Came here to recommend nuking it with Linux to get a much slicker experience but I see everyone else had the same idea.
Also gtf off chrome.
Submitted 7 months ago by yogi_pogi@lemmy.world to mildlyinfuriating@lemmy.world
https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/c3528189-c214-4318-8d1b-49947de0ae4e.jpeg
Came here to recommend nuking it with Linux to get a much slicker experience but I see everyone else had the same idea.
Also gtf off chrome.
This post is like catnip for Lemmy users.
I can’t believe this is anything other than fishing for engagement.
Haveyouheardofourlordandsaviorarchiusearchbtwfuckmicrosoftsnapsarecancerwhatdoyoumeanyouwanttohavefunwhatthefuckdidyoujustsaytomeyoulittleshitillhaveyouknow…
This /c/ is catnip for lemmy users.
Welcome to /c/atnip@lemmy.world
This device looks to be supported by the custom firmware project over here: mrchromebox.tech
Basically it allows you to replace the stock firmware and just run regular ol’ Linux, entirely replacing ChromeOS.
There’s also a pretty good video outlining most of the process here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6oyqrrXTLM
Running xfce4 Fedora brilliantly on an old Dell Chromebook thanks to this, fully recommended!!
I use this bios on CN62 Chromeboxes as an alternative to a Raspberry Pi; it’s faster, can be found cheaper, is available widely on ebay cheap, has proper NVME ports, and has an X86 processor. They make great little reverse proxies, etc.
I’m pretty sure two gru_bob and gru_kevin have Libreboot support. I forget the name of the exact laptops, it should be in their documentation
Which means it’s time for you to switch to Linux
Looks like a Chromebook, which means Linux would be a bit hacky and not guaranteed to work well at all.
it’s gotten a LOT less hacky now: www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6oyqrrXTLM
It’s arm right? Just fiddle a bit with the bootloader and that’s it. Similar to Andorided phones
Chromebooks are actually Linux.
Wait, I bought a chrome book during that time frame and the first thing i did was wipe it and install Linux. That was the plan from the beginning. Works like any other laptop. Still does actually.
But I had no idea that it was hacky or difficult in anyway. There were issues?
A chromebook? You can install Linux then.
I actually have a few of these chromebooks. Asus 202c from 2016. They’re EoL, so they don’t get OS updates. Which means the Play Store is also outdated.
Overall, they’re pretty nifty. Battery life is still solid. Keyboard and case is pretty durable.
I’ve reformatted one with Linux. Another is Chromebook + side loaded for coding. This one is just for browsing and taking notes.
But just the thought that some old person buying a computer and going, “Lemme pick up these Google Things that are $100” only to end up with these errors makes me sad.
Maybe an unpopular opinion around here, but getting 8 years out of a $200 laptop is a fucking steal.
I don’t think it’s reasonable to expect more.
Had this been a $1200 laptop, the expectation would be different.
For me it’s not about the price, it’s about owning your hardware in ways that allow you to easily install whatever you want. As for chromebooks, that’s not the case and you need to hack your way around. In the case of phones, many vendors don’t allow unlocking the bootloader. This kind of practices means that in many cases, completely useful (maybe old) hardware goes to the dumpster.
Big companies want more e-waste for their own bottom lines.
Fuck chrome
I’ve got this huge fancy samsung tablet from 2015. It’s made to be like a table top display. Has a mount on the back to keep it standing up.
It can’t really do anything now. The android version on it stopped being supported by anything. No youtube or Netflix or nothing. There was a bit of homebrew effort to get root and a newer version of android on them about 4 years ago, but it kind of fizzled out. Now it went from a great portable streaming mini TV (what I used it for, anyhow) to e waste.
Try alternative apps such as NewPipe for YT, they might still run on your outdated android.
Otherwise, there’s always LineageOS and other custom ROMs
Sounds like a good prospect to try and get lineage on it. Just need to see if anyone has tried.
ARM linux distros, phone nixes, nothing?
Nope. It’s essentially a samsunch tablet with about 2014 samsung tablet specs, only way larger screen. They were made more for retail stores to have set up for customers than for consumer sales, almost. Basically, they missed their mark, so not many were sold. Imagine back in 2015. A nexus tablet was like $100. These things were $600. Galaxy View 18.4" tablet.
There was a custom that I had found from like 4 years ago, but when the project stopped it was still left with a lot of issues/bugs.
Linux gang raise!
I use Fedora btw
I use Qubes btw
m’OS
give it the mrchromebox treatment, and then install linux on it. Good shit.
Now my chromebook is an extremely low power idling node for anything i need it to be, with incredibly like UPS standby times.
most websites just check the browser useragent, and if you spoof the useragent, it works. most websites are blocking it artifically even if the website works fine with your browser. so i think it’s worth a shot if there are chrome plugins who can spoof the browser useragent.
Usually they’re building the website with browserlist and polyfills, and they specify how old a browser they wish to support, usually by analysing percentages of public usage, or they allow types only supported in newer browsers. Meaning if they use a feature only available in newer browsers, then it won’t be automatically backported to support older browsers.
But that’s only if they actually use those features, they’re just available to them. And it’ll only break in those places they do use them, which could be quite little of the site.
So often it’s just “we can’t guarantee it’ll work in your old browser and enough of our users use newer browsers that we’ll block you and not care”.
yupp, and i hate that. i use a firefox version that don’t supports private fields, and because a common js lib uses them a lot of websites suddenly stopped working for me just because of this bs. instead of just using a normal variable they use private fields and kill a ton of older browsers by doing so. and most website owners don’t care so asking them just leads to them saying “just upgrade bro”.
For the love of god OP don’t start your Linux journey with Arch
Don’t get me wrong, i use it and love it, but don’t use it!
my first proper experience with linux on the regular was manjaro, a week later i manually installed arch and i’m still using it today, 4 years later.
Plus various debian installs on other systems.
By all means, pick whatever you think is correct for you, just be ready to learn lol.
Linux and Firefox would get updates!
Firefox won’t for much longer. Or at least not without significant spyware installed. I’m hoping it gets forked before the new CEO can do too much damage. Sucks that it will split the community with such a small user base already. But I guess that’s the point.
???
So which browser are you using then?
Something something ~linux~ profit?
If I was you… I’d…nah, nevermind
Probably every comment but install linux
Does it still supported by Chrome OS Flex?
Is Firefox an option?
Yep! That was my next action! :-)
I can personally recommend Debian with xfce
Pretty sure you could still update manually.
You mean there’s not still a team of developers working full time to make sure you’re 8 year old hardware is still getting software/security parity? Color me shocked. Shocked I say! They should support your hardware for free forever! How dare they advance in such a way that it’s not possible for my 8 year old hardware to run the exact same as modern hardware that’s been updated and iterated hundreds of times since then.
Today I’ll update my Chrome version in my 2013 media box desktop running Debian in honour of your terribly written comment!
I have 11 years old phone that still gets updates. For free. And all my computers will have updates for ever. For free.
what kind of phone is getting updates that long?
Google can choose to not update the operating system but I don’t see why the browser is left behind.
Google supported chrome on windows 7 longer than Microsoft itself, they can’t do it on their own Linux distro?
It is not a good idea to use EOL software. It really sucks but you are putting yourself at risk. The only option is to find third party software that is supported.
Install Mr. Chromebox and Linux and your good to go
I think I had a similar one. Is that the one you can detach and use as a tablet?
I tried cracking mine open … I succeeded, in a sense.
Any laptop is a tablet if you try hard enough and tape the wires sticking out of the hinges.
Not trying to be the fifth dentist here, but at some point all devices reach the end of life. While I’m sure it’s possible for you to install Chrome OS Flex, or some other kind of Linux, at some point isn’t it just time to buy a new computer?
Until George R.R. Martin gives up his DOS computer, then there’s never an excuse to upgrade so long as the machine you use can perform the actions you ask of it!
Sure, but by making that decision George also had to accept he can’t install the latest version of Chrome. Maybe George is ok with that, but OP isn’t.
Ok, but the only action George needs to perform on it is to not write a book. I don’t even need a computer to do that.
“At some point” yeah. But that point though… Must not be 8 years
It depends really. If you need to use old software or hardware, then no. I have some automotive tools that don’t need the greatest PC to run and I’d rather not mess up my installation of the software they need to work, so I have an ancient Thinkpad with windows 8 on it that I can boot up and use for diagnostics. I just maxed out the ram and put in an SSD so it runs halfway decent.
Time to get a last gen laptop 🧐
Edit: angry loonix users beware!
Nomad@infosec.pub 7 months ago
Install Linux and have updates for the Rest oft your life. And more performance.
NoneYa@lemm.ee 7 months ago
I have a Chromebook and it’s ridiculous how difficult they made it to install another OS.
I eventually did, but I needed to get something to flash a third party boatloader and at first I was told my laptop was not supported.
But getting an actual Linux distro has been so much better than ChomeOS.
ObviouslyNotBanana@lemmy.world 7 months ago
Back when I had a Chromebook I actually had to open it up and remove a screw to be able to do it.
taiyang@lemmy.world 7 months ago
I didn’t think it too hard but it ended up being kind of fruitless, those things have almost no harddeive and I mostly did it to fuck around with Linux. Chromebooks, at least that one, had something like 16gbs and equally weak CPU to match (granted it might have changed since then but woof.)
KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 months ago
thankfully, once you get a proper UEFI bios on it, it’s free, forever.
But yeah, i agree, total bullshit how much work they put into not using UEFI from the get go lmao.
umbrella@lemmy.ml 7 months ago
i hate that this is now the future of computing
cosmicrookie@lemmy.world 7 months ago
It wouldn’t be jemmy if this was not the top comment
davidgro@lemmy.world 7 months ago
It’s a Chromebook. That’s just the real answer to OP’s issue regardless of where they ask about it.
Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
I don’t usually like all the Linux posts on Lemmy, but this is 100% the correct answer here. The computer will likely run a lot better if you do everything right!
Aux@lemmy.world 7 months ago
It already has Linux, that’s the issue.