Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision | |||
chromebooks [2025/09/24 13:58] – [Chromebooks] demiurge | chromebooks [2025/09/24 13:58] (current) – [Chromebooks] demiurge | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
Chromebooks are lightweight laptops built around ChromeOS, a fast, secure, cloud-centric OS from Google. They’re popular because they’re cheap, have long battery life, and boot quickly. Under the hood many Chromebooks use standard Intel/ARM hardware and can run full Linux or other OSes once you remove the restrictions ChromeOS places on the machine. | Chromebooks are lightweight laptops built around ChromeOS, a fast, secure, cloud-centric OS from Google. They’re popular because they’re cheap, have long battery life, and boot quickly. Under the hood many Chromebooks use standard Intel/ARM hardware and can run full Linux or other OSes once you remove the restrictions ChromeOS places on the machine. | ||
- | * | + | * Enable **Developer Mode** |
- | + | * Replace stock firmware with **Coreboot** | |
- | Enable **Developer Mode** | + | * Boot a normal Linux distro (Ubuntu, Arch, Debian) from USB or internal storage. |
- | + | * Reuse Chromebooks as lightweight servers, kiosks, or simple homelab nodes. | |
- | * | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Replace stock firmware with **Coreboot** | + | |
- | + | ||
- | * | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Boot a normal Linux distro (Ubuntu, Arch, Debian) from USB or internal storage. | + | |
- | + | ||
- | * | + | |
- | + | ||
- | Reuse Chromebooks as lightweight servers, kiosks, or simple homelab nodes. | + | |