Google has put another beautiful piece of hardware and software on stage. Now it has to prove the Googlebook won’t end up buried next to a dozen other abandoned experiments in its graveyard.
Why I won’t upgrade my ageing Chromebook to a MacBook Neo in 2026
The biggest Android release is right around the corner
A unified OS that looks great on paper
The technical case is hard to argue with. Google is walking away from the browser-first ceiling that has held ChromeOS back, and the new platform, codenamed Aluminium OS, sounds like a serious reset.
The new platform, reportedly codenamed Aluminium OS, fuses the Android app ecosystem with a true desktop architecture.
The hardware line appears to be aiming higher, too, with premium materials and the return of the Glowbar light strip from the original Chromebook Pixel.
But the software story is where things get more interesting. Gemini is built into the system itself.
A feature called Magic Pointer turns the cursor into an agent, so hovering over a date in an email can prompt the system to schedule a meeting.
That same idea could make the whole desktop feel more active. Highlight a block of text, and Gemini can turn it into a task list. Open a disorganized folder, and it sorts files by project.
Search for a document, and it could pull context from your Drive, email, calendar, and browser history instead of forcing you to remember where you left it.
If Google pulls this off, the Googlebook could make the PC market uncomfortable in the best possible way.
A system-level AI laptop would force everyone else to rethink what a modern computer is supposed to do.
Google’s laptop history makes the Googlebook hard to trust
I want to believe, but my faith is buried next to the Chromebook Pixel and Pixelbook.
Google has a maddening habit of shipping ambitious, sometimes well-reviewed laptops and then slowly dissolving the teams behind them.
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Independent trackers have logged more than 280 products and services killed by Google. When margins tighten or an executive loses interest, hardware goes first.
A premium laptop category requires a multi-year commitment, and consumers are right to ask why they should buy into an ecosystem Google refuses to sustain.
Google can’t afford to abandon its partners
Google isn’t building these alone. Acer, Asus, Dell, HP, and Lenovo have signed up to ship the first wave of Googlebook devices this fall.
Partners can pick silicon from Intel, Qualcomm, or MediaTek, but they must meet strict thresholds to run the local Gemini models.
Hitting that bar is expensive right now. Thanks to AI data centers, memory and storage costs are surging.
Building premium laptops with serious memory budgets means a heavy capital outlay. If Google loses interest in 18 months, these OEMs are stuck with warehouses full of unsold inventory.
That’s not a mistake they will forgive, and Google can’t afford to burn them if it wants any foothold in premium PCs.
Gemini won’t matter if the apps aren’t there
Gemini might get the keynote moment, but a premium laptop category lives or dies by third-party apps.
The new multidevice Android Developer guidelines for the Googlebook are a good start, with developers being asked to support things like native drag-and-drop and multi-instance windowing.
Still, the harder test is outside Google’s control. People will want to know if they can run the tools they already use, from Photoshop to AutoCAD, SolidWorks, Blender, and full coding environments.
The Googlebook has to outlast Google’s attention span
When someone spends over $1,000 on their main computer, or an IT department spends it a thousand times over, they expect the machine to last.
Google is also walking into a hostile market. Apple just dropped the MacBook Neo at $600, putting a macOS laptop with an aluminum unibody into the budget tier.
A typical MacBook also runs reliably for many years and benefits from Apple’s long support culture. That makes life painful for Googlebook partners trying to justify higher prices on an Android-based machine.
To compete, Google needs to promise longevity. We need to know that the Googlebook will still be a top Alphabet priority in 2036 and not a footnote by 2028.


