I think Microsoft just announced hardware and a modified version of Windows 11 (Windows SE) to challenge Chromebooks in Education. The company was promoting Surface laptops under $250. I had read a Chromebook columnist predicting this possibility and watched the MicroSoft Education Reimagined announcement as a consequence. My wife and I serve on a community technology advisory committee for our local school district. They use chromebooks in the lower grades and Windows machines in secondary. MicroSoft at all levels could offer a more convenient approach. Is MicroSoft’s productivity suite the equivalent of Google Classroom? What about other apps designed to run in the browser. This could get interested and K12 students may benefit from the competition.