

What it offersProcessor: Intel Celeron N4500 (2 cores / 2 threads; base ~1.1 GHz, boost up to ~2.8 GHz) RAM: 4 GB (likely soldered, non-upgradeable) Storage: 64 GB eMMC 5.1 Display: 11.6″ HD (1366×768) resolution Weight: approx 1.21 kg (so quite light/portable) OS: Chrome OS — meaning it’s streamlined for web-based use, Google ecosystem, and lighter tasksTargeted at budget / student / everyday use rather than heavy workloads—👍 What’s strongPortability: At ~1.2 kg and 11.6″ size, it’s good for carrying around, commuting or school.Value: For what you pay, you’re getting a full Chromebook experience. I found price history in India showing it dropping to ~₹10,990 at one point. Sufficient for lighter tasks: Web browsing, Google Workspace, streaming, and typical Chromebooks workflows should be handled fine. The review for a related model (IdeaPad 3i Chromebook with same N4500) says: “good for day-to-day tasks… decent battery life.” Battery / build: Although this exact model’s battery life isn’t abundantly reviewed, similar 11.6″ Chromebooks mention full-day battery for student use. For example: “the 11.6-inch HD screen … perfect for … and long battery life …” —👎 What are the limitationsPerformance ceiling: The N4500 is a low-power chip aimed at budget use. The review of a comparable model says: “it’s entirely serviceable for general-use … but you’ll likely see a bit of a slowdown when loading up a bunch of tabs.” If you expect to run heavy multitasking, many browser tabs + web apps + occasional Android apps, you may notice sluggishness.4 GB RAM / 64 GB eMMC: For Chrome OS that may suffice in many cases, but fewer resources mean less headroom. Not upgradeable, so you’re stuck with what you buy.Display quality: 11.6″ HD (not Full HD) means less sharpness compared to larger laptops with 1080p. Also budget Chromebooks often have lower brightness or viewing angles. Review for similar model: “Low screen brightness.” Storage type: 64 GB eMMC — fine for many Chromebooks (which rely on cloud storage) but less flexible than SSDs in Windows laptops.Chrome OS limitations: If you need Windows-only software or heavy local processing (eg video editing, large data sets), a Chromebook may not be the right tool.Future update / longevity: With Chromebooks you also want to check how many years of Chrome OS updates are promised. The reviews hint at some concerns. Example from Reddit: