of the time
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There's an audible creak during this too.- When using the stylus, there's no palm rejection, meaning you can't rest your palm on the screen while writing or drawing, because it'll register as touch input
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Stylus works really well with palm rejection, looking forward to Google Keep being improved as we go
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Sonos does not work as of this writing, as it could not find my Sonos system.
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Build: metal and not plastic, so there's not much creaking as in cheap netbooks
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I concur with all the praise: Superb screen, fast and smooth as long as you understand the limitations of the processor, great keyboard, beautiful finish
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It worked as I would expect having owned phones from their Note series
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I hate Apple products probably equally as much as I hated my Chromebook which I returned after discovering it’s useless for my purposes
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USB 3.0 over USB C- Supports
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This has a better I/O dual USB Type C as opposed to 1, plus more versatile in how you use it due to it being a full-fledged computer
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USB type C on both sides, keyboard not difficult to adjust to / big enough, screen and battery solid
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This has a better I/O dual USB Type C as opposed to 1, plus more versatile in how you use it due to it being a full-fledged computer
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n’t get a refund for a product that doesn’t work and has a warranty for 1 year
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n’t go wrong with those hoping to use skype well.-
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My top 5 drawbacks of the plus are its (i
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While I stand by my assessment that Chrome OS is more than enough OS for most people and that the OS is actually surprisingly developer friendly (I'm compiling C++ on it without issue, so the OS is definitely a capable Linux system), the hardware is utter garbage
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This has a better I/O dual USB Type C as opposed to 1, plus more versatile in how you use it due to it being a full-fledged computer
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This has a better I/O dual USB Type C as opposed to 1, plus more versatile in how you use it due to it being a full-fledged computer