Googlebook
An Internet at Google (business model: "Uber for watchlist subscriptions") has announced the Googlebook, a laptop whose sole purpose is to serve text files to half a dozen people while vacuuming up everything they touch via a "Magic Pointer" that makes Clippy look like a trustworthy confidant. Hackernews, literally all of whom have a closet full of abandoned Google hardware, spend the first sixty comments competing to recount the most tragic story of a broken Pixel watch or a dead Chromebook Pixel, before pivoting to a furious debate over whether "Googlebook" sounds worse than "gBook" or "Geminibook" — as if any of these naming options will matter when the entire product line is quietly put out to pasture in 2027. Meanwhile, the marketing video shows a woman taking a six-day vintage shopping trip to Tokyo, which is the sort of use case that perfectly captures the disconnect between Google's vision of "Intelligence is the new spec" and the actual experience of fighting with an Android laptop that can barely run a browser without begging for server approval.