- flashgnash ( @flashgnash@lemm.ee ) English12•1 year ago
Yeah, Google did
Also there are a ton of guides online for how to put full fat linux on them if you Google
- PAPPP ( @PAPPP@lemmy.sdf.org ) English12•1 year ago
Yup.
I have a little Dell 3189 2-in-1 that I originally got used just to see what the ChromeOS fuss was about and hack on.
I’d rooted it, and played with the various hosted/injected Linux options (like chromebrew and the 1st party Linux VM stuff, neither of which was great) while it was under support, but some time after it went AUE I went ahead and flashed a Mr. Chromebox UEFI payload onto it and just slammed normal Linux onto it. It basically “Just Works” though that’s thanks to considerable efforts in the Coreboot port and Kernel because there is a bunch of cheap bullshit (badly plumbed i2c input devices, that stupid bay/cherry trail style half integrated audio setup, etc.) in the hardware. I had briefly flashed it over a couple years ago and that hadn’t all been smoothed over yet back then.
Lately its an Arch system playing with various Wayland options - Hyprland is ricer bullshit, but it actually does a pretty decent job at being not wildly broken compared to the big environments in Wayland mode, tiling makes good use of the not enough pixels, and the search key in the left pinkie position makes a great WM key.
It’s not a nice computer, an N3060 with 4GB of RAM 32GB of emmc and a 1366x768 panel is distinctly in craptop territory these days, but you can also get them for like $50 now because no one wants past AUE Chromebooks, and they make nice beaters - and unlike refurb SFF boxes, SBCs, and similar usual sub-$100 beater options, they come with a screen and keyboard and battery.
- sentientLasagna ( @sentientLasagna@lemm.ee ) English6•1 year ago
I had an early Chromebook and Google made it super easy to convert to Linux. I tried it for a bit, then reverted,
- Fizz ( @Fizz@lemmy.nz ) English4•1 year ago
Yeah I got fedora running on my acer 730E
- db2 ( @db2@lemmy.one ) English3•1 year ago
Everyone who had ever had one, Chrome OS is based on Gentoo.
- Daniel ( @beta@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English2•1 year ago
Yeah, a couple of times, the easiest way is to run it along side Chrome OS with crouton. Although, if you have a Chromebook with an Intel (or AMD? - not sure on this) CPU, you can use Mr. Chromebox’s scripts to install a full UEFI.
Yeah I was wondering if it was Intel only.
- Dotdev ( @Dotdev@programming.dev ) English2•1 year ago
There is Gallium a linux based os for chromebooks.
- Lost_Wanderer ( @Lost_Wanderer@beehaw.org ) English2•1 year ago
Gallium has stopped developing and no longer secure. Running xubuntu or debian 12 will work on most older Chromebooks no problems
- Dotdev ( @Dotdev@programming.dev ) English2•1 year ago
Thanks i never noticed it since it has been a while since i used it
Ah that’s useful.
- Borgzilla ( @Borgzilla@lemmy.ca ) English2•1 year ago
How much of a PIA is it to install Linux on a Chromebook? I’m looking for a small laptop and Chromebooks are the perfect size.
- CloverSi ( @CloverSi@lemmy.comfysnug.space ) English2•1 year ago
I had to solder something on mine, though I don’t think that’s true of all chromebooks; depends on the model.
Watch the hard drive space. Chromebooks are supposed to be mostly cloud based, so they don’t have much.
- Dubious_Fart ( @Dubious_Fart@lemmy.ml ) English2•1 year ago
in my experience, a major pain… and while I did technically get it working on one, the audio and SD card never worked on one, and the other one required a fresh reinstall every reboot for some reason i could never figure out. Gave up on both and reinstalled the original OS.
They werent mine, so usability was more important than tinkering.
- bertmacho ( @bertmacho@lemm.ee ) English2•1 year ago
I had to take the keyboard off to remove a screw that enabled the required bios update. Since then been running Void with no issues. This was a Lenovo N22 so old, but still working.
- basuramannen ( @basuramannen@discuss.tchncs.de ) English1•1 year ago
I have Arch running on a Chromebook using depthboot.