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Googlebook laptops will come in multiple chip options beyond just Intel, and that’s a relief

More chips, more choices. Google is giving Googlebook buyers real hardware flexibility from day one.

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After Google’s bombastic Android Show, where the company unveiled tons of new features, Google VP John Maletis sat down with Chrome Unboxed to talk Googlebook. The interview contains several nuggets of information, and one of the most reassuring confirmations we got was about the chips powering these new laptops. 

Maletis said that Google is working with Intel, Qualcomm, and MediaTek, meaning the platform won’t live or die by a single silicon provider. For anyone who has followed the Chromebook space for a while, this is genuinely good news.

Why does the chip variety actually matter?

A platform dependent on a single chip provider is sure to doom. Consider how Apple had to switch to its own Apple Silicon chipsets when Intel couldn’t keep pace with its plans.

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It’s not just about survival, too. Different processors serve different needs, whether that’s raw performance, battery life, or price. Having Intel, Qualcomm, and MediaTek in the mix gives OEM partners like Lenovo, Acer, Asus, HP, and Dell room to build machines that serve different kinds of users rather than forcing everyone into the same box.

Maletis was also clear that Google is setting strict hardware requirements across the board, covering not just processors but memory, storage, and even keyboard layouts. So, the overall Googlebook experience should stay consistent and premium regardless of which device you pick up.

What else do we know about what’s inside these laptops?

While Google has not shown any hardware, it has confirmed a few software features that provide a clearer picture of these machines. Magic Pointer, built with Google DeepMind, brings Gemini directly to your cursor so you can get contextual suggestions. Also, the laptop will likely run on Aluminium OS based on Android tech stack so Android apps will work out of the box.

There’s also Create your Widget, which lets you pull in information from Gmail, Google Calendar, and the web to build a personalized dashboard just by describing what you want.

Pricing and exact specs are still under wraps, but with hardware partners confirmed and a fall 2026 launch window locked in, the full picture is starting to come together nicely.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
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