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Chromebooks Are About To Change (androidcentral.com) 36

Google is preparing to introduce a significant change to its ChromeOS platform by decoupling the Chrome browser from the operating system, AndroidCentral writes. The project, known as "Lacros" (Linux And Chrome OS), aims to solve several issues, including the inability to receive browser updates after a Chromebook reaches its Auto Update Expiration (AUE) date. This change will allow users to install updates for the browser separately, potentially extending the lifespan of their devices and reducing e-waste. Additionally, Lacros will bring a consistent user experience across all platforms, including features like profile switching without the need to log out of accounts.

Google has yet to announce the exact release date of the change, however, the report adds.
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Chromebooks Are About To Change

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  • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Friday March 29, 2024 @09:09PM (#64355084)

    Of Linux on the laptop. And no, Stallman doesn't get to call this one GNU/Linux given there's no gnu in it.

    • by kriston ( 7886 )

      I think you will find plenty of GNU software in the "Help...About" menu, and in the command line console it sure does look like GNU/Linux to me.

  • C(h)rom(e) (Score:4, Insightful)

    by TwistedGreen ( 80055 ) on Saturday March 30, 2024 @01:44AM (#64355476)

    Oh wow, is it going to be a real operating system now? Not just a web browser?

    Funny to see this schizophrenic company admitting that not everything can be done in a web browser.

    • You beat me to this comment. The whole point of chromebooks was to bypass the regular operating system by making google's browser the provider of operating system services for apps that would run inside of a web page.
    • Re:C(h)rom(e) (Score:5, Informative)

      by davide marney ( 231845 ) on Saturday March 30, 2024 @08:03AM (#64355876) Journal

      Please go and actually use a Chromebook. It's a Linux distribution that uses the web browser as just one of several application environments. In addition to the web environment, it supports containers for Andoid, Linux, and Windows apps, and integrates them all under one desktop manager, perfectly seamlessly.

      • Its made by an advertising company. I'll pass.
      • Re:C(h)rom(e) (Score:4, Informative)

        by Jetstream ( 911042 ) on Saturday March 30, 2024 @05:48PM (#64357424)
        It may "support" Linux apps, but it's kind of a pain to have to wait a couple minutes for the Linux container to "boot up" when you first try to open a Linux application. And the one time I tried installing Linux side-by-side with Chrome, it was so slow as to be unusable. It all sounds good, but doesn't work so well in practice. (And LibreOffice Calc acts a little weird for me when run in the Linux container.)
      • I'm struggling to read between the buzzwords here, but I understand that ChromeOS is a locked-down distribution of Linux that can't run any native apps; it can only browse the internet or use web apps. Now I see they're allowing you to run "legacy apps" inside a PWA, which is not the same thing as running apps natively. Are you actually talking about using ChromeOS Virtual App Delivery? Because these are still web apps encapsulating an emulation layer, and am very skeptical this is a good idea.

        • by trawg ( 308495 )

          It can run a lot of native apps. You can run a Linux mode on it and install stuff via apt. I don't quite understand how it all works - it's some mutant container/virtualisation thing - but it /works/.

          It's Linux on the desktop. It's great for SMEs and has tons of enterprise features. Anecdata, but more than half our SME is.ok Chromebook because it's a lightweight, cheap browser focus desktop environment, and we can set up full Linux Firefox on it if needed (we did for a while to run a few websites that neede

  • ... my IDEs and GUI tools on a Chromebook with no extra hassle. That would be soooo cool and likely push ChromeOS forward by a large margin. Let's see what they're up to.

  • by davide marney ( 231845 ) on Saturday March 30, 2024 @07:49AM (#64355842) Journal

    Do not buy an underpowered machine and expect ChromeOS to somehow make up the difference and let you run apps with an acceptable level of performance. You will hate running ChromeOS on a slow machine just as much as you would hate running Windows. Spend enough money on hardware that will last the full 10 years of support. Get a fast CPU. Web apps are especially susceptible to memory bloat, so do not skimp on RAM. You will not need a large local disk for the OS. Buy storage based on your app usage only. A 2-in-1 form factor is a game changer for many work flows. I will never go back to a normal clamshell design.

    I have ChromeOS, Android, and Linux all installed on my Chromebook, and I use apps running on all three environments everyday. They've done a very good job integrating the desktop environment, you'd never know you were running on different hosts.

    I have never had to do a manual install of a ChromeOS update. All updates are automatic, and most do require a restart, but I've never had work interrupted because of an update. I have had to do manual updates of the Linux container. ChromeOS attempts to keep this updated, but only about 1 in 3 updates can be done automatically. As every Linux user knows, you can't avoid having to jump in and fix up a dependency.

    On the big selling points of ChromeOS -- you have to learn only one UI, all the hardware just works, updates are automatic, local storage is just a cache of your cloud accounts so you can literally switch entire machines in a manner of minutes -- they've done an outstanding job, in my opinion. This is as close to set-it-and-forget-it as it gets. Much better than an Apple laptop in that regard, and miles better than a Windows laptop.

  • by kriston ( 7886 ) on Saturday March 30, 2024 @07:53PM (#64357624) Homepage Journal

    About that e-waste thing: I have several Chromebooks that I really liked over the past decade and a half but after three to five years the batteries wear out. It's almost like they're planned to wear out once Google support runs out.

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