The hardware vendors are as much at fault. They should provide machines with a better BIOS and boot manager capabilities. They usually only offer the choice of Mac or Windows and support that. There's no reason why they cannot deliver/support a machine that has a muti-boot configuration. They just don't want the extra support costs or the demand for Linux, even in the education market is just not big enough to make it worth it for them.alexa9 wrote: ⤴Thu Jul 12, 2018 9:27 pmA lot of schools use Chromebooks. I think they would be better off installing Linux on cheap Dell Laptops and Desktops but this will be a decent workaround. Also will give more exposure to Linux which is a good thing for young people to get out of the binary Mac/Windows mindset.bbaker6212 wrote: ⤴Thu Jul 12, 2018 6:57 pm I don't see the point of this. If you want Linux apps then install a Linux distro. It works on Apollo-Lake devices if you use either 1) the rEFInd boot manager or 2) you use Linuxium's ISO respin script for Ubuntu based distro's like Mint, Lubuntu, Xubuntu, etc.
Linux programs come to Chromebooks
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- bbaker6212
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Re: Linux programs come to Chromebooks
Linux Mint XFCE 21.1 , Windows 11, Pop!_OS 22.04 Acer Aspire 5 A515-57 (linux-probe), Core i5-1235U, 16GB RAM
Lenovo Ideapad 330S-15IKB (linux-probe), Core i5-8250U, 20GB RAM
Lenovo Ideapad 330S-15IKB (linux-probe), Core i5-8250U, 20GB RAM
Re: Linux programs come to Chromebooks
I'd say usually support that, but there are holes even in this scenario .. e.g. try finding WiFi drivers for Windows 7 for a Toshiba NB520. That's right, Toshiba hosts/hosted most of the drivers but this one was notably absent. The WiFi worked OOTB in Linux Mint 17.3. Now I know what the card is, I could likely find Win drivers but I disembarked the M$ gravy money train ages ago.bbaker6212 wrote: ⤴Sun Aug 05, 2018 9:20 am They usually only offer the choice of Mac or Windows and support that.
I'm all for more Linux exposure. If this means more of our successors get to discover Linux, meaning an effective end to the MS/Mac duopoly, all the better.
Dell Inspiron 1525 - LM17.3 CE 64-------------------Lenovo T440 - Manjaro KDE with Mint VMs
Toshiba NB250 - Manjaro KDE------------------------Acer Aspire One D255E - LM21.3 Xfce
Acer Aspire E11 ES1-111M - LM18.2 KDE 64 ----… Two ROMS don't make a WRITE …
Toshiba NB250 - Manjaro KDE------------------------Acer Aspire One D255E - LM21.3 Xfce
Acer Aspire E11 ES1-111M - LM18.2 KDE 64 ----… Two ROMS don't make a WRITE …
- smurphos
- Level 18
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Re: Linux programs come to Chromebooks
I'm a happy bunny - Acer R11 -- £120 Chromebook convertible with touchscreen. Synaptic from the Debian Stretch Repo and the Playstore. My travel laptop has just got way more useful. The linux container takes a while to load on the first launch. Once running it's got good performance. Only got the update yesterday so will report back on what is possible or not.
For custom Nemo actions, useful scripts for the Cinnamon desktop, and Cinnamox themes visit my Github pages.
- smurphos
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Re: Linux programs come to Chromebooks
For custom Nemo actions, useful scripts for the Cinnamon desktop, and Cinnamox themes visit my Github pages.
-
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Re: Linux programs come to Chromebooks
What I would rather see in ChromeOS is a way to run X-window applications remotely (have them installed on the desktop machine in my home office, use the Chromebook in another room to run them on that screen). Essentially, use the Chromebook as a "portable Xterminal".
- smurphos
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Re: Linux programs come to Chromebooks
RealVNC is available as a Chrome app so you can remote any Linux desktop with a VNC server to a Chrome OS device.
I actually use it as my VNC client of choice on my Linux machines aswell.
I actually use it as my VNC client of choice on my Linux machines aswell.
For custom Nemo actions, useful scripts for the Cinnamon desktop, and Cinnamox themes visit my Github pages.
Re: Linux programs come to Chromebooks
ssh -X
is an effective way of doing this if it's individual programs you want to run, assuming chromebooks have ssh functionality.On the server you'll need to edit the "X11Forwarding" line in
/etc/ssh/sshd_config
as follows:X11Forwarding yes
.Dell Inspiron 1525 - LM17.3 CE 64-------------------Lenovo T440 - Manjaro KDE with Mint VMs
Toshiba NB250 - Manjaro KDE------------------------Acer Aspire One D255E - LM21.3 Xfce
Acer Aspire E11 ES1-111M - LM18.2 KDE 64 ----… Two ROMS don't make a WRITE …
Toshiba NB250 - Manjaro KDE------------------------Acer Aspire One D255E - LM21.3 Xfce
Acer Aspire E11 ES1-111M - LM18.2 KDE 64 ----… Two ROMS don't make a WRITE …
- smurphos
- Level 18
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- Joined: Fri Sep 05, 2014 12:18 am
- Location: Irish Brit in Portugal
- Contact:
Re: Linux programs come to Chromebooks
That doesn't work on Chromebooks as far as I know. I did try a while back. I think it's because they run on Wayland rather than an Xserver.
For custom Nemo actions, useful scripts for the Cinnamon desktop, and Cinnamox themes visit my Github pages.