All posts tagged: ChromeOS

I tested Artix Linux: An enjoyable systemd-free distro for experienced users (and ChromeOS speeds)

I tested Artix Linux: An enjoyable systemd-free distro for experienced users (and ChromeOS speeds)

Jack Wallen/ZDNET Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google. ZDNET’s key takeaways Artix is a Linux distribution with a different approach, but plenty to offer. It offers a very fast boot time and outstanding all-around performance. Artix uses the OpenRC init system and ships with a bare minimum of apps. “The art of Linux” — that’s where the name for the Artix distribution comes from, and this modern, independent take on Linux takes the art in its name seriously. But don’t be misled; Artix (an Arch-based rolling release distribution) isn’t geared toward artists (although it certainly could be). Rather, Artix is about the art of creating a unique Linux distribution while replacing several of the usual bits and pieces. Also: France is replacing 2.5 million Windows desktops with Linux – and I mapped out its new stack For example, Artix eschews systemd in favor of either OpenRC or dinit (user’s choice), as well as XLibre or Wayland, in place of Xorg. According to the Artix FAQ, the developers “love systemd,” but would never use …

I installed ChromeOS on my 9-year-old MacBook Air, and it actually works

I installed ChromeOS on my 9-year-old MacBook Air, and it actually works

My 2017 MacBook Air had been sitting in a cabinet, fully functional but effectively retired. macOS had outgrown the hardware — not because the laptop broke, but because the 128GB drive had hit a wall. Apple’s macOS installers need a meaningful amount of free space just to stage. On a 128GB drive, after years of normal use, that room simply doesn’t exist. With the M5 MacBook Air on my radar as an eventual replacement for my 2019 Intel MacBook Pro — the Air is a much better fit for the work I actually do than the Pro — I figured the 2017 machine deserved one last look before it became e-waste. ChromeOS Flex seemed like a stretch on hardware this old. It wasn’t. The MacBook Air wasn’t broken — macOS just outgrew it A storage ceiling it couldn’t climb past The 128GB SSD that came with this MacBook Air was manageable when I bought it. Years later, it wasn’t. macOS update installers are large, and they need headroom well beyond just the installer file itself. …

These Official ChromeOS Flex USB Sticks Can Give Your Old Mac or Windows PC a Second Life

These Official ChromeOS Flex USB Sticks Can Give Your Old Mac or Windows PC a Second Life

“People want something that lasts them a long time, that is quality, that is useful,” says Google senior director Alexander Kuscher. “Eventually, when it breaks or when you lose it, you get a new one because you feel taken care of. So I think that builds trust, and the trust is important.” Flex started as an enterprise service for businesses; Google offered companies worried about security vulnerabilities on aging hardware a way to easily update to a more secure operating system. Or, at least, one that still received updates. After a while, other users started to get ahold of the software, downloading and installing it on their own USB sticks for their personal machines. “We didn’t make it particularly easy at the time,” Kuscher says. “But people did it.” What led to the more consumer-oriented push of ChromeOS Flex—like this partnership with Back Market—was the end of software support for Microsoft’s Windows 10 operating system last fall. While the OS still technically works, it stopped receiving security updates, and Microsoft has encouraged users to update …