Chromium OS doesn't seem like a particularly good fit for the form factor and Android already runs Chrome, so I'm not sure I understand the effort, but I guess it's a neat hack.
I sort of like the approach of Chromium OS and Boot to Gecko. I don't know how useful this particular project is, but I'm interested in how the end result works.
Theoretically, the newer HTML5 extensions are getting these closer to native apps in terms of features, so let's see how they do!
I thought/think they're pretty darn close. And I continually see signs of feature parity and moves towards enabling more of Chrome in Chrome for Android.
The biggest thing missing from Chrome for Android IMO is plugins. I hope they bring those over soon. I'm seriously thinking of switching to Firefox for Mobile just for this reason, even though I'd probably have to write/port the extensions I want myself.
"A 16GB version of the tablet is currently priced at $249.00 on Google Play, with an 32GB iteration expected to be officially announced at some point over the next few weeks."
Is this correct? At least over here (yay for regional limitations!) I can go to the store page of the 32GB model [1] (listed as 'in stock'). Only the 32GB model with HSPA+ [2] is listed as 'coming soon'.
That just changed, then. Thanks for the update! I checked those very same pages an hour ago and all three models (16, 32, 32 with HSPA+) were listed as “coming soon”.
I don't think ChromeOS can be useful as a tablet interface, just like I don't think Ubuntu would be useful like that, but I could see it somehow dual-boot, or easily change between the Android and ChromeOS mode when being docked to a keyboard, with ChromeOS being more optimized for that kind of usage.
I totally agree with you. I can see myself using something similar: a tablet when I'm travelling, relaxing, or watching a show, dual-booting into Ubuntu and plugging in a mouse+keyboard+monitor to get work done.