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1374 lines
127 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3242
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Title: HPR3242: The eternal battle over how to run your chromebook is about to begin
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3242/hpr3242.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 19:36:17
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio episode 3242, for today the 5th of January 2021.
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Today's show is entitled The Eternal Battle Over How To Run Your Chromebook In About To Begin.
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It is hosted by Men Flota 2 and is about 148 minutes long and carries an exquisite flag.
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The summary is Quill Vs Alien Chromebook Discussions.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honest host.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Okay, this is going to be another public access.
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Squirrel addresses Alien from another planet video.
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And as you can see I have a desk running here and it is recording along with my normal
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screen recorder. So this will be a joint video and joint audio podcast
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and down here we have my, I need to get that to download again.
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I got the G Potter running and I don't know it always fails downloading the brother's whisp.
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But as you can see I've got Freedom Decrypted downloaded and I've also got the latest
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GNU World Order, GNU World Order 383 on my G Potter podcasting thing which is what I usually
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use to get my podcasts. And we're talking to you off of a brand new Google Pixelbook
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go. It's a Chromebook, it's the I7, it's the big one. And I've decided to invest a few years time
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in the Chromebook architecture and I have the Linux beta running and I'm using audacity
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from the Linux beta repos, the devian repos and recording this podcast to from a Chromebook.
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And the reason of which will become clear here in just a minute. Anyway let me go ahead and
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minimize the G Potter and let it finish. And normally you know when I play a podcast I would just
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click on for instance if I'm going to play GNU World Order I would just click on that and hit play.
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But we're going to do things a different way at this time. We're going to use Google's Assistant
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to play a podcast and I'm going to comment on it as we go through it. Okay Google,
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play GNU World Order podcast.
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Got it. The latest episode of New World Order Linuxcast. And in this episode
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we're going to talk about Chromebooks. No, we're not. We're going to talk about Chromium
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Books. So in this episode I wanted to kind of finally review. Pause. Now I can pause
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this podcast but I wanted to make note that if you noticed on the screen if you're watching
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the video version of this that it said that we were playing the GNU World Order 383 from Google
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Podcasts which somewhat implies and I've been playing various podcasts all morning long and
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implies that I guess Google is making a recording of the GNU World Order podcast as well as or
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copy of it anyway and putting it on their servers as well as a number of other podcasts
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which I think is cool I guess but it doesn't do anything if that's the case for the statistics
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of the GNU World Order. Anyway this GNU World Order 383 episode happens to be about Chromebooks and
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apparently Clat 2 the alien in question has purchased a used Chromebook and I've been working with
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Chromebooks. It's amazing but you know every time I get into something like Chromebooks which I
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did roughly a year ago I'm finding out that Clat 2 is also getting into them and I don't know if
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it's a mind connection or what often we feel that ESP is to blame but the reality of it is is that
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we the humans they all live in oceans of herd mentality and so across the school systems you find
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that they're using Chromebooks in school systems and it's apparently they're using Chromebooks
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in the school systems of New Zealand which is where Clat 2 lives now and so he's become interested
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in them because I gather he he must work with kids teaching them Linux and maybe in a college
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setting or something all right we're going to continue playing this now I can pause and resume
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podcasts resume and sometimes that works and sometimes it doesn't
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it does not appear to me that it's working let's just try playing it again from the beginning okay
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Google play GNU world order podcast
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you've got to play the latest episode three world order Linux
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my name's new order under this episode three
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Chromebook no we're not we're going to talk about chromium books so in this episode I wanted to
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kind of finally review in a way the recent experience that I've had with Chromebooks and in order
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to do that I guess I'll back up a little bit and talk about how I have very intentionally and
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quite happily for a long time ignored Chromebooks Chromebooks came out well before I left the US
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which was seven years ago now and it came out well before that so I'm going to say arbitrarily
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10 years I could look that up but let's just call it 10 years for convenience sake 10 years ago
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Chromebooks came out and I think it's fair to say at this point that they have made a rather
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hefty impression at least here in New Zealand they are the default computer at most schools at most
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what do you call them primary and secondary schools I guess like not university but for all the other
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schools the lower schools and I think that's kind of a a general I think that's a pretty common
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phenomenon and that's interesting to know because that means that there are a lot of computer users
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out there with Chromebooks let's just put a pin in that we're going to come back to that point
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in a moment so Chromebooks when they first came out I kind of ignored because as far as I knew
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and I don't know this for sure because I didn't because I have I'm late to the game I've waited
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like 10 years to even start investigating so my history of the subject is very much lacking but
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we could say that at the time at least when they came out I was in uninterested in them because
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as far as I knew their reputation was it was a hardware browser like it was it was an internet
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browser and that was what it was and as far as I know back then that that was the case and as far
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as I can tell now it seems to be by default that case and once again we'll come back to these
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concepts and sort of revisit a lot of these in a little bit but that that's the reason that I
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ignored Chrome Chromebooks for a very very long time well recently I kind of realized that there
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are a lot of people out there as I've said with Chromebooks it's it's a computer that you are
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very likely to run into and and I'm saying that as someone who was not looking to run into Chromebooks
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and yet I still ran into them whether it was at computer stores and you know there'd be the obligatory
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shelf of Chromebooks because it would be the back to school season and so there were Chromebooks for
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sales so people could pick up a Chromebook for school that sort of thing or whether it was because
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someone at a at a social event showed up with a Chromebook or someone's kid has a Chromebook
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and they need to know how to do something on the Chromebook or whatever you just you start to
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especially as a geek you start to run into them they're they're kind of unavoidable and when
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that happens then you know that it's reached a certain certain capacity and so my my life as a
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geek was starting to very very on the peripheral but I mean it was it was I was starting to notice
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Chromebooks it was starting to be affected by the presence of Chromebooks and so finally I kind
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of sat down and did a little bit of soul searching and thought okay well I have no interest in buying
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a new computer I don't need one I'm I work from home now and I have all the computing devices
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that I really technically need I mean I don't know if if one can ever have too many but you know
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realistically had enough and and I don't like to purchase new hardware if I don't have to because
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I feel like this world has produced enough hardware at this point that without any new purchases we
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could all probably get another computer if we wanted one so I didn't want to purchase a new
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computer but I I was very aware of the fact that my that there's a gap in my knowledge around
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computing I mean there's a huge gap in that I don't really know Windows at all but that's that's
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its own thing and I feel relatively okay with that personally because I my interest is in
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POSIX systems and until Windows becomes a true POSIX system I I really don't honestly have
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interest in it and I realize that that's 80% of the population or 75 or whatever it is of the
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computer using population is probably on Windows and so it it does me very little good as a sort of
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as a as a walking talking advertisement of maybe an alternative to know nothing about the platform
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upon which people are are probably computing I realize that this is a big gap and we could
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talk all day about whether it would be more advantageous to learn sort of the OS of the of the
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opposition such that I could then better argue for the alternative or something like that I get that
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I'm aware of it we don't need to bring that up right now it's a thing chrome books on the other
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hand I felt well from what I understand it's based on Linux and it's probably a big deal that's
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probably something that I should be more educated about so I started looking months ago now
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for a used chrome book on the internet a long story short could not find one that wasn't like over
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a hundred dollars and with the text not sure if it works that that kind of so it's really weird
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like the the local resell market on computers is really really strange or at least especially
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for chrome books it just seems like they don't go for very cheap and then even when they do go
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for cheap which is not under a hundred dollars so cheap is a relative term obviously
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even when they're going for like a hundred bucks there's there was often something about how the
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thing was not actually working or the battery was completely gone or whatever so didn't really
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comfortable it didn't feel comfortable buying a a truly sort of used you know I didn't I didn't
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feel comfortable digging one out of the rubbish bin essentially because it was going to be expensive
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and it was going to I felt like I was going to end up with a computer that may or may not even
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work and I didn't want to invest that much effort into this I didn't want to get a a door stop
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and try to resurrect it not not interested in learning it on those conditions so I I
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eventually found a deal at one of the local hardware stores the computer stores where they had a
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refurbished chrome book so it had been you did belong to to someone at some point and it had
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gone back to the store not the factory just the store for you know as a returned item or whatever
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and so they brushed it off and and freshened it up and made it look like new again and we're
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selling it at a at a reasonable discount so I'm and I'm saying all of this because I just
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one of the things that I want to talk about here is the the price the the value the bang for
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your buck so I was able to purchase this Lenovo chrome book I think it's the CR340-11 which
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if you go to Lenovo.com or whatever and look that model up you will see that it is no longer
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available and that is again it was refurbished so it doesn't it's not a current model but it's
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it's current enough and I purchased the thing for about let's say $450 New Zealand dollars
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which is pricey I mean again cheap and expensive relative terms and I realize that and frankly
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$450 but pause okay I can pause collateral courty hopefully I'll be able to resume at this time
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but I will interject this squirrel's experience it was August of 2019 and I happened to be driving
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into Muscogee Oklahoma for some reason I was going to tear some of the antique shops along the
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the junk malls downtown and just look at old pots and stuff like that and I it got close to lunch
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I think it was around 11 a.m. 11.30 and decided well I'm going to go eat and I went into a
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hearties I think it was and got a hamburger because I'm not a vegan and french fries and
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some diet drink which would really help me you know diet drink you always have to have a
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diet drink when you get like a double you know anyway I noticed that right across the way from
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this was an office depot and it had been some time since I was in an office depot so I thought
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I'd go in there and take a look at what kind of computers they offered because you know I'm always
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the kind of person that just picks up laptops you know I I buy more stinking computers than
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probably anybody else in the planet and I went in there and I didn't see too many decent laptops
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or even desktops it was all pretty garbagey which is unusual because usually office depot does have
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a pretty premium collection of laptops in fact I remember seeing an x1 in one of their stores
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what a year or so ago I didn't buy it but I just looked at it and I noticed a section on
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Chromebooks and they had a sale on them and there are several different manufacturers of Chromebooks
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as you know Lenova Dell acer and of course Google makes one and I don't know who else there's
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probably another half dozen that I haven't mentioned and on the display case there was this big
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acer with a huge screen and I thought was that a laptop and I know it's a Chromebook and it had
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huge speakers and I played with it and it sounded great and so I bought it and the thing was like
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I don't know it was $180 bread new 180 bucks and it had four gigs of RAM in it
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and it had a very small storage device card of some kind I think it was like 64 gigabytes or
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something inside I don't remember anyway it's sitting in the room next to me here I'm plugged
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because after using that thing for an entire year in watching Chrome OS you evolved to a point
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where now we can actually record podcasts using Audacity in a Chromebook I decided just a week ago
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that I'm buying a Google Pixelbook go the i7 the big version because it has a full 16 gigabytes
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of RAM and in the Linux beta I can run the here's the top Amazon result I just pushed a button
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sorry about that I can run Figuita in the Linux beta using QMU and create a really tightly encrypted
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volume that I can transfer over to an open BSD server and run it on other laptops so I noticed
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that and I thought that's that's pretty cool because you know if I need to do anything ultra-private
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I could do it in that I suppose anyway let's see if I can resume Class 2's podcast here resume
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and I was afraid of that it's not working is it
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Google's OS is still a little buggy when it comes to
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okay Google resume nothing's playing right now oh that's great so you lost my new world order
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podcast well anyway I just thought I would mention that you can play the new world order podcast
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from the Google Assistant but if you've got this many things running in your Chromebook
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it may not work correctly so what we'll do is we'll cheat and we'll run the downloaded version
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of the good new world order and we'll play it in Audacity here you're listening to episode 383
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of the good new world order my name is Class 2 and in this episode we're going to talk about
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Chromebooks no we're not we're going to talk about Chromium books so in this and that is
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correct he is actually going to talk about Chromium books so I'm going to skip forward a little bit here
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and see if we can get to the point where he was talking about something else as he's moving along
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to become like a little tablet although you're tablet now I guess has a keyboard in the back
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which is kind of weird but you know whatever it's so it's it's a flip top or Chromebooks and yet
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I still ran into them whether it was at computer stores and you know there'd be the obligatory
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shelf of Chromebooks because it would be the back to school season and so there were Chromebooks
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for sale so people could pick up a Chromebook for school that sort of thing or whether it was because
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someone at a at a social event showed up with a Chromebook or someone's kid has a Chromebook and
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they need to know how to do something on the Chromebook or whatever you just you start to especially
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as a geek you start to run into them they're kind of unavoidable and when that happens then you
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know that it's reached a certain certain capacity and so my my life as a geek was starting to very
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very on the peripheral but I mean it was it was I was starting you know and I'm sorry for doing
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this to you but most of my podcasts are low budget as in you know there's like morons doing
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them but not low budget in many I spent quite a bit of money on this stuff but let's just let's
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just keep going to notice Chromebooks it was starting to be affected by the presence of Chromebooks
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and so finally I kind of sat down and did a little bit of soul searching and thought okay well
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I have no interest in buying a new computer I don't need one I'm I work from home now and I have
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all the computing devices that I really technically need I mean I don't know if if one can ever
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have too many but you know realistically had enough and and I don't like to purchase new hardware
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if I don't have to because I feel like this world has produced enough hardware at this point
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that without any new purchases we could all probably get another computer if we wanted one so I
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didn't want to purchase a new computer but I I was very aware of the fact that my that there's
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a gap in my knowledge around computing I mean there's a huge gap in that I don't really know windows
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at all but that's that's its own thing and I feel relatively okay with that personally because
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I my interest is in POSIX systems and until Windows becomes a true POSIX system I really don't
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honestly have interest in it and I realize that that's 80% of the population or 75 or whatever it
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is of the computer using population is probably on Windows and so it it does me very little good
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as a sort of as a as a walking talking advertisement of maybe an alternative to know nothing about
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the platform upon which people are are probably computing I I realize that this is a a big gap
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and we could talk all day about whether it would be more advantageous to learn sort of the OS of
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the of the opposition such that I could then better argue for the alternative or something like that
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I get that I'm aware of it we don't need to to bring that up right now it's a thing
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Chromebooks on the other hand I felt well from what I understand it's based on Linux and it's
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probably a big deal that's probably something that I should be more educated about so I started
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looking months ago now for a used Chromebook on the internet a long story short could not find one
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that wasn't like over a hundred dollars and with the text not sure if it works that that kind of
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said it was really weird like the the local resell market on computers is really really strange
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or at least especially for Chromebooks it just seems like they don't go for very cheap and then even
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when they do go for cheap which is not under a hundred dollars so cheap is a relative term obviously
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even when they're going for like a hundred bucks there's there was often something about how the
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thing was not actually working or the battery was completely gone or whatever so didn't really
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comfortable it didn't feel comfortable buying a a truly sort of used you know I didn't I didn't
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feel comfortable digging one out of the rubbish bin essentially and you know I wanted to add
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something to this conversation I guess having studied the Chromebook a little bit longer just
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a couple months longer than glad to I guess and that I've discovered that basically all Chromebooks
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have is all of them have a six month or I'm sorry a six year timer on them in other words
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Chromium OS will support a particular platform a particular Chromebook that's been sold for six
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years and then when they they just discontinue support for it so eventually at some point in time
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I'd have to switch over to this Chromium OS that he's going to be talking about soon but in the
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meantime I'm just going to use they built in OS that shipped with the unit but yeah you have a
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six year limit before they will discontinue support for it in which case in theory your unit is dead
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you know and I paid what was it 1300 dollars I guess for this expensive unit and it's much smaller
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and lighter than the acer Chromebook that I have in the other room smaller screen but it does have
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the the 4k whatever you want to call it ultra high definition and the display is fantastic I mean
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it's it's better than any other laptop I have and as you might be able to to kind of detect
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from the video I'm making it's just unreal it really is so let's continue on with tattoos I'm
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going to be commenting on tattoos podcast because I feel that I need to throw in things because
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it was going to be expensive and it was going to I was I felt like I was going to end up with
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a computer that may or may not even work and I didn't want to invest that much effort into this
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I didn't want to get a a door stop and try to resurrect it not not interested in learning it on
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those conditions so I I eventually found a deal at one of the local hardware stores the computer
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stores where they had a refurbished Chromebook so it had been it had belonged to someone at some
|
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point and it had gone back to the store not the factory just the store for you know as a return
|
|
item or whatever and so they brushed it off and and freshened it up and made it look like new again
|
|
and we're selling it at a at a reasonable discount so I'm and I'm saying all of this because I just
|
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one of the things that I want to talk about here is the the price the the value the bang for your buck
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so I was able to purchase this Lenovo Chromebook I think it's the CR340-11 which if you go to
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Lenovo.com or whatever and look that model up you will see that it is no longer available and
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that is again it was refurbished so it doesn't it's not a current model but it's it's current enough
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and I purchased the thing for about let's say 450 New Zealand dollars which is pricey I mean again
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cheap and expensive relative terms and I realized that and frankly 450 bucks seven years ago to
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me would have been prohibitive and and that would that would have been expensive today it's it hurts
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it's it's a chunk of change but I was able to sort of I was able to justify the purchase and
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to make the purchase I mean more than just justifying it I had that money lying around for sort
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of personal development and learning new things and so I was able to do that with a relatively
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clear conscience now 450 bucks again it depends on where you sort of sit how you were you know
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where where you were raised what your experience was as a as a young person with money mine was
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okay as a kid and then as a young adult I could sort of dipped pretty far down into sort of the
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poverty zone and have been working pretty pretty steadily you know within the past well very
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steadily within the past probably ten ten years or so so so yeah the the money was there it
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did hurt though 450 bucks and then I started looking at other computer options like if I hadn't
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gone for a Chromebook you know and and I believe me as I was doing this as I was shopping I was
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thinking maybe maybe I should just stop not get a Chromebook and just get another laptop and look
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into the options for installing Chrome OS or whatever onto that laptop because I understood at the
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time that that might be possible and I'll talk about more about that in a moment so I thought
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maybe that's what I'll try and so I was looking at other laptops and I was quickly realizing that
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no 450 dollars New Zealand dollars is quite quite reasonable for a laptop and and certainly certain
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brands of computers are literally a thousand dollars more than what I just 450 plus a thousand
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just for the starting for the bottom line so I thought okay this is actually a really reasonably
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priced laptop make really it is it is not free and and free is better zero dollars is definitely
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better than four hundred and fifty dollars and as I've said before if you are a geek and you need
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a laptop and you have zero money then you can sometimes make a really really sweet score by finding
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somebody who needs help transferring their data from their old computer to their new computer
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or they need help you know you're racing the data off of their old computer or they have a
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computer that they that that has broken and they need you to just grab the data off of it or
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or whatever very frequently you can find people who need geek help and are willing to essentially
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pay for your services with free hardware and that is how I got a lot of my hardware very early on so
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that's zero dollars this is four hundred and fifty dollars take that take that for what it's worth
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you know that take it take that value for whatever it's worth what I'm gonna say about four hundred
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and fifty dollars for this particular piece of hardware is that kind of blew my mind four hundred
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and fifty dollars for this little laptop that I have now have is pretty amazing like the form factor
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I would I would liken to a MacBook Air perhaps like that's that's what comes immediately to mind
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without having and you know that's the thing that comes to my mind even though I have never owned
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any Apple products at all I've had my hands on a Macintosh like 20 years ago or something 20 25
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years ago you know in the late 80s but I never got interested in in any of Apple's infrastructure
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because when I was you know a teenager before Vietnam I worked for a geophysical company in Tulsa
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and I key punched operated Fortran programs on cards and these cards would be read through a key
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punch reader which would be transferred to a electronic tape after they had been turned into
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assembler and then that tape would be taken into the main machine room and processed against data
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so that we could make three dimensional maps of oil fields you know we could see 18 miles into
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the ground what a a actual pool of oil and other water resources look like in 3D that was in the
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1960s American it's much better today then anyway if I were to talk about any that I would have
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been putting jail for like 40 years or something you know and I also learned how to write software
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for three dimensional plotters or plotter plotter machines back then because how we did it was we
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plotted the maps one layer at a time in different ink colors on these plotter tables and there were
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huge sheets of paper then we would hang them from racks on the ceiling and you could just walk past
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the papers and you could get it an idea of what we're talking about what's underneath the ground
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by the images that you see drawn on the paper you know the papers would be spread a couple feet
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apart hanging from the ceiling so you could literally walk and investor down that row
|
|
and they could see as you got deeper and deeper what the pool look like and where you needed to
|
|
drill your hole anyway I get too far into my own history I do you know when I was 14 I started
|
|
working on geophysical crews and that was years before OSHA was invented in 1979 and you know I
|
|
actually handled dynamite when I was like 15 you know explosives and stuff so that they could
|
|
shake the earth and record the sounds coming back in the geophones and I also knew how to repair
|
|
geophones being a hammered or operator I mentioned that before you know from the 60s so I would repair
|
|
geophone lines and work on the equipment and stuff like that so I was a very geeky kid
|
|
in the 1960s in the moon shot decade let's go forward here clad to of course his background is
|
|
in McIntosh and he grew up in the 90s using McIntosh's because I guess that's what his parents bought
|
|
you know that's what they started in that's how he started his competing environment and he's
|
|
comparing this to this this chrome book experience to McIntosh and you know this pixel book is so
|
|
lied it's only a couple pounds and it's got such a fantastic screen and it's so frigging mind
|
|
blowingly fast it just blows your mind but it does upset me a little bit when google assistant won't
|
|
resume my new world order 383 podcast so that I don't have to start up adacious and redo everything
|
|
and look like you know let's grow more on anyway let's go on with this and done any kind of
|
|
side by side comparison because I don't have access to a MacBook Air so that that's where I would
|
|
place its form factor and in many ways it is better than that because the screen flips over to become
|
|
like a little tablet all the way your tablet now I guess has a keyboard in the back which is kind of
|
|
weird but you know whatever it's so it's it's a flip top or whatever it's got a touch screen which
|
|
I've actually not really used much at all I'm just not used to touching sort of a screen that's
|
|
weird to me it's got one of those weird sort of chiclet keyboards or whatever they're calling them
|
|
these days but it's got two USB ports and an micro SD card slot and it looks like a USB-C
|
|
and then the power port which I don't know if that's that double as a USB-C I'm not really sure
|
|
oh and a audio jack a single audio jack so yeah I mean that it it it definitely for $450
|
|
I upon seeing it and experiencing it I felt like I was getting more computer than I had paid for
|
|
especially since I have paid for I mean I paid for I purchased a bulk of a couple of laptops
|
|
uh for for a school for an organization once and they were $300 laptops I think it was $300
|
|
and they were nowhere near this nice and that was a couple of years ago so I felt like I don't know
|
|
I felt like the value has gone up for that amount of money um yeah so pretty pretty happy with the
|
|
hardware from from from the start from from the moment I opened it and and sort of felt it I felt
|
|
like 450 well spent possibly now I still had the operating system to tackle right and and and
|
|
and that's that's something that's that's a big deal that's that's the main thing you could argue
|
|
I mean if I'd hated the hardware at least I could just sit it up on a shelf somewhere and SSH
|
|
into it or something but I mean this is this is it this is the OS this is the this is the thing
|
|
that you interface with so uh let's take this in two stages the before the coffee break stage will
|
|
be the default chrome OS experience and after the break will be the non default chrome OS experience
|
|
that's the one that we actually care about but we may as well again because part of this exercise
|
|
for me at least was to to know and understand and experience what other people out there like lots of
|
|
other people out there are experiencing as a computing platform I don't think this will take a
|
|
long because there's not a whole lot to it to be fair but I I'm gonna try to be relatively objective
|
|
here um and and don't mistake my objectivity for acquiescence or for even praise necessarily it
|
|
is true objectivity so turn the computer on and it boots up to you know the chrome OS thing and
|
|
the initial couple of screens have you sign in to your account now if you don't have an account you
|
|
can create a google account so this was like my I don't know 18th sort of throw away google account
|
|
that I've I've created and that is the that's the thing that you log into you you log in to your
|
|
computer by logging into your gmail account which feels very strange and very unsettling however
|
|
it works like it it has local awareness of your identity you can log into your computer without
|
|
a network connection it's fine it doesn't it it's not like oh if you don't have access to the
|
|
internet you no longer have access to your computer now once you're in the computer what do you
|
|
have access to that gets a little bit trickier because certainly if you have things that are saved
|
|
on your in your google drive then you have local access to sort of the cashed version of that
|
|
and you could work on that and I guess your mind kind of goes immediately if you're like me at least
|
|
to the the edge cases and you think well what about the time when I've got my chrome book and I've
|
|
been working on my document and I don't have internet and then I I don't have my chrome book and
|
|
I do have internet and I pull up that document and now my changes aren't there or what happens if
|
|
I work on something online at work or at school and that's in my google drive and then I go
|
|
onto my chrome book and I don't have internet so now I don't have access to the new the newest
|
|
addition of my work or version of my work and you know he's brought up an interesting subject
|
|
I've barely even used google's drive but you know when you buy a new chrome book and I've done it
|
|
twice now in the last couple of years you get the 16 gigabytes of storage they give you for free
|
|
you know and you can buy more but as you know I'm a big open BSD user and and the video side if
|
|
you're watching the video version of this I'll just open a terminal and I'll type in my magic
|
|
macro name of server and that takes me right to my open BSD server cabang see and there we are in
|
|
tmux and I store all my stuff on my multi gigabyte open BSD server so I haven't yet decided to
|
|
use google drive for anything other than the apps that I buy and I I did buy a one year lease to
|
|
use this video recorder that I'm making the video with because Linux does not the Linux beta
|
|
doesn't support video recording from inside the Linux container however you can set a switch
|
|
inside the Linux beta which I'll show you here in a minute as soon as he starts complaining about
|
|
it on how you can record audio from inside the Linux container so it's this sort of fear of
|
|
being out of sync and I imagine that could be a problem realistically like that could that could
|
|
happen and it takes exactly one time I would imagine for that to happen for you to lose confidence
|
|
in that model but I also feel like you would develop a certain sensibility around your internet
|
|
feasibility you would kind of know I think if you had a Chromebook I think you would have to develop
|
|
a sense for okay well where am I where am I going and what's the reasonable expectation about whether
|
|
I'll have internet or not and and also I think the idea would be that you would have your Chromebook
|
|
and therefore you wouldn't be working on another device like that wouldn't be part of your workflow
|
|
you would you would be working on your Chromebook so of course the other thing you could do is you
|
|
could get a T-Mobile phone which has a built-in Wi-Fi you know which I have it's at Nexus 9 that's
|
|
like I don't know four years old now and I'm still keeping it because it costs me $900 and they
|
|
charge me 60 bucks a month for this service and it's unlimited internet and I just turn the Wi-Fi
|
|
on the phone and then I just logged my Chromebook right into that no problem and that way you you always
|
|
have internet anywhere you go in the United States of course the class you you see he's
|
|
living in New Zealand and he might be able to do something like that New Zealand but when he comes
|
|
back to the United States to attend a Red Hat conference or something he might find that he has to
|
|
find a a landline ground-based Wi-Fi source somewhere to use his Chromebook if you were to do that
|
|
of course if you took a Chromebook into a Red Hat conference they'd probably
|
|
take a nail gun out and nail him to a pre-fabricated cross as some kind and
|
|
standing upright outside the yard I guess I don't know whether you had internet or not you would
|
|
have the latest version of your work because that's always on your Chromebook and if you've never
|
|
used one then you'll you would you would be maybe a little bit fooled by how the applications appear
|
|
to be self-standing applications and and they do a really interesting job of turning the web browser
|
|
inside out but if you could imagine if you've never used a Chromebook if you imagine a computer
|
|
full of electron applications electron being that framework where you can build cross-platform
|
|
applications because it's built on I think WebKit or something like that and it's essentially a
|
|
JavaScript HTML CSS application that runs locally on on your computer you can see that in action
|
|
with for instance signal signal and what's what's the other one that I know of I don't remember it
|
|
but yeah there's a couple out oh Adam ATOM I'm pretty sure I think that's an electron application
|
|
I could be wrong anyway it's you'll you'll see it if you look hard enough electron applications
|
|
it's a pretty big stack for a local application but what Chrome OS apparently has done is it
|
|
sort of takes all of these web apps and and I say turn them inside out because you'll you'll you'll
|
|
hit your little application button which by default is the caps lock although I've I've I've
|
|
remapped that but more on that later I guess and then type in something that you're searching for
|
|
like calculator and apparently there's not a calculator on on this particular machine and I'll
|
|
explain why that might be the case again in a little bit so either way you could look through
|
|
oh there there's one files so actually I don't know if that's one of them anyway my point is
|
|
do a point and that is that they've they've exploded all of these applications that normally would be
|
|
apps sort of within your Google application suite and they've made them into apparently self-standing
|
|
apps but but really it's it's just tabs that have been taken out of the browser get rid of the
|
|
the browser window decoration and menu options that wouldn't be relevant in that situation
|
|
and just give you the app part and that's pretty much the experience that is Chrome OS it was like
|
|
out of the box that's Chrome OS I think that's it um it's a bit weird you know like um for for
|
|
someone who wants to be who wants to use the computer as a computer that does feel very limiting
|
|
it did not take me long to continue past that part of the experience it was as dismal as I'd
|
|
expected like that was the Chrome OS experience that I had feared and it was exactly as I'd expected
|
|
it was it was here is a browser and here are the five or six applications that Google
|
|
applications suite happens to offer none of which I use in real life so and frankly none of which
|
|
are very useful to to my my interests none of these had things that interested me in any way
|
|
like even Google docs which is kind of their word processor well it's not kind of there is
|
|
their word processor even that didn't really hold any interest for me because I wanted to write
|
|
in plain text and Google docs doesn't really understand that concept it doesn't know really how
|
|
to how to treat plain text I mean you can style it in a certain way so that it looks like plain
|
|
text and then you can I guess export it as plain text although of course that's not the intention
|
|
Google Drive expects it to be an entity that files be an entity within your Google Drive
|
|
that there's a a certain almost hyper integration to it if that's even the right word I guess
|
|
what I'm really trying to say is it's very difficult once you're in Chrome OS as far as I can tell
|
|
by default to extricate your the data that you believe you are saving out of Google and that is
|
|
obviously the intent that is exactly what Google intends and it is not I don't think it's a
|
|
bad idea interestingly shockingly like I get it I you know what I don't think they're trying to
|
|
create a lock-in personally I think they're trying to offer some services the more I study this
|
|
but I mean I've got the flat pack for labor office installed right here and I can launch that
|
|
to show you and it's got the latest library office 7.03 I guess it is or whatever it is
|
|
installed and I just pull this thing up and start writing away and I can store these documents
|
|
on my Google Drive or as I'm doing put them on my Open BSD server and there doesn't seem to be any
|
|
lock-in here that I can see I mean you you have multiple ways to get out of it it's just that they
|
|
offer a lot of commercial apps especially in that Android Play Store that are rather hit and
|
|
messes to whether they exactly work right or not and some of them require you to put down money
|
|
for instance the Chromium extension that I'm using to record this video it's 45 bucks a year I
|
|
think is what they want plus they have another editor that you can buy for another 45 bucks a year
|
|
which I'm not doing because I'm using Kaden Live and Open Shot video editors with Blender
|
|
inside the Linux beta so I don't really need it I just downloaded my video from the drive and
|
|
do my processing if there's anything to be done really do I I totally get it and if there was
|
|
for instance a next cloud OS whereby it doesn't have to be the bootable OS understand I guess
|
|
would be more like a next cloud desktop whereby you would boot into your Chrome OS or you know
|
|
whatever your future pretend cloud computer you boot into that and your desktop is an exploded
|
|
turned inside out kind of expression of of your next cloud instance then that would work really
|
|
well for me to be honest like that would be great if I could just interface directly with all of
|
|
my next cloud components but as individual apps and all my files would be saved into my next cloud
|
|
instance that that makes sense like it makes a hundred percent sense to me and it's it is
|
|
honestly not a bad a bad idea at all and you could certainly do that with a stock Chromebook
|
|
I refuse to put that on my Open BSD server because of security issues I think they need to
|
|
improve upon that quite a bit before I'll let that get installed in my server but for me personally
|
|
I can just use the SSHFS the fuse file system and mount one of the volumes of my Open BSD server
|
|
use the applications that I have locally installed here on the Chromebook and essentially do
|
|
the same thing what I'd be missing is a calendar I guess and stuff like that but you know when it comes
|
|
to working online the little bit that I do I don't mind using Google docs and Google's
|
|
calendar to take care of the few little tasks that I have to do and you know considering my age
|
|
but I could see where people would want to write in a free format like a library office or
|
|
man docs or something like that if you were actually doing some development and you can do
|
|
that no one explaining anyway and I don't know if if you dear listener were personally lucky enough
|
|
to see some of the mid 2000s like 2006 7-8 that time frame there were some really interesting
|
|
experiments around operating systems that existed like desktops that existed in your web browser
|
|
so you could open up into a web browser go to this location one of them was called iOS
|
|
e-y-e-o-s which I think I think someone grabbed that domain since and it's a completely different thing
|
|
but at the time it was something like iOS dot something or another you would go there and
|
|
it's probably just either com or net or or because I don't think they had yeah they didn't have
|
|
a bunch of fancy domain top level domains back then but you go there and you would log in and
|
|
your browser screen would become a desktop and you are more importantly you could just install a thin
|
|
client on a digital ocean server and access that that machine as a thin client you could do that too
|
|
I mean that that technology has been available for 30 years now right at least 20 years
|
|
you know 30 years actually it's been available for 30 years so you you could install a
|
|
X server on a digital ocean or a machine like I've got here I could do a thin client with OpenBSD
|
|
and literally run an OpenBSD desktop but you know there are many ways to solve this problem
|
|
I think the reason why people buy Chromebooks and why I've become interested in it is
|
|
I view Google's Chromebook and it's software as an enhancement to my already free G&U experience
|
|
it's an enhancement you know it's not something that I have to take or use it's there if I want it
|
|
like Google Assistant and stuff like that but I I'm not required I don't have to push it but
|
|
and if I don't want to so in other words it's an enhanced OS and when you start going back
|
|
into the GNU framework where you're just running GNU only like you're running Trisco or something
|
|
or OpenBSD you don't have these enhancements they're not available at your fingertips
|
|
so kind of the way I view using a Chromebook is I get the pretty much the best of all the worlds
|
|
the best of all of them the commercial junk that you hate the spying and everything else what you
|
|
get with anywhere browse you installed an any operating system Firefox even you you'd be spied on
|
|
you'd be tracked you know you you can't get away from it so you get but you get all the enhancements
|
|
of all the cool software that they offer but you also get the complete volume of free software
|
|
GPG licensed or BSD licensed software that you normally use in your open environments you know
|
|
it's it's the best of all worlds combined plus I might add that if you leave it as a Chromebook
|
|
you know Google does updates about once every month or two and it really reminds me of the days
|
|
of running CrunchBang Linux Philip Newberg I or Newborn or is it Newborn or Newberg excuse me
|
|
Philip if you're listening but it reminds me I've got several CrunchBang Linux cops and cups and
|
|
shirts around the house I really love CrunchBang Linux but it was a an operating system that was
|
|
always there it never screwed up on you and it was always dependable now can I say that about the
|
|
Chromebook well you just saw me not be able to resume the new world or the podcast because
|
|
something's overloaded the system I mean they still got some bugs to work out but and you'd
|
|
occasionally have problems of course with CrunchBang Linux but it was a relatively unchanging
|
|
stable operating system that I don't have to do any maintenance on it's just done for me
|
|
automatically I mean at the most I might have to go to the Play Store and update a few apps
|
|
every month and then run in the Linux beta and update slash apt upgrade and upgrade things there
|
|
and other than that it remains a very stable environment and someday it won't be a Linux
|
|
beta anymore they'll have full functionality including using OBS Studio to record the desktop
|
|
which they don't currently have and really when you sit down in front of a Chromebook you you're
|
|
not going to be able to tell the difference the the worlds will be completely integrated completely
|
|
integrated so again I view it as you're getting the best of of all of it this is the the pinnacle the
|
|
peak of the margins between open source and proprietary software you you had of a little menu at
|
|
the bottom of the of the window and you click on your applications and launch a little text editor
|
|
inside of there and so it was like a it was a window into this sort of cloud based operating
|
|
system and it was a fascinating idea I mean it's it felt as clunky as it sounds you know I mean
|
|
it is it's it's like it's like a virtual machine with no integration with your host whatsoever
|
|
but and it lived in the browser so if the browser crashed or if you I don't know closed the browser
|
|
without thinking about it or something then it went away but it was a really fascinating idea
|
|
and I feel like this is kind of that idea that that's that's this content that's the continuation of
|
|
that concept here in Chrome OS so what I'm really really trying to impress upon you dear listener is
|
|
this is not a bad idea if if you are a person with your your and you you have progressed beyond
|
|
physical thumb drives and your your your USB thumb drive is the cloud which is a completely
|
|
reasonable thing especially with something like next cloud where you you own the hardware and the
|
|
software running this little quote unquote cloud then then having a computer that just kind of
|
|
interfaces directly with that and the synchronization is always on it felt very natural the only
|
|
thing that felt unnatural was the ecosystem the actual the cloud that I was on and and I had
|
|
no interest in interfacing with the Google Cloud and it turns out to the surprise of probably no
|
|
one Chrome OS is not the right tool for someone who does not want to get involved with Google
|
|
before we walk away from the default Chrome OS experience I do want to mention the Google Play
|
|
Store because it is a significant part of the default experience of Chrome OS as I understand
|
|
that it is relatively new and I don't know what that means because new to me is everything
|
|
about Chrome OS having just gotten involved with it sort of three weeks ago but so I mean you know
|
|
when I say new it could be five years ago it could be seven years ago it could be yesterday I don't
|
|
know but at some point the Google Play Store was opened up to Chrome OS users and what that means is
|
|
that just as people can install applications on an Android phone they can also install it on Chrome OS
|
|
that's a big deal because if you think about what Chrome OS is which is a web browser with
|
|
Google web apps then the Android Play Store the Google Play Store offers everything else so you name
|
|
it if you're looking for I don't know games I guess are on the Play Store I don't know a voice
|
|
recorder that was that's that's something that you're looking to record a podcast you can't do that
|
|
on Chrome OS I mean you can if you find some kind of cloud based voice recording service which I'm
|
|
sure there are many out there but what if you want to do this locally well you could find a voice
|
|
recording app in the Play Store and run that maybe you don't like I don't know the text editing
|
|
options you want to do something you don't you don't use Google Docs you want to use a text
|
|
editing app well you could maybe you could find that in the Google Play Store so in other words
|
|
applications really honestly like all all applications that you want to run that aren't in a
|
|
browser Google Play Store is able to to to provide some something I don't know if it's an alternative
|
|
because in many cases it's not an alternative it is it is the only alternative it's the only
|
|
thing you've got to use so it's huge that the Play Store is available to Chrome OS users and I don't
|
|
know you know I don't know I haven't like I say I've ignored Chromebooks for so long at this
|
|
point that I I don't know how common it is for people to to take advantage of that I don't know
|
|
if it's something that people do frequently I don't even know if most people have the ability to
|
|
because I I do understand to to a limited degree I understand that Chromebooks are probably very
|
|
frequently managed devices so you may as a user not have the ability to install something from Play
|
|
Store because maybe you don't have you know someone's limiting your ability to to to do that which
|
|
and concerning that the Play Store apps that won't run on a Chromebook you know Android apps
|
|
for instance anything that involves GPS like a GPS program that will show you the satellite
|
|
constellation or give you your elevation or your exact latitude and launch date you cannot run
|
|
on a Chromebook because for some reason even on the most expensive Chromebooks that they sell
|
|
there is no GPS receiver which kind of surprised me there's no GPS receiver so I can't use this
|
|
as a map while I drive in my pickup truck across the country you know I can't use Google Maps and
|
|
navigate like I can with an Android phone and that's a shame because the pixel book go has a
|
|
battery life of about 10 hours I've actually been walking around here with a lid closed and just
|
|
opening it occasionally and I've had this thing running for over 24 hours because I often will
|
|
just sit close the unit up and sit it next to me while I'm reading a book or doing something else
|
|
or I'm out in the patio and then I'll open it to access some information read the news or
|
|
play a podcast or play a video or something and it just lasts forever so it's at least in my
|
|
unit with that kind of battery life if they had a GPS receiver would be great the other option
|
|
that may be available I haven't really investigated it but that would be to get
|
|
4 and 5G access straight into the Chromebook so I don't have to have an Android phone with a Wi-Fi
|
|
you know a Wi-Fi built into it to allow me to gain internet access on the Chromebook you know I
|
|
I'd buy a a LTE device of some kind 4G you know modem interface to access the cell towers
|
|
if they could integrate it in with the laptop I mean that would make it even better as well
|
|
but yeah it did make me wonder why Google of all people didn't put a GPS and offer a setup to where
|
|
we could just sign up with a provider perhaps you can if you go to a T-Mobile store and
|
|
bought your Chromebook there you know and maybe you could have done it that way but
|
|
and maybe they have some plug-in dongles that will allow you to get GPS and cell phone access to
|
|
I haven't investigated that either but a lot of that sort of technology won't be available if
|
|
you switch over to Chromium OS and get away from it and start running after I know that you
|
|
know you might not be able to to access that's on it's kind of stuff so there's a downside to
|
|
going from a straight Chromebook to you know hacking one over to Chromium OS and running
|
|
FJord and stuff like that limits you know the devices usefulness in many ways anyway so that's
|
|
it's a pity but I mean yeah sometimes that's that's the goal of the devices to just be a device
|
|
for a specific set of apps so for managed managed devices I can imagine that
|
|
that none of these sort of workarounds are going to do anything because the the device is strictly
|
|
maintained by some other entity other than yourself but if that's not the case then Google Play
|
|
Store is there and so the default you know like the the normal everyday user who's who just
|
|
purchased a Chromebook off the shelf what they're getting is a web browser they're getting some
|
|
Google web apps and they're getting access to all of the Android apps that exist on sorry all
|
|
of the Android apps that exist on the Play Store that's a that's an important thing to realize now
|
|
I know and what you're thinking you're thinking I don't use the Play Store I use FJord and so I
|
|
would if I were going to do this I would just load FJord apps on my Chrome OS well you you could
|
|
definitely try to do that the Chrome OS will stop you it recognizes that the application that you're
|
|
trying to install that that APK that you're trying to install on your device is not a Play Store
|
|
authorized or verified whatever app and so it will not let you install the FJord app on Chrome OS
|
|
without you working around it's it's preventative measures and I don't want to go into that because
|
|
that's not the default Chrome OS experience what I've just described is the default Chrome OS
|
|
experience and I have to admit that if you are okay with living your life within Google's
|
|
guys then the default Chromebook experience is not bad I mean it's not bad in the same way that
|
|
you know I don't know I guess Mac experience isn't bad if you're okay with just doing whatever Mac
|
|
tells you to do or Apple tells you to do Windows isn't bad as long as you're okay with just letting
|
|
Microsoft decide arbitrarily what you're not authorized to do yes it's it's not great but at the same
|
|
time like in terms of using a computer purchasing a computer and then sitting down at a desk and
|
|
using the thing I have to say in a weird way it's it's it's not as bad as I'd expected it was
|
|
sort of like yeah I could there is use here I could see how a person if I was if I really put
|
|
myself into someone else's shoes I can imagine how a person could do work as long as they live in
|
|
a browser and I know a lot of people really really do they they use online services left and
|
|
right and so this would feel like a very reasonable if not restrictive platform for them and I think
|
|
in a way and hear me out here I think in a way Google has successfully called people's bluffs what I
|
|
mean by that is for many many years now we Linux users have been telling people if you do not like
|
|
macOS if you do not like windows then you can come over to Linux and use Linux and it will do
|
|
everything that you need it to do and people have sometimes ignored us outright other times they
|
|
have taken us up on the challenge and they've tried Linux for a day and sometimes I mean to be
|
|
to be fair you know sometimes people try it for quite a long times so often it seems like they
|
|
they encounter some kind of block something that doesn't work the way they need it or want it to
|
|
work immediately and they say well there you go I gave it a try and I just can't do this thing and
|
|
so I'm going to walk away from Linux or I'm not going to ever try Linux or whatever the
|
|
the scenario might be and I have often been rather suspect of that I've always felt like there
|
|
was a little bit of something disingenuous about that and I feel like Google because maybe because
|
|
they have because they're Google they have lots of money they've been able to to get the Chromebook
|
|
into lots of hands I feel like they have truly they have they've they've told people look if you don't
|
|
like Mac you know like windows you can try a Chromebook and people have been trying it and for whatever
|
|
reason people when they try that they say oh well this doesn't do this thing this doesn't this isn't
|
|
working the way that I need it to or whatever instead of just dropping it they find a workaround now
|
|
why are people willing to find that workaround for Chrome OS and they haven't been willing to
|
|
find that workaround for Linux I I think there there are probably lots of different factors
|
|
going on here I mean I think probably one of the one of the reasons is it's Google it's a branded
|
|
product and people in today's world they love branded products they just that's not the reason I
|
|
bought it they love to feel like there's a company out there taking them under their
|
|
under its protective wing and so if you just stick with Chrome Chrome OS and Chrome your Chromebook
|
|
device and and just work work with Google to solve your problems it'll be fine whereas Linux you
|
|
don't you don't really have that sort of figurehead Linux I look at it as a challenge you know
|
|
Google may try to prevent me from doing something but I'll get around it it's just it's another
|
|
challenge view it as a challenge it's is famously disparate there there is no central
|
|
Linux thing to sort of latch on to if you're the person who needs the central thing to latch on to
|
|
not everyone does but I think the people who don't are probably comfortably okay they're
|
|
Linux users and the people who do I think are latching on to some some figurehead whether it's
|
|
the Google logo or the Apple logo or the Windows logo so you've got that going on I think you
|
|
also have the the cost of the the barrier of entry which is the cost and and when you spend
|
|
money on a device you are frequently more likely to work with that device and I remember back
|
|
in the 2000 somethings 2006 I guess everything happens in 2006 the triple EPC came out and it
|
|
distributed Linux on the device and it was a different form factor and it shook the foundations
|
|
of the computing industry it made lots of different companies think very differently about what
|
|
a laptop was and could be and was expected to be and I think it's it's arguable that it even
|
|
ushered in the the the era of tablets and things like that and portable devices and and certainly
|
|
the lightweight laptops so I mean it was it was huge and yet even then even that computer people
|
|
people took and installed Windows XP onto instead of of Windows so I think there's the this
|
|
margin of escape that Chromebook by ensuring that it's OS is this immutable untouchable OS
|
|
image somewhere on your machine that you don't really even have control over or knowledge of
|
|
like a phone practically the mobile device there there's no way for you to put something else
|
|
on that this is it you get Chrome OS that's what you've got on this hardware device I know and in
|
|
some cases with people like me that switch operating systems on certain laptops virtually every week
|
|
it's a sharp relief because you know now I can't I'm forced to stay with this one
|
|
it's just fine it's just like the experience I was talking about like running crunch bang Linux
|
|
when I got hooked on crunch bang Linux I found myself stuck on that for it was like six years
|
|
and then he discontinued it I mean I couldn't get away from it I put it on everything and it's just
|
|
one of those operating systems that appeals to you because of its simplicity and because it's a
|
|
Chromebook I no longer have to maintain it you know it will enhance itself like arch Linux
|
|
periodically for the next six years and then I'll have to buy another Chromebook to get more
|
|
modern hardware and just start the process all over again which seems reasonable because that's
|
|
pretty much what we were doing when we were running crunch bang or slackware or what have you
|
|
opened BSD you know you'd run a laptop for four or five years and you get tired of it
|
|
give it to somebody and go buy you a new one you don't get to back out of that decision that's
|
|
the decision that you've made and you get to work around that decision or if you're wealthy enough
|
|
then you just write it off you just give it to your kid and and get yourself a different computer
|
|
that you like better or something like that I do think there's a little bit of the investment syndrome
|
|
you've invested in this thing and darn it you're going to make it work and you know that's true too
|
|
I put good money into this and I want it to make it work and I see that Google is progressing
|
|
along to where we'll be able to do everything that we did in a Linux environment here on the Chrome
|
|
book OS anyway it's going to happen so it just doesn't make any sense plus a Google does better
|
|
security I think then any other Linux distro I know of you know could do I mean they're they're
|
|
going to be a very security conscience company and Chromebook is their primary product I mean this
|
|
is this is the thing that Google's thrown the most money in that they're not likely to walk away
|
|
from but if they did if they did walk away from it then Chromium OS had begun as well and we would
|
|
all be installing something like Linux men in our Chromebooks probably I think it's really
|
|
interesting though I think there's a lot or there's something to be learned there and I don't
|
|
know if Linux can act upon those lessons because Linux as I say it isn't an entity that's not a
|
|
single thing that can that can sort of respond to that same you can't leverage the same tricks
|
|
you can't play the same tricks on our public that that Chromebook and Mac OS arguably and Windows
|
|
plays so an interesting thing to take note of let's go get coffee and then we'll come back
|
|
and we're going to talk about the other side of this whole equation and it's full of open source
|
|
so get ready for it
|
|
I really want to set the stage here I'm assuming you have coffee I want to set the stage here I had
|
|
made the decision to get a Chromebook that was something that I was going to do I just decided
|
|
that I had to learn more about this platform it was time for me to stop stammering and admitting
|
|
ignorance whenever anyone asked me about a Chromebook I wanted the experience I didn't do a whole
|
|
lot of research before purchasing and I want to emphasize that because I was very much diving into
|
|
something unknown and I really felt like I had just taken $450 out of my pocket and burned it
|
|
because I I but I mean that was the price of doing business I thought I'm a computer person
|
|
arguably an expert in computers I mean if you ask you know my neighbors that's what I am so
|
|
that that's that's the part I'm going to play here I'm going to invest in this computer going to
|
|
be horrible and and maybe after I spend the money and realize that this is a just an an abysmal
|
|
platform that no one should ever use I will be able to get rid of the computer to a good you know
|
|
give it to a good home maybe some kid in the neighborhood or in the town will not have the money
|
|
for a Chromebook required for school and so I can just donate it so that was what was going through
|
|
my head I got the default experience I was not overjoyed with it impressed but not overjoyed
|
|
and I should have I should mention too when you turn the thing on you know when you're logging
|
|
into your Google account and stuff that the initial setup stage it does have really good accessibility
|
|
features so if you're looking for a laptop for someone with low vision low mobility whatever this
|
|
is not you know that they've got options for it more options I think more options haven't looked
|
|
at some lately but yeah I mean it's it's really good it's really good I mean it it still suffers
|
|
from the problem of not being on by default and so you're in other words visually prompting a
|
|
blind person to turn on an optional speech screen reader function so I mean that's not going to work
|
|
for a blind person someone will have to be there for the blind person to to know when and where and
|
|
how to turn that feature on so that's a problem it's a pretty typical problem to be honest you
|
|
find that in a lot of devices it I would say most most companies don't don't ever think about that
|
|
that you know they they're they're they're asking you to to point at a little button on screen
|
|
and turn on mobility accessibility features but if you don't have good mobility then that could be
|
|
very challenging for you these features I feel like especially during that initial setup phase
|
|
should just be on first and then people can turn them off as part of the setup but they it shouldn't
|
|
be off and then be able to be turned on by the people who cannot respond to the prompt really
|
|
strange oversight that I just I can't imagine why no usability person in any company seems to
|
|
have thought of that well I shouldn't say no usability person in any company someone thought of
|
|
it at Apple because it is on by default last time I heard anyway it's it's a good experience like
|
|
I said it's as good as any other experience that you're going to have on a consumer device luckily
|
|
for me as a consumer there are options you can do other things with your Chrome OS device other
|
|
than sign into Chrome OS and use a Google computer you can instead well okay I'm going to do
|
|
this in faces here's what we here's what you can do you can have Chrome OS on your Chrome
|
|
book and you can activate what is called the Linux beta the Linux beta is a feature on Chromebook
|
|
that allows you to run Linux applications on your Linux computer it's an amazing amazing feature
|
|
the way that they implement this is a little bit surprising to me they you're not so the Chrome
|
|
the Chrome platform is based on Linux I want to emphasize that this is I I would have to argue
|
|
that I mean like I guess I would have to surmise I would have to theorize that this is how
|
|
BSD people must have felt when macOS came out with a bunch of you BSD utilities now that to be
|
|
fair always has confused me because it's not like macOS is running a literal BSD kernel it just
|
|
has a bunch of BSD utilities on it which I mean that is cool and all but that's it's not really
|
|
people say oh macOS is BSD but I mean it's not really it's it's it's running a different kernel
|
|
and it has it's borrowed a lot of ideas and stuff from BSD so I never really got the whole idea
|
|
that mac was BSD I never quite understood that but anyway this is Linux like this is actually Linux
|
|
you can you can you can you can look into the file system I mean not not by default that's not
|
|
the experience we're going for right now we're past the default chromos experience but this is
|
|
a Linux device which I think if I'd known if I'd really understood that and I think that's why
|
|
people early on within the Linux community were excited about Chromebooks a little more excited
|
|
about Chromebooks than I sort of thought reasonable but I mean it is a Linux device so this is kind
|
|
of amazing however many Chromebooks are out there just just like even my think more so than
|
|
Android phones I mean not necessarily more so but like really yeah I mean this is like a computer
|
|
running a Linux kernel and lots and lots of people are using it it's kind of amazing if you think
|
|
about it now it's all hidden and so you can go into your settings and activate this Linux beta feature
|
|
and you can do this just as a normal user I mean again we'll assume that the the question of
|
|
managed devices is not entering the equation here because I don't have any experience with that
|
|
and I assume that that would restrict all kinds of things so we won't we won't talk about managed
|
|
devices but if you own your device and you manage it yourself you can go in and turn on Linux beta
|
|
and it it offers to partition your hard drive such as it may be I mean the Chromebooks you know
|
|
part of the theory here is that you don't need a whole lot of local storage everything's going
|
|
to go up to Google so you're not partitioning your Google drive you know you're you're partitioning
|
|
whatever physical media there actually is on you know embedded in your computer I would all right
|
|
well the Linux beta is in fact a container when you run QMU you cannot access the things like
|
|
KVM to speed it up you know you can't run the KVM module not from inside a container
|
|
it's not going to work that way so you can run QMU as a normal user
|
|
it gives you out of the four processors I have in the size seven it gives you two of them
|
|
and it keeps the other two for the Chromebook OS parent
|
|
you do get access to the full 16 gigabytes of RAM so I can run stuff like Figuita and really stack
|
|
the RAM up with programs and stuff there is 128 gigabyte hypersonic SSD that this particular
|
|
Chromebook that I've got runs on and you can tell it to give it any portion of that volume
|
|
actually 256 gigabytes in it excuse me it's 256 gigabytes in this model so I gave my Linux
|
|
partition 100 gigabytes so I've got plenty of room to play around with and and create volumes
|
|
and all kinds of things but you cannot access things like your you can't access a USB
|
|
pin drive that you might plug in from your Linux container you can't do it you can't access
|
|
Google Drive however I can use SSHFS to get just gigabytes of storage up in my OpenBSD server which is
|
|
how I resolve my problem excuse me if you have limited storage you can use SSHFS and ramp up some
|
|
storage pretty quickly that way over the network you can do that but at any rate let's
|
|
Clity was having problems he said getting audio to work in the Linux container so for those of you
|
|
watching the video and I will explain things as I push buttons if you go down here and you push
|
|
on the time on your on your little bar then go up to your your settings button and push that
|
|
and then scroll down when that comes up to your Linux beta and then explode your Linux beta tab
|
|
you'll see down here they've added and I happen to be on Chromebook 87 by now it's we're on the
|
|
87 upgrade allow Linux to access your microphone and I have that clicked yes in which case it will
|
|
ask you to restart your container to make that take effect and then in order to get the audio
|
|
through on a Dacity we'll just open that up you go under edit in a Dacity is it edit or where is
|
|
it where's the preferences on a Dacity I've forgotten because I'm recording it may not allow me
|
|
to access preferences I think that's the problem and it is under edit I think where your preferences is
|
|
yeah it isn't it's it's grayed out I can't access it not while I'm recording but I'll just tell
|
|
you from memory if you go under the section where it asks you to to select your audio input device
|
|
and it'll have it all set it for pulse audio just go down under the microphone or the recording
|
|
device whatever and select from there the internal microphone hardware zero comma zero in in brackets
|
|
and you'll get access to your microphone and then you can record you can record audio using
|
|
either Google's built-in microphone which is what I'm using now or earbuds if you have them you
|
|
know some sort of Bluetooth device so let's start this recording back up again or the playback
|
|
was able to do that with a 25 gigabyte Linux partition and I think another 25 for Chrome
|
|
Chrome OS or something like that so it was a considerable size I mean not really I mean my
|
|
thumb drive is 64 128 gigabytes so you know there are there are there are it's a scale here but
|
|
20 gigs out of whatever it is 50 gigs 64 gigs whatever is on this computer is is pretty
|
|
respectable I thought so that's nice and then once you do that you you wait for it to sort of set
|
|
everything up and then it opens up a terminal for you and this terminal if I type in you name
|
|
dash AV tells me it's Linux penguin 5.4.74 that's what it is as of this recording and that's
|
|
kind of kind of cool so it is actually a Linux terminal if I do for instance sudo apt search I
|
|
don't know emax then I get I get the results of a sudo apt search emax so yeah this is it let
|
|
me do a cat slash Etsy star E L E A S I don't remember what it's release what is it OS release
|
|
something like that so this says it's Debian GNU Linux 10 Buster and yeah that's that's what I'm
|
|
running now now interestingly this isn't really this is it's not like this terminal has punched through
|
|
the the veneer of Chrome OS and is looking at the Linux layer underneath I I'm not this is not
|
|
Chrome OS in other words this is actually a Linux container running on Linux I feel like
|
|
that's a really surprising sort of layer of abstraction and I haven't been able to delve quite
|
|
deep enough yet into into how this is implemented to know whether this is for instance like a toolbox
|
|
on silver blue on fedora silver blue or if it's if it's a completely if it is a container a proper
|
|
container being managed by C groups or whether it's like a virtual machine that is being hypervisored
|
|
so I'm I'm not entirely sure what exactly I'm dealing with here and I haven't I haven't I have
|
|
not yet looked deep enough into it to understand the exact technology but it smacks of well one of
|
|
those because for instance if I if I go over to a browser and download food dot jpeg then food
|
|
dot jpeg appears in my downloads folder in my file manager here this is just the normal Chrome OS
|
|
file manager downloads but not in my Linux files so those are two separate partitions remember we
|
|
we had to create a separate partition for Linux or a separate container or something for Linux
|
|
and so I don't see the things in in from from Linux if I do an LS while I'm in my home directory
|
|
I don't see any files there and yet I know from clicking on my files in the little file manager
|
|
if I go to downloads there it is so it kind of it it it represents Linux in the file manager
|
|
as a different folder in your in your my files location file location but in reality it seems
|
|
to be more than that because you can also do things like you can right click on for instance
|
|
downloads and select share with Linux and then Linux can reach those files as well so there's
|
|
always this weird kind of unsettling awkward separation between your Linux side and your
|
|
Chrome OS side and I'm not exactly entirely sure why they didn't just sort of say okay well
|
|
if the user is created a Linux partition then we're going to simlink or whatever they need to do
|
|
tunnel or or or do a file share of some sort such that the Linux home directory is is your
|
|
my files or or maybe at least your Linux downloads directory is your downloads directory in
|
|
in Chrome OS I feel like that would be a more natural kind of connection between those two those
|
|
two paths whereas right now it seems like you just like at this extra thing that you have to do
|
|
I'm sure there's probably a command I would hope there there was a command to do this but right now
|
|
you can you can right click on the for instance downloads and tell it yes share with Linux
|
|
and then you can access those things from Linux or something like that it's awkward um but Linux
|
|
does run and it's more than just a Linux terminal it is a Linux terminal with apt for instance so
|
|
you can install uh like I say EMAX and then in your application menu within within Chrome OS your
|
|
application menu sees that you have installed EMAX and you now have EMAX available to you as an
|
|
application that you can launch and run within Chrome OS and you would be hard pressed to tell EMAX
|
|
apart from any other application on your Chrome OS I mean it it is exactly it it just it behaves
|
|
exactly the same way it is fully integrated into the system and I want to emphasize this point
|
|
for people who have maybe tried playing around with uh macOS and some of their you know the macOS
|
|
X-quarts integration which I shouldn't even say the word integration and the term X-quarts
|
|
in the same sentence if you've ever had to suffer through X-quarts you'll know that the
|
|
that the that the integration is just doesn't exist there's just not there is no integration there
|
|
I mean there is strictly speaking but but really it never feels like it it's a really it's it's
|
|
pretty poorly done not so with this this is surprisingly well integrated this this feels exactly
|
|
like the same system except it always goes back to that file system separation that's a little
|
|
bit weird so if you've got a text file that you've downloaded into your uh Chrome OS downloads
|
|
then when you open up your EMAX you're gonna have to work to get to that text file or more likely
|
|
you'll just drag that text file into your Linux directory and then we use it from there so there
|
|
is a weird invisible barrier there that that to a to a to a normal user must really feel strange why
|
|
why is that it must feel less like a barrier and just like really clunky clunky design like why
|
|
why do I have to put all my files in this folder called Linux files like I understand that
|
|
that's what I have to do in order to see my files but why why would they do it that way and the
|
|
answer is I don't actually if I wanted to use a Linux program to open something that's outside
|
|
of the links container I could open my file manager in Chrome OS and let's see if I have anything
|
|
in downloads I have a picture here and I can click on that and open my picture my squirrel okay
|
|
but let's say that I wanted to open it with something else other than gallery I could pick a Linux
|
|
app like here's image magic which I believe is one of the Linux apps and just click on that
|
|
and the Linux app will open from the Linux container here in a minute hopefully there it is
|
|
and you can see my little picture of the squirrel that's actually a Linux app that's opening data
|
|
from outside of the container now that doesn't work all the time with everything that you do for
|
|
instance if I go into my Linux files and I go in here where I keep my key pass xc password file
|
|
and I try to open up my master password and I right click on that and hit more actions I see that
|
|
key pass xc is not listed as one of the options so Google hasn't put up all of the options
|
|
on their file manager to open everything not yet so I would go into the command line on the console
|
|
I type key pass xc and then provide the path to my password file and it would open it that's
|
|
how I'd have to do it or do it from the key pass xc file open command or hit the file database open
|
|
and map myself over that way other problems I've seen with the Linux container courses I've
|
|
just mentioned you can't use simple screen recorder or OBS studio to capture your Chromebook desktop
|
|
from the Linux beta because there's no video access that I can I've figured out yet doesn't appear
|
|
to be any that's coming probably in 2021 sometime I would guess and I also had a problem
|
|
running the library app you know the Linux app of the debit the dev file that wouldn't run it all
|
|
from when I installed that in the Linux beta I also couldn't get the library flat pack to run
|
|
for some reason and I don't know why that is apparently there's something that it needs it's
|
|
probably related to SSL I guess that just isn't in the Linux beta that that particular application
|
|
needed and it's just not there not there to to use it won't run so there are a few smoothing points
|
|
left and it may never get to a point where it could run everything but on the bright side you know if
|
|
you wanted to run those kind of applications and not run the Android library app or just run
|
|
library from the the website you know you can access it from Chrome or Firefox have Firefox installed
|
|
on here both from the Android apps and also the Firefox flat pack from inside the Linux beta
|
|
I can access library that way so I mean I've got multiple ways to access library it seems like
|
|
you're just having to use different software to do different things until they get everything
|
|
working with the Linux beta but even if they do get everything working with the Linux beta someday
|
|
I may still be using the Android apps and otherwise to access things because they have their
|
|
cool features as well so again it's it's a hodgepodge and Linux beta is just that it's a beta
|
|
it's still in a development and it might be another couple years before they finish
|
|
smoothing that out to where everything you could do in Linux is really supported
|
|
but separated in a container from the rest of the operating system in Chromebook OS
|
|
I don't know why they would do it that way it seems really odd to me so I'm not really sure what
|
|
they're what they were thinking there and hopefully that'll get better eventually because I can
|
|
definitely see some really smooth avenues to just making that not be apparent to people you could
|
|
just say there's your downloads folder because once you're in your Chrome OS file manager you have
|
|
no sensation of a system of a file system like the file manager of Chrome is exactly what you
|
|
would imagine from a Google product it is a window with essentially what I assume are labels or tags
|
|
off to the left so if you want to find all of your image files you would click on images and whether
|
|
there in your downloads folder or in some other directory on your computer they show up there
|
|
but there's no sense really of folders and directories it's it's a big bucket where you put
|
|
all your stuff and and it it just feels odd to me that the one exemption to that is Linux files
|
|
so it may as well just be the same bucket as far as I can tell and no one would really understand
|
|
the difference there it would just look like the same bucket now once you're within a Linux app
|
|
the fact that you have directories or that you might have directories that's up to you because
|
|
you're creating the directories yourself but otherwise you're just throwing everything into that same
|
|
bucket and you can also create directories on your Google Drive all the directories that you want
|
|
but you know now that we're on the subject of creating directories I'm just curious
|
|
and I'll start at the file manager can I create a directory inside here and yes I can I can
|
|
make a new folder and call it anything dogs or whatever there I'll just call that one dogs
|
|
there I now have a dogs file folder next to my downloads Linux files and play files
|
|
and I could just go in there and create it and you know as far as Linux videos goes
|
|
and the images and audio and recent yeah those are all kind of quick starts let's see can I kill
|
|
my dogs file folder or delete it yep sure can so it's just like Linux it's just that they offer
|
|
they offer enhancements you know if you're looking for audio you can click on audio and it'll
|
|
help you find the audio quickly but you can create your own download folder whatever you want
|
|
for your movies music pictures whatever you want in here it's not really any different than any
|
|
other Linux operating system other than it has that enhancement which sort of freaked out clad to
|
|
you know that they would have a bucket called music or pictures or maybe images where you'll
|
|
only find pictures or images or music in those buckets and they could come from anywhere
|
|
so it's just different ways to prepare dinner here if you will you know there's more than one way to
|
|
to cook a roast I know why there'd be the separation okay anyway Linux it works exactly as you'd
|
|
expect that's all there is to say about that Linux is exactly what you would hope for it to be so
|
|
if you had purchased a Chromebook and you were nervous as you might be about sort of the functionality
|
|
of the thing you're just turning on Linux beta pretty much you've you've just sort of you've made up
|
|
the price of that computer it is now a fully functional computer with a couple of exceptions so
|
|
first of all Linux has that there is that separation between the Linux and the Chrome system so
|
|
you're going to have some problems with Linux programs that require access to ports that Chrome OS
|
|
otherwise dominates so for instance I tried recording this very episode on the Chromebook and to
|
|
my dismay it just wouldn't work I installed audacity a couple of different ways and tried to get
|
|
my sound into audacity could get sound out could not get sound in and what I finally sort of settled
|
|
on and I'm not overly pleased with the the answer but I think well you can use a dacity and I'm using
|
|
it right now and I've just explained that I'm not going to explain it again but yeah you can
|
|
you can do it by the way no matter what Chromebook OS or Chromebook you buy they're all going to be
|
|
using the same OS and they'll all work exactly the same way too which is another cool thing about
|
|
Chrome OS and Chromebooks is that no matter what Chromebook you buy the instructions I gave you
|
|
will work on any of them Aleneva and Acer the Google product itself Dell any of them you can run
|
|
audacity in the method I just described and they will all be supported whether you're trying to
|
|
record from the built-in microphone or you're trying to record from earbuds or anything else
|
|
it will all be supported in fact most external audio devices are Bluetooth that are supported
|
|
within Chrome OS and that is carried right into Linux with the Linux audio switch into the Linux
|
|
beta column think this is it it's just that that Chrome OS is grabbing for instance my USB headset
|
|
it's it's grabbing control over that before Linux has access to it no because it's all running
|
|
under pulse audio and I am recording audio to a program right here that is doing the video
|
|
at the same time this program that I'm I'm I'm leasing for a year is recording audio from the same
|
|
mic that audacity is recording audio from see audacity is making a recording I'm showing that on
|
|
my video they're recording at the same time and that's one of the capabilities of pulse audio
|
|
so um yeah you can record from multiple programs the same mic input
|
|
so I need some kind of USB pass-through option that I do not have at least at least not in
|
|
an obvious way I haven't looked very very deep into it but I've tried a lot of different things
|
|
I've tried interfacing through alza and through pulse and a bunch of other things and it's just
|
|
not working it's just the Linux itself is never seeing that device as an option so that that's
|
|
that's sort of it and that's another good point supported devices that will show up for Linux have
|
|
yet to be put in the Chrome OS you know for you to directly access them from the container
|
|
but they have these switches to where you can just ride in along with Chrome OS and grab whatever
|
|
you want in the way of audio right now so the audio problem is resolved we just need them to give
|
|
us access to the video so that we can make screencasts from the Chrome OS desktop okay we need that
|
|
otherwise if you're going to make a screencast for Chromebook right now my suggestion would be
|
|
to install KDE plasma in the Linux beta which you can do get that running
|
|
and or maybe you could install no there is an instructional tutorial on one of the Chromebook
|
|
videos on YouTube for how to install KDE plasma and you can make your desktop recording using
|
|
OBS studio right there within the container it's just that you won't be able to take pictures or
|
|
or make videos of what you're doing on your Chromebook OS desktop by the way the Chromebook OS desktop
|
|
is basically known three if you've noticed it's you know I I pushed this button here
|
|
I pushed this right here excuse me and this is absolutely that's Nome 3 you know so Chrome OS
|
|
desktop is Nome 3 they just need to get Nome 3 video access piped down to the Linux container
|
|
that's the final piece to that and then add a few fiddly bits here and there to make things like
|
|
the library application fully functional you know that you can download as a Debian package or
|
|
flat pack and they'll have everything man they'll they'll have it all I mean there will be a damn
|
|
thing that you can't do in a Chromebook that you could do and say Trisco OS or or Debian installed
|
|
on a regular laptop and on starter now if you're just looking you know there are ways to work
|
|
around those kinds of things like if if your aim is simply to record audio then you can use the
|
|
Android applications that you have access to to make up the difference but if you were looking
|
|
to use a specific Linux app and I was for instance I wanted audacity because I I know that as I talk
|
|
I need to edit myself so I'll I'll stop recording and and delete something that I wasn't sure about
|
|
or or delete some some stammery and suttery and so on so I wanted audacity specifically not just
|
|
some method of recording I could get some method of recording got that but specifically that
|
|
Linux app that was not that was not working now if there had been an audacity you know Android
|
|
edition or something then maybe that would that would work but but trying to use that feature of
|
|
Linux was not functional and I'm sure there are lots of other examples of that limitation so
|
|
that's something to be aware of but in terms of kind of the productivity side of of Linux and even
|
|
the development side it's just it's it's exactly what you would expect I've installed Lua I've I've
|
|
installed cute and I've I've compiled and run applications that are cute based I've written
|
|
Lewis scripts everything's just kind of working the way that one would expect it to work pretty much
|
|
watch out for the exceptions I wouldn't bank on it but I I would say overall the thing is is
|
|
functioning as I would expect it to function okay so you know really I'm surprised
|
|
that the Google development team didn't just go ahead and integrate in a Ubudo based container
|
|
aren't you instead of going with Debian of course if they did that then they'd have to be upgrading
|
|
along with Ubudo all the time and the snap packages and everything you know it does make you
|
|
wonder why they didn't maybe make a contract with Ubudo and just put Ubudo in on the Chromebook
|
|
doesn't that make you wonder I mean I realized the challenges might be a little greater
|
|
but in other cases though it might actually be easier for them to do it if they had a
|
|
Ubudo container rather than a Debian container not that I find anything wrong with Debian but
|
|
just as a joke I was thinking about installing Slack or 14.2 in a container down here just so that
|
|
I could say that I had it so that when I listen to the rest of the Good New World Order
|
|
podcast I could follow along as Clat 2 goes through various you know PDF readers and
|
|
doc book programs and all these things that he's been doing because it's interesting and I don't
|
|
think that you're going to find much of that in a Google Chromebook unless you're in the Linux
|
|
beta and Debian happens to have it but you know there you go in fact it'd be it'd be just as cool
|
|
if if they'd make a container that you could put any Linux operating system in suppose you wanted
|
|
to run open saucy that would be interesting but yeah it does make me wonder though why Google
|
|
didn't just shake hands with Ubudo and say okay hey we're gonna suck Ubudo desktop and in your OS
|
|
in our container are you cool with that and just you know make a deal and I think that would really
|
|
be very attractive to a lot of people considering how like 80% of the users out there either using
|
|
Linux Mint or Ubudo one or the other you know most of them so that's Linux and of course Linux
|
|
also has this new new thing called flat pack and that turns out to work really well as well so you
|
|
can install flat pack on it within your Linux terminal and then install flat packs from your Linux
|
|
environment and Chrome OS becomes aware of the flat packs that's right and here's my
|
|
here's my flat pack of Firefox OS or Firefox right here and it works I just set it up here an hour
|
|
or so ago and it'll be a little slow loading because you know we got a lot going on in the system
|
|
but let me see if I can just get it to we have so much going on in the computer right now I'm
|
|
sorry it's very slow anyway this is this is Firefox 83 I think it was here start me is just fixing
|
|
to come up hang on a second here boys and girls there we go and it plays videos and sounds great
|
|
through the speakers and everything it's it's wonderful what's version of Firefox is this by the way
|
|
help about Firefox I was thinking it's Firefox what 80 60 no it's 83 Firefox 83 right there let me
|
|
go ahead and shut that back down again anyway yeah I've got just all kinds of flat packs installed in
|
|
here you'd be surprised what you can get to run in it it comes right out you can put it right
|
|
on your start bar so you now have your Linux applications and your flat packs and your
|
|
Chrome OS applications all in the same loop and snaps if we had you booted by the way if they had
|
|
that option which I I would encourage them to do location looking like applications that may as
|
|
well have shipped with the computer it's it's kind of amazing to be honest and again everything
|
|
is working as expected outside of the the few exceptions of things that just collide I guess with
|
|
with Chrome OS's systems or or probably it's not that they collide it's just that it's being
|
|
dominated by the Chrome OS side and there's no pass through into that I guess virtual machine or
|
|
container or whatever it is okay so that's that's just the Linux beta side of things now you can go
|
|
a step farther and activate developer mode developer mode is really easy to activate it was trivial
|
|
to turn to to to turn on the problem was that well there is no problem the the thing about it is
|
|
that it erases your computer it's sort of like it re you know does some weird factory reset or
|
|
something and and it it activates the big fancy developer mode which isn't really that fancy but
|
|
it's it it activates the developer mode by erasing you know resetting your device essentially so
|
|
you have to go through the whole setup experience again so if you're going to do developer mode just
|
|
decide that early on or make sure all your stuff is backed up but of course you wouldn't have to
|
|
back anything up because you're living in the Google paradise but assuming all of those things are
|
|
are fine you turn on developer mode you reboot well you wait for it to reset you finally after a
|
|
long while you reboot and now your computer beeps really really loudly at you twice every time
|
|
you turn it on and that apparently is not something that you can deactivate outside of opening the
|
|
computer and I'd probably desoldering the little motherboard speaker or something it's and I'll
|
|
verify that is what it did because on the Acer the the Chromebook I bought from August of 2019 I
|
|
did that I went in developer mode and it does everything that he says and my assessment of developer
|
|
mode was it was basically a mess I didn't like it at all and Clancy is going to talk it up because he
|
|
he's looking more along the lines of freedom and security and I'll get into more about that when
|
|
when he finishes here because I have something to say about developer mode I'm not that crazy about
|
|
it but you know you're welcome to do what you want it's some very involved convoluted process that
|
|
I am not interested in attempting right now probably ever I'll just live with the beeps but boy
|
|
with those beeps be annoying I could see like if you were trying to get some late night computing done
|
|
or something and someone was asleep in the same room like that would be that would keep you from
|
|
turning your computer on it's just it's that loud you know the loud beep that I'm talking about the
|
|
the motherboard beep so there is that but once you have developer mode turned on you're free to
|
|
pretty much do whatever you want and it's pretty amazing so first of all the the most obvious
|
|
benefit of developer mode is that you can now ignore play store Google play store and use f
|
|
droid so if you are used to f droid I think it's what f dash droid dot org or something like that
|
|
if you if you've ever used yeah f dash droid dot org if you've ever used f droid on an android
|
|
phone or tablet then you'll be familiar with it it is a it's like a Google play store or a Linux
|
|
software repository before play stores existed and it has applications on it that are open source
|
|
now there are a couple exceptions there that you have to look out for some some applications are
|
|
you know that it's an open source client but the service that it's sort of tapping into isn't open
|
|
but f droid is really good about identifying those for you if you're if you're about to install
|
|
something that that's that they say sometimes encourages open source or or not encourages
|
|
you know closed proprietary technology or something like that then then it warns you so you know
|
|
very much what you're getting into pretty early on and it's really nice f droid dot org you should
|
|
check it out for your device your android device and then if you get a Chromebook or if you have one
|
|
turned developer a mode on and now you can install stuff from f droid so that is huge that's
|
|
um that's that's a whole other set of applications that you now have to and to add to your computing
|
|
environment and the f droid applications or the android applications whether you get them from
|
|
f droid or or Google play they work really really well there is a yet another caveat and that is
|
|
the file system thing again so android applications of course imagine a certain structure of
|
|
for its file system and so you have to kind of get used to speaking now in three different
|
|
senses of your file system there's the chromo-ass which is the really stupid simple one which is like
|
|
yeah dump it onto my computer and and then it just shows up in your file manager big bucket
|
|
model then there's the Linux version which is yeah put it in my Linux drive here in slash
|
|
home slash clat 2 and then good luck finding that from somewhere else well actually it's not that
|
|
hard because it's got Linux files right here so it points you to your Linux home in your file
|
|
manager the trickier one though and of course there's possibly the SD card so the SD card shows up
|
|
in your file manager if you have an external you know a card reader SD card slot whatever I put
|
|
that in shows up in my file manager and it also shows up as slash mnt slash chromo-ass slash
|
|
I think the name of the SD card in in Linux android applications sort of throw all of that out
|
|
and it I think in the android application mind there is the storage and then there's the I think
|
|
they call it the emulated storage and you have to kind of figure out well what is that on my
|
|
computer and it can be tough to figure out sometimes and and it they they they're pretty consistent
|
|
they really do insist that that's the truth like this is the file system and even if you're
|
|
if you know that's not the file system that's not what my system looks like to that android
|
|
application that it's exactly what your file system looks like and you get to save things in
|
|
certain places and then you get to go look for them later because it's really hard to navigate
|
|
file systems that don't actually exist after you've just saved it into a file system that something
|
|
insists exists so that's that there's a little bit of an oddity there again and again and I'm
|
|
not sure what he's getting into there but the base file system for Chromebook OS is butter the
|
|
BTRF BTR file system butter file system and you'll see that when you do a df dash capital T h in
|
|
your Linux environment you'll see that it'll mention that it's running on a better file system as
|
|
well so I'm not quite sure what he's referring to there at all I'm I'll have to I'd have to go
|
|
to development mode to to take a look at it and I'm not going to do that I've been there done that
|
|
and I've chosen not to pursue that because no matter how nice the after a collection is it seemed
|
|
to me when I was running it you could find every one of those things up on the place to or
|
|
anyway I just kind of do unfortunately I wonder what an quote unquote normal user every day user
|
|
what they would what they would make up that like it's got to be great that you can install
|
|
these Android apps but I at least the stuff that that is geared toward productivity I just don't see
|
|
like why you know when you you do a voice recording on simple voice recorder why does it end up
|
|
in a place called slash emulated storage slash simple voice recorder slash date dot in in
|
|
for air in p3 or whatever it records in and and not just in my files like how and how do you get
|
|
back there when you need it so yeah there's there's some there's some oddity with these these
|
|
other systems that you can kind of keep layering on to Chromo S but by my reckoning it's definitely
|
|
definitely worth it because Chromo S is pretty bare bones so these extra features well they're huge
|
|
I mean they make the the computer worth the money really so check that out you can only get again
|
|
afteroid only in developer mode that we will not work outside of developer mode you have to have a
|
|
developer mode turned on because otherwise it it wants to it insists upon seeing the Google play
|
|
certificate or signature digital signature so that's that's developer mode and like I say side
|
|
effect is that you get to hear too loud beeps every time you turn on your computer at least you do
|
|
on my device I don't know I've read elsewhere that it is on other devices as well so just be
|
|
aware of that all right so and finally finally finally the the the last one and this is the the big
|
|
one you could also just get rid of the OS entirely or or rather you can swap it out for something a
|
|
little bit more open source so it turns out and this is again probably not all that surprising to
|
|
many of you because you maybe you've done like five seconds of research which was more than I did
|
|
before purchasing the thing um but boy was this a relief when I found out that it was correct because
|
|
I suspected it I just didn't I didn't bother confirming because I knew that if I found out
|
|
that it was not possible that I would not then I would not purchase the device and I wanted to learn
|
|
the stupid trauma less thing and now I know it and I never have to look at it again so it turns out
|
|
that chroma s is based on open source an open source project called chromium OS so you know chromium
|
|
it's the open source version or the the open source foundation of chrome at the browser chromium
|
|
is is what chrome is based on so it is it is like fedora is to red hat or it is like maybe you could
|
|
say debian is to Ubuntu something like that um all of that seems a bit too harsh but but chromium
|
|
is the open source version of of chrome it's it's the open source stuff and then google takes chromium
|
|
puts their own logo on to it and puts their own google stuff into it and that becomes chrome so
|
|
just like that there is chromium OS there's this there's this project that is alive and maintained
|
|
and developed and it exists chrome takes it or google rather takes it puts their logo on it puts
|
|
their their their stuff their apps into it and all of their requirements and they ship it as
|
|
chrome OS so you can flash your device your chrome book with chromium OS and it is something that
|
|
you might have to fiddle around with a little bit but I have done it so you can go to chromium.googlesource.com
|
|
and there's documentation chromium OS docs and uh and they'll tell you also that if you use uh
|
|
and I think chromium OS also supports play store apps but if you end up using them you might be
|
|
in violation of google's terms of service this is a warning and they might terminate your account
|
|
lock you out of google so if you're using a google as your main service that might not be a good idea
|
|
just as a warning you know if you're not that tied to google then maybe you can but watch out
|
|
using any of the android apps they they explain the process for developers how to build chromium OS
|
|
how to flash it onto your computer and so on so if you're already in developer mode you're sort of
|
|
halfway there already you don't really need to do a whole lot more really you need that you need
|
|
to build chromium OS into an image and burn that to or you know dd that onto a usb device but in
|
|
terms of prepping the computer as long as you're in developer mode you you pretty much have everything
|
|
enabled that you need enabled there are there are lots of different variables because there are
|
|
different architectures the computer that it builds for the computers that it builds for are there
|
|
are a lot of board specific options and so on so it can be it can be a little daunting just to kind
|
|
of figure out what you're dealing with and then you don't really know what you what what you
|
|
what you're in for the first time you do it because you're in developer mode now you can
|
|
access a little known this very secret console that is available with a control alt f2 and there
|
|
aren't any f keys strictly speaking on a chromebook but there are keys along the top of the keyboard
|
|
with icons on them and so if you just count over there's escape and then there's f functionally
|
|
there's f1 2 3 4 and so on control alt f2 takes you to a console just like on a Linux computer and
|
|
you can log in with the username cron os and this is not recognizing that i have a divorce act
|
|
keyboard because when you switch over to this terminal they it doesn't recognize that but you log
|
|
in with this name cronos cronos ch ro in os cronos and no password required you just log in you can
|
|
set a password there's a command for that chrome chrome os dash set dev pass wd i have not done that
|
|
yet because this has just been installed the new chromium os this is a fresh image and and if you
|
|
set a password it gets erased later on you know when you're reinstalling so for now just know that
|
|
you can install you can log in no password cronos and you set the device to be bootable over usb which
|
|
typically is not set to be active and the way that you do that is you find the command it is
|
|
cross system cros system cros system cros system and what that does is if you do it with sudo at
|
|
least i don't know what happens if you don't do it with sudo probably doesn't show you anything
|
|
but sudo cross system and you might pipe it to less or something you do that and it shows you all
|
|
the active it's really sort of like cis ctl in fact i wonder if is that even do they have cis ctl
|
|
no they don't okay that's probably why so yeah it's very very much like cis ctl on another system
|
|
and so it has all of the these environment variables and one of the important variable one of the
|
|
the both this is a different one that we're looking at right now is one called dev underscore boot
|
|
underscore usb and it is set by default to zero so if you set that to one with a sudo cross
|
|
system dev underscore boot underscore usb equals one then now your developer mode is happy to to boot
|
|
from usb it might take a moment to sort of to update that variable so so be patient and then once
|
|
you're ready you can reboot your computer and hold down when you know you reboot or you power
|
|
down let's do it that way power down insert your usb drive into your usb port start your computer
|
|
and hold control you as you're booting and that just switches over to the usb drive and as long
|
|
as you flashed that image correctly onto that usb drive you're now booting off the usb drive you'll
|
|
know that you're booting off the usb drive because it instead of chrome on the on the splash screen
|
|
it says chromium and it uses the chromium logo instead of the chrome logo once you've booted to
|
|
the usb drive you can switch over to your virtual console again control all f2 and then issue the
|
|
command to install the from the image install that image onto your hard drive and that through
|
|
me for a loop here and there because so it's it's slash usr slash usb and slash chrome os dash
|
|
install is the is the command that's pretty straightforward but it it threw me off because
|
|
was asking for a destination and I hadn't thought about that because all the in the documentation
|
|
on chromium os it just sort of indicated that it would know that the the only part of that command
|
|
was usr has been chrome os dash install so it took me a moment to kind of figure out what that
|
|
destination ought to be and it ended up being a slash dev slash mmc blk zero which was the internal
|
|
sd card of of the chrome book that I have now whether this is true for all chrome books I have no idea
|
|
but it kind of harkens back to the triple e pc yet again where it was it was literally an internal
|
|
sd card and if I think it was I think it was like literally an internal sd card because I think I
|
|
added another one I think I got one that you could add another sd card to or something like that
|
|
I don't know um but yeah so it's it's like this slash dev slash mmc and of course at first I
|
|
thought well that's talking about my micro sd card that I added for extra storage uh surely surely
|
|
that's not where I want to install it too but yeah actually that is where I wanted to install it too
|
|
so after a couple of false starts I finally figured out where the the proper destination ought to
|
|
be set the dash dash dst for destination to slash dev slash mmc blk zero and let it let it install
|
|
now to be fair before I did that I didn't I didn't understand what I was doing and so I logged
|
|
into my into the usb the live system which is kind of it'll let you do that it'll let you set up
|
|
your sort of your system which I think once you install it just goes away anyway because then once
|
|
I rebooted I had to go through that step you know what a third time right once for chroma
|
|
as once for live usb and then once for the actual rebooted correct image so that was a little bit
|
|
weird um but but fine I mean it's not a problem just know that once you boot off of the usb you are
|
|
able to switch over to our virtual console and and get the thing installed there is no graphical
|
|
installer you're not gonna log in and then find a install the hard drive icon somewhere that's
|
|
not how this works you're just gonna go to your virtual console do your slash user slash usb and
|
|
slash chroma s dash install dash dash dst and set your destination wait for it to finish and once
|
|
it's finished you can reboot and rebooting was fun too I couldn't find them the reboot command to
|
|
save my life there's no telling it in this console there's no I think there was no reboot command
|
|
I ended up just doing a you slash usb and slash power off I think is what it was let me look really
|
|
quick usb and power off yeah that's what it was so anyway um you can do that and then you start
|
|
your computer back up again and remove your usb drive start your computer and then you're you're
|
|
booting into chromium OS you still have to suffer through those two loud motherboard beeps
|
|
but you're booting into chromium OS and now you're living in developer mode all you know is developer
|
|
mode and wow what a great experience that is because now you're not using any of the Google
|
|
proprietary stuff you're coasting off of a open source operating system on um a relatively
|
|
affordable computer with some really powerful tools at your disposal is it is it is it worth
|
|
doing this over just getting a laptop and putting Linux onto it no no it's not this really isn't
|
|
this isn't that there's no added benefit here that I can tell to to just having a Linux computer
|
|
and and frankly the way that this implements its Linux awareness is a is kind of weird and a
|
|
little bit crippling if what you're going to do with this is I don't know video editing or audio
|
|
recording or things like that actually maybe video editing would be okay I'm not sure because
|
|
um I mean unless you need to input sound uh but anyway the point point is yeah the Linux
|
|
aside of this is is a little bit a little bit wonky and the Android side of it is a little bit
|
|
wonky although less because it does integrate with the rest of the system but if you're looking for
|
|
for whatever reason a an affordable computer that that can you know that that sort of has a fallback
|
|
mode for I don't know stuff that people expect out there in the world like if you're going to a
|
|
school or something and they say that a Chromebook is an acceptable bring your own device uh device
|
|
well you can do that now but you can have a bunch of other things tacked onto it that that gives
|
|
you a lot more freedom than I think most people would expect to have with a Chromebook so my
|
|
overall impressions of a Chromebook are actually surprisingly quite good but that is bearing
|
|
you know I'd be curious to find out what his extra freedoms were but I bet you we could match
|
|
most of them anyway um but I tried the same thing on the Acer a year ago in September the month
|
|
after I bought it I started listening to Mintcast and uh actually I think I bought this thing two
|
|
years ago come to think about it because it was the other fellow was doing Mintcast at the time
|
|
and they were talking about converting a Chromebook over to Rentalynics Mint and I had performed
|
|
that procedure and everything was running fine but then I got to missing all of the Google features
|
|
you know from Chrome OS that that I enjoyed and uh at that time you know a couple years ago
|
|
Chromebook OS really was lacking enough stuff that you'd want to install Linux Mint or something else
|
|
um you know you just felt raped you know you got a bunch of new toys and features to play with but
|
|
you missed some of the stuff you used day to day on your normal Linux laptop that I I felt I needed
|
|
and so I was torn between the two environments and ended up just putting the Chrome OS back on
|
|
the Chromebook and leaving it that way and I'm glad I did because and actually I think it has been
|
|
two years it was probably August of 2018 when I bought the Acer because it's only got four more years
|
|
left on its contract according to Google you can look that up on how many more years your Chromebook
|
|
will be supported and mine that Acer expires in 2024 I believe whereas this pixel book expires in
|
|
2026 so I I can keep this and keep using it to 2026 so when when my Chromebook finally expires
|
|
the question is will I put Chromium OS on there or something else or will I just get rid of this
|
|
and buy modern hardware six years from now and continue running Chrome OS and I think the answer
|
|
to that is I'd probably just buy another laptop because when you run Chrome OS things like your Linux
|
|
container they're all encrypted so if your laptop is ever seized by somebody in an airport or
|
|
stolen or whatnot they can't decrypt it without the password and I don't know that Chromium OS does
|
|
that for you out of the box I don't know anything about it I know that you're probably not going to
|
|
get access to certain Google features but if you don't care about that that would be okay I think
|
|
the security would be lagging on it compared to what Google does with Chrome OS on a normal Chromebook
|
|
I would kind of worry about that and then of course as technological advancements happen
|
|
they're likely to become available year two before on a Chromebook then they will for you running
|
|
Chromium OS on an older laptop the final comment I'd like to make is that if there's anybody that's
|
|
going to port Chromebooks to the new M1 processor or any variant their app that Google might come
|
|
up with you know an ARM processor and this has been another sideline I've talked about previously
|
|
on hacker public radio on what we should do to get away from Intel obviously I bought another
|
|
Intel chip here because I'm running an i7 on this Chromebook and the acer Chromebook is a
|
|
pinium chip set by the way with four gigs of memory and believe it or not I can't tell the
|
|
difference in performance between the two systems when I'm running it in the normal way you'd run
|
|
a Chromebook where I can tell a difference is when I start running QMU and playing with Figuita
|
|
or similar operating system and the Linux beta then I really notice a difference between
|
|
this more modern pixel book go that I have with the i7 processor and the acer with the pinium
|
|
the acer with the pinium just gets outrun you know it's it can't keep up with that sort of stuff and
|
|
I won't be able to do the kind of video work that I'm doing right now and making an
|
|
audio podcast at the same time either I mean it just doesn't have the horsepower for it
|
|
but if there's anybody that's going to take a Linux to an ARM M1 like processor or whatever
|
|
Google might pick in the future six years from now for my replacement Chromebook Google do it
|
|
they have the resources to do it and hopefully chromium since they they use that as their base they
|
|
will you know be allowed to port over to it too it's just that I'm kind of worried that probably
|
|
a lot of the video drivers and stuff that they'll come up with under an ARM architecture which are
|
|
normally built into your AMD or Intel platforms now you know the the 3G accelerated graphics
|
|
might be proprietary of some kind and they might have some trouble warming their way around that
|
|
I know you've all heard about the new Apple M1s coming out so that'll be the next target for Google
|
|
and probably Windows as well you spec'd and then Linux will just fall in behind it however it can
|
|
and you know if there's going to be a port to Linux to get us on the M1 it's going to come through
|
|
Google and probably this Chromebook and Chrome UOS and that's what I have to say about that
|
|
so again I'm going to stay with Chrome OS on a normal pixel book because I'll get the most
|
|
advanced features first I have better security and I don't think that there's anything that you
|
|
could do on chromium with froid that I can't already somehow do on this pixel book and it might
|
|
be interesting to have a contest to see you know who can do what I suspect that I can do that much
|
|
if not more it just takes a little thought learning a new platform and learning what you can do
|
|
let's finish this up bring in mind that there it does take work to get to that point it's not
|
|
it isn't good off the shelf my impression of it off the shelf is it is professionally
|
|
implemented it looks like a computer that people can use and apparently people use it why I don't
|
|
know but with just a few extra options here and there I can see how it is a useful device and and
|
|
frankly it's it's it has been a useful device to me now for a good two weeks after after I
|
|
replaced Chrome OS with with Chromium OS in other words with with with all the Linux stuff and
|
|
and all the Android applications from froid it really is it is a completely useful system there are
|
|
days where I use the Chromebook the Chromium book exclusively like that's that's the entire computing
|
|
experience not days like this where I'm recording a podcast and I'm doing that on slackware because
|
|
this Chromium this yeah Chromium OS doesn't have the right tools for that so and mine does it's
|
|
available so I'm making a podcast for hacker public radio and recording a video which I'm
|
|
going to post a library and bit shoot when it when I'm done with it and I'm going to be able to
|
|
render my video in the cloud which you know if I've done a lot of videos in the last 20 years and
|
|
typically it'll take me a couple hours to render a video maybe longer three hours sometimes
|
|
if it's a long video I'll tell you the cloud resources that they have with the Google Chromebook
|
|
I can render a two-hour video in like 10 minutes I mean it's just nothing the brute force machinery
|
|
that they have sitting out there in the cloud it's it's between the display and everything else it's
|
|
it's like I am introduced to a whole new generation of laptops you know that the the world has
|
|
opened up once again for me and I take this thing even shopping with me I go grocery shopping
|
|
and I'll put my phone in my pocket and turn the Wi-Fi on and I'll use my Chromebook to help me
|
|
shop in look at prices while I buy groceries I literally am I'm walking down the aisle with a
|
|
cart and a Chromebook in the child seat asking Google about things it's it's amazing in fact if
|
|
they could just make this Chromebook do a sell call I probably get rid of my Android phone because
|
|
my Android phone compared to my Google Chromebook sucks you know have the GPS built into it and everything
|
|
to where I can make phone calls through say a Bluetooth headset I wouldn't even have a damn
|
|
Android phone wouldn't even use it at all and that's the reason they move some of the Android apps
|
|
over to Google Chrome because you know Chrome is their mainstay this is the mainstay for Google
|
|
which is again and I'll reiterate this one more time it surprises me that they didn't put a GPS
|
|
in the unit it really did it kind of angered me too but it surprises me there's not much you can
|
|
read about when you buy one but also a complete cell phone option where we can get our internet
|
|
data and also make phone calls from it that would be great you know in a future Chromebook I guess
|
|
since I don't see that it's possible in fact it seems to me I can get my chat messages my text
|
|
messages from my phone on my Chromebook I can do that right now they've already got integration
|
|
between the Nexus 9 that I have and the Chromebook so that I can use I can text and the Chromebook
|
|
communicates with some server out there that it has authorization to use my phone number to send
|
|
and receive text messages and pictures and things so they're just a hop skip and a jump away from
|
|
being able to make a phone call from the Chromebook of course we already have zoom you know
|
|
and we already have the Google video chat thing and YouTube and everything else already so I mean
|
|
all of that works right now on the Chromebook I mean you could use that if you wanted to get away
|
|
from Skype what have you okay yes there are huge exceptions there are caveats but I could
|
|
definitely see getting by on a Chromebook for an extended amount of time like really especially
|
|
if what you do works you know if you're a developer or if you are working primarily in a web browser
|
|
and just dip out now and again for that for the really good IDE that you love or whatever that's
|
|
completely functional that is exactly that is the sweet spot for this thing if I ever go to a
|
|
technical conference again and see a person with a Mac I think I will just tell them politely
|
|
that they should not ever get a Mac again and get a Chromebook because I mean the the price
|
|
difference is enormous and the functionality frankly is superior and you know I'm glad he said
|
|
that because he knows a hell of a lot more about Macintosh and Apple products than I ever will I've
|
|
never used one I've set in front of a Macintosh back in the late eighties my aunts and played with
|
|
it for a while and I've seen kids using Macbook errors I guess and they're blindingly fast you know
|
|
the graphics on those things are fast but this Google pixel pro go thing is just as fast
|
|
it is it's it's breathtaking and the color and the resolution of this screen is just breathtaking
|
|
it is it's it's almost as if I'm in Colorado or Wyoming wherever this picture was taken going
|
|
down a highway and my pickup truck if I as if I were there and of course everything is just
|
|
lightning fast in in a Chromebook world and I'm going to have to start learning to get more
|
|
integrated with the cloud as far as Google Drive goes and figure out what I'm going to do with it
|
|
right now I'm doing is video rendering and working with audio but you know eventually storing a
|
|
few files on there probably wouldn't hurt me a bit and maybe backing them up to the OpenBSD
|
|
server but I don't think I personally could ever get away with not having OpenBSD in my life in
|
|
a server you know I wouldn't trust it and that's where I currently store you know 99.9999
|
|
percent of my stuff is on that server so if I want to play a movie or something using VLC I can
|
|
just use SSHFuse file system bring up my server's volume and play that movie play that audio file
|
|
use library office to edit a document that you know are a spreadsheet that I'm maintaining out there
|
|
you know for some of my other activities and do what I need to do and in Classes right you can
|
|
just about buy anything you want to run on the Chromebook including even if you're into
|
|
Microsoft Office you know office products and what they do in the business world for Microsoft
|
|
Office and you know I've used Excel and all that in the past I'm not a huge fan of it but yeah
|
|
you can buy into that and basically use Microsoft Office I believe anywhere now not just Chromebook
|
|
so yeah everything is coming together it's the singularity I think they call it right that's
|
|
what the young people call it singularity what I call boomerollity maybe did I make a joke
|
|
integration with Linux is not perfect but it sure is a lot better than the integration between
|
|
X-quarts and macOS or cocoa whatever this is this is something this is a thing that you could get
|
|
it's also a thing that you don't have to get I mean it's it is by no means a requirement and
|
|
there's like I say the added value to Linux here is minimal and really once again what this is
|
|
a demonstration of is how a crippled system can be opened up with open source luckily at
|
|
least with the right Chromebook and I obviously this is based on exactly one but with the right
|
|
Chromebook the right options turned on you can replace the entire thing and have an open source
|
|
computer with a really interesting model of operation that can carry you through days and days
|
|
and days of computing and the battery life frankly is really amazing on this thing at least so far
|
|
I know that will fade over time but yeah it is it is pretty nice it takes a while to get there but
|
|
you can get there it's kind of fun getting there hacking around proprietary systems is deceptively
|
|
sort of satisfying you feel like certainly I mean the battery life on this Google pixel book
|
|
crow go excuse me is so good that I can charge it up overnight and I can walk around with this
|
|
folded up all day long and still have battery to go well into the evening when I get home I mean
|
|
it it's the only laptop I've ever had that's this battery efficient and powerful it's it's so
|
|
amazing and of course my phone will run the Wi-Fi on a charge for a full day I can just put it in my
|
|
pocket or shirt pocket or pants pocket and carry it right along with it and I've got internet
|
|
access and everything I need anywhere I go anywhere like you've done a really amazing thing when
|
|
you finally loaded all your open source applications on proprietary system but it's even better to
|
|
just get rid of the proprietary system entirely and with Chromium OS that's exactly what you can do
|
|
that's it I think that's everything I have to say about Chromebooks probably maybe in the future
|
|
I'll try to record an episode on this thing to see if it works but I I'm not going to promise it
|
|
because I do edit a lot as I go and without audacity that's a very that's a tough call don't go rush
|
|
out and get one thinking that I'm advertising that Chromebooks are amazing I'm advertising that
|
|
Chromium OS is a really important project something that can replace a crippled proprietary product
|
|
and make it really really useful but two Chrome OS's credit the integration of Android and Linux
|
|
applications is a big deal I'm really I'm glad that they've done that I think that they could
|
|
I hope they go farther with it and I hope that they really embrace this open source foundation
|
|
that they're basing their stuff on because it that's the part that makes this fun that's
|
|
what makes this cool and useful and I hope that they recognize that because honestly if there's
|
|
a person in your life who is stuck with a Chromebook these are the tools and tricks that can
|
|
transform them from a passive computer consumer to a productive and active and an invested
|
|
open source computer user thanks for listening I'll talk to you next time
|
|
well I'm going to go ahead and cut it off there and there is a difference in the mentality between
|
|
squirrels that live in a magical forest and aliens like clad 2 that do intergalactic travel
|
|
and stuff in that a they prefer open source projects over ones that are closed or entrapped
|
|
and be they prefer to write their direct their data on thumb drives and stuff like that
|
|
instead of really use the cloud even though we did mention that you know next cloud would be
|
|
an option for him it's probably hard to get an internet access while you're cruising across
|
|
the galaxy I think that's the difference between squirrels and aliens is that we're more cloud
|
|
oriented it's just that we're a little more selective on what kind of cloud I'm going to use
|
|
and for what and obviously more cloud options are better I suppose but I'd have to agree totally
|
|
with this young men's comment about how much better this is over MacBook even though I've not
|
|
owned a MacBook Air even touched one I know pound for pound it's lighter it's got a better
|
|
screen display it's faster and it certainly has a lot more cloud options I think that you would
|
|
than you would find you know a lot more capabilities than you would find in the MacBook maybe
|
|
maybe I'm wrong maybe someone will chew me out over that as far as capabilities goes but
|
|
I would certainly pick the the Chromebook over a Windows system any day you know
|
|
and there are a variety of Windows systems that are that are coming out as well that are I'm
|
|
singing doctors offices right now you know that the the the Windows mobile platforms all right
|
|
let's conclude this video with a final message from Google okay Google fart you can blame me if
|
|
you want I don't mind well you didn't fart for me okay Google fart it was me I farted it
|
|
definitely wasn't someone else in the room all you won't do it for me all right well we'll
|
|
conclude the the podcast then because Google's not cooperating maybe glad to his ride maybe we should
|
|
if we all ran that other operating system chromium then we could get our farts more reliably and
|
|
start our podcast from okay Google
|
|
we're Christ six where's the button to turn this off
|
|
and to the hacker public radio community thanks for listening
|
|
and yes you can record a hacker public radio broadcast on a Chromebook
|
|
you've been listening to hacker public radio at hackerpublicradio.org we are a community podcast
|
|
network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our shows
|
|
was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast
|
|
and click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. Hacker public radio was found
|
|
by the digital dog pound and the infonomican computer club and it's part of the binary revolution
|
|
at binrev.com if you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment
|
|
on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself unless otherwise stated today's show is
|
|
released on the creative comments attribution share a light 3.0 license
|