There are few things quite as emblematic of late stage capitalism than the concept of “planned obsolescence”.

  • Sorry but Fritos of software is dumb & in no way representative of bringing old chromebooks back to life beyond their support date.

    Schools often buy the bottom baseline of everything & in now way was a 4gb of ram a good, decent or proper experience to begin w/ & their replacements probably also had 4gb of ram - just a faster cpu, gpu & ram to hide that it’s lacking ram still.

    I think schools could easily band together & make their own education focused Linux distro & then just focus on hardware that’s compatible w/ that’s Chromebooks or Windows laptops. Hard part would be building out an on par MDM &/or ldap server if not using a Windows server.

    All Chromebook are is a browser basically. It already is the bag of Fritos imho. I think the hard part though would be to hire an IT guy that knows Linux better than the students tbh. Schools already under pay teachers in the US & that goes 2-3x for IT staff.

    • I mean, underpaid IT aside, do they need to be better than the students?

      We like to organize school like there’s rules, you follow them, and if you do better it must be because you are better.

      But thats not how the world works, and it’s not how technology works - it’s all about understanding the system and looking for loopholes

      Is it better to enforce absolute control though? It teaches you nothing but how to be a good cog in the machine.

      Teaching you that the rules aren’t absolute, but requires skill and legwork gives you a mindset to actually succeed in our warped little resource allocation game. Instead you should teach them to consider the effects - if they crash the network, make school suck for everyone for a few days.

      But as to your original point, you still need an admin who can at least manage the network, and they should be given the funds to pay for that