• This article is a bit strange

    Even though you can install Linux desktop applications for that container, you can’t use it to modify the Linux code (huh?) that runs ChromeOS

    Unless he’s on Gentoo (he’s not, he is on PopOS) to modify and recompile his kernel every time, I don’t see what he’s trying to say here.

    The title feels accurate, but misleading, like yeah it is Linux, with another desktop environment, but when they say this

    While most Linux distributions come with a default desktop environment, users can install and choose from many others. You can’t do that on ChromeOS, which is why I say ChromeOS uses Google’s desktop environment. Choice would be nice here but I really do like the new Material You interface.

    I’m like, no shit ChromeOS uses Google’s desktop environment? And what changed from the past versions that it is so “now more than ever”? On the contrary, from what I’m reading, there was even an effort in the Chromium OS development to decouple the browser from the window manager to make them standalone components (it seems to have succeeded in fact: mus+ash), now I’m not sure if it’s actually possible to Frankenstein a “real” desktop environment to replace or exist alongside Aura shell, but the point still doesn’t make much sense.

    When I use ChromeOS, I am limited. By Google

    Meh, you’re limited by the product’s features, if GNOME allowed as little customization (wink wink) you’d say the same, now that’s not to say that Google doesn’t force its vision on the user and that Chromium isn’t an open source project that is more or less closed in on itself, but it could always adopt some features inspired from other projects, some will never be there of course, namely extensions or “applets”.