Home / Lifestyle / Mobile / Laptop / Mobile / Demand for Chromebooks expected to see a sharp increase

Demand for Chromebooks expected to see a sharp increase

As schools all over the world start taking their teaching online, DigiTimes reports that the demand for Chromebooks is expected to see a sharp rise that will carry on throughout 2020.

Since the outbreak of COVID-19, schools in many countries have been forced to shut down, and as a result teaching has been taken online. In an effort to help connect students, many schools have distributed Chromebooks so that learning can be done from home. Japan is one of the countries where demand for Chomebooks is expected to increase the most, due to its GIGA School program – where the Japanese government plans to spend $3.7 billion to provide more computers to schools.

 

According to the report by DigiTimes, many countries have adopted “one-student-with-one-machine projects” for their K-12 education sectors and it's believed that the number of shipments of Chromebooks will start to surpass that of Windows devices. Worldwide shipments of Chromebooks to the educational sector is expected to rise by 32.3% during 2020, up to a total of 42.1 million units.

Discuss on our Facebook page HERE.

KitGuru says: Do you own a Chromebook, and if so have you used it for educational purposes?

Become a Patron!

Check Also

DLSS 5 NVIDIA

KitGuru Games: DLSS 5 misses the point

It would be hard to argue that NVIDIA’s DLSS technologies haven’t been a net positive to the PC space, with the machine-learning based upscaler successfully translating lower resolution inputs into a final image which is perceivably sharper while hogging fewer resources. Though somewhat more contentious, the next evolution of DLSS came in the form of Frame Generation, using ML in order to generate additional frames for high-refresh rate gaming. Both techniques can have their issues, but generally speaking they’ve allowed for more people to experience higher-end titles at increased frame rates. DLSS 5, however, takes a sharp pivot, with a very different end goal in mind than the performance-boosting versions that came before.