On 19/02/14 12:00, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> Samsung have had an ARM-based laptop for a while, sold as a Chromebook.
> (ie. with an Android-like Linux kernel and the Chrome browser as the whole OS)
> 
> The little ARM cpu means the laptop doesn't need much power and can
> run for quite a while, despite being lightweight and cheap with a
> small battery.
> 
> I was wondering how it'd go running a full version of Linux; just
> running a bunch of terminal emulators more of the time, and maybe
> Chromium from time to time.
> 
> I've heard of people managing to get Ubuntu or other linux variants
> installed, but I wondered if anyone here has done it? Was it worth the
> trouble?

I've run openSUSE on mine as described here:

  http://en.opensuse.org/HCL:ARMChromebook

There's an image you can put on an SD card, then with the Chomebook in
developer mode[1], you boot off the SD card (have to hit CTRL-U at each
boot to do this).  This means you can have a play without trashing or
otherwise repartitioning the SSD.

Last time I tried this, *something* didn't work (might have been not
waking from screensaver? I forget exactly), and I never got around to
figuring out what it was.  This may well have since been fixed.

I ultimately ended up just running my Chromebook in regular ChromeOS
mode, as I'm really only using the thing occasionally as a a slightly
glorified web browser, and I got sick of it whining loudly at me on
every boot about the possible doom associated with being in developer mode.

HTH,

Tim

[1]
http://www.chromium.org/chromium-os/developer-information-for-chrome-os-devices/samsung-arm-chromebook#TOC-Entering-Developer-Mode
_______________________________________________
luv-main mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.luv.asn.au/listinfo/luv-main

Reply via email to