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Google will let some Chromebooks transition into a Googlebook experience soon

Google says some existing models will move into the Googlebook experience, while ChromeOS support continues for devices left behind

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Googlebook is launching this year, but Google isn’t cutting every Chromebook loose.

In an interview with Chrome Unboxed, Google VP John Maletis said some Chromebooks will be able to move into Googlebook-style software through a firmware update. This means Googlebook shifts Google’s laptop plans toward an Android foundation, with Gemini built more deeply into the laptop experience and Android apps no longer sitting behind the same emulation layer.

The caution flag is still big. Google hasn’t named the eligible models, shared rollout timing, or said whether upgraded Chromebooks will match new Googlebook hardware feature for feature.

Which Chromebooks make the jump

The key question is compatibility. Google has confirmed a firmware path for some Chromebooks, but it hasn’t published the device list.

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That leaves owners waiting on specifics. The first Googlebook devices are being positioned as premium machines, and Google is working with Lenovo, Acer, ASUS, HP, and Dell on requirements covering processors, memory, storage, and keyboard layouts. That helps explain why eligibility shouldn’t be treated as a given across the Chromebook lineup.

What happens to ChromeOS

Googlebook doesn’t mean ChromeOS is going away overnight. Google said current Chromebooks will keep their promised support window, including the 10-year update commitment that could carry some devices through 2034.

That matters for anyone managing laptops at home, school, or work. Google still has Chromebook and Chromebook Plus devices in the pipeline, and owners who miss the Googlebook switch won’t suddenly lose updates. The company also expects familiar ChromeOS features, including virtual desks, Quick Insert, and screen recorder, to carry over in some form.

When the switch starts

Google hasn’t shared a public rollout schedule, but the transition won’t hit every market the same way. The source says consumer devices will move first, while education and enterprise will take a more cautious path to protect stability and management tools.

For now, the practical move is to hold off on treating any current Chromebook as future-proof until Google publishes model-specific guidance. Some devices will get a path into the Googlebook era. Others will stay on the ChromeOS track they already have.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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