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Agreed. There might be halo if your brightness is too high, but just turn down your brightness. Day or night, it’s significantly easier to read on.

I’m not sure if the test site was just done in this way to show it’s possible or not, but when you scroll to the top of the “scroll jail” to try and refresh the page it will fail to bring down the spinning circle and refresh. If you pull down on the “fake bar” at the top it’ll reveal the real bar.

The one thing I’d be careful with on haveibeenpwned is while useful it’s not always accurate. There’s been a couple times where a “google” or “yahoo” leak was really just a dump of peoples’ gmail and yahoo email addresses used on other websites and had nothing to do with the site in question. Which changing a password

From the site, it doesn’t look like they get the key. “do not recover the password of the Wi-Fi network”

Your client device is the bigger risk. Fixing your router could help at home, but your device is still vulnerable anywhere else.

I never said it implied high numbers, it implies they sold the amount they wanted to create for the niche group. I believe the previous Chromebook Pixel was specifically mentioned as being a model for developers and not consumers. This one seems like they’re aiming for a middle ground. It still doesn’t change the fact

The previous LS edition of the pixel chromebook actually sold out for quite a while. It was also popular in the linux and dev communities.

It depends on your use. Chromebooks work great as linux systems. Having a higher end system allows for larger workloads in the linux environment.

A large number of Chromebook Pixel users (now pixelbook) run fully functioning linux environments within the systems as they’re extremely well supported. Either as a stand alone OS or through crouton https://github.com/dnschneid/crouton 

Doubt this will get out of the grey, but from the potential impact page: