You Can Now Install ChromeOS On ANY Computer

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  • Опубликовано: 30 июн 2024
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    ▼ Time Stamps: ▼
    0:00 - Intro
    0:56 - Creating the Installation Media
    2:30 - ChromeOS Flex Installation Process
    4:10 - A Very Important Thing
    5:45 - First Time Setup
    6:39 - Exploring ChromeOS
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @WilliamShinal
    @WilliamShinal Год назад +231

    You might not like the accusatory nature of this statement but this was ORIGINALLY a distribution of ChromiumOS called Cloudready. By purchasing Neverware, Google has dodged making a version of ChromeOS that is based on THE ChromeOS they use on their Chromebooks. They know how to keep their cards close.

    • @warthunder1969
      @warthunder1969 Год назад +17

      True but they also did alot of "under the hood" tweaks to bring Flex in line with stock Chrome OS. To be honest I owned a Acer Chromebook Cb3-111 and if all you do is stuff in the browser (which is how Chrome OS was born) then its fine for a side machine. I've got it running on 2 older system (one is a lenovo thinkpad L512 and the other is a Lenovo chromebook x131e that became unsupported) and it runs fine on both. Again nothing groundbreaking but good enough for basic computing.

    • @Sumire973
      @Sumire973 Год назад +13

      CloudReady turns into CentOS 2.0 basically, epic EEE move from Google.

    • @tacokoneko
      @tacokoneko Год назад +6

      im going to be honest i have used chromiumos and i am not really sure what your point is because chromiumos with google apps installed is borderline identical to normal chromeos, probably always better because chromeos can be locked so you don't have permissions to enable developer mode but if you compile chromiumos yourself that does not apply

    • @tacokoneko
      @tacokoneko Год назад +3

      in the chromiumos i installed there was even google play store and the android apps worked on x86 CPU which seems to be the big issue for some people, i have a video of it on my channel edit: nvm that is a chromeos build but i used a chormiumos separately and i could post videos of that if someone asks

    • @Sumire973
      @Sumire973 Год назад +1

      @@tacokoneko which Chromium OS build are you talking about?

  • @GrdDog
    @GrdDog Год назад +205

    I'm running Flex on an old Lenovo laptop (with decent specs); gives me limited things I can do, but I only takes this when I'm out and about and do not want to take my tablet, one thing I did notice was the increase in the battery usage length to 7 hours and yes I tested that 5 times, over all a decent o.s. that can get small things done, I like it.

    • @moonphoenix9324
      @moonphoenix9324 Год назад +19

      If you want a less limited experience, install a linux distro (like PopOS or Fedora) for very similar performance

    • @JohnSmith-xq1pz
      @JohnSmith-xq1pz Год назад

      Does Flex have have a dark mode?

    • @TheOperatingSystemWorld
      @TheOperatingSystemWorld Год назад +9

      @@JohnSmith-xq1pz It's coming to version 105. The latest version is 104.

    • @BotanistOnDuna
      @BotanistOnDuna Год назад +8

      chromeos sucks, get a linux distro based on ubuntu. ubuntu based distros are super easy to use, apt is the easiest package manager ever. it also has more apps and you can even run windows programs on it through wine.

    • @TheOperatingSystemWorld
      @TheOperatingSystemWorld Год назад +8

      @@BotanistOnDuna Chrome OS is a ChromiumOS-based Distro. You can install Linux Apps.

  • @tOSdude
    @tOSdude Год назад +23

    One note about the media creator: The reason it asks for model numbers is so you can recover other chomebooks, not just flex. All of those other options will install the real chrome OS.

  • @StuffOfSonny
    @StuffOfSonny Год назад +142

    My only guess as to why the Google Play store (and others) might not work is that they might be expecting an ARM based ChromeOS, and not x86.

    • @that_leaflet
      @that_leaflet Год назад +53

      Most Chromebooks are x86 and can run Android apps. It's just Google keeping certain features exclusive to the "official" ChromeOS.

    • @sunightmc
      @sunightmc Год назад

      @@ilan6291 what features exactly were removed?

    • @gblaudio
      @gblaudio Год назад +6

      This is just google wanting some more user data....

    • @edbp7689
      @edbp7689 Год назад +9

      Android programs are written in Java and more recently, Kotlin, they're both interpreted programming languaje (a.k.a. not compiled), so the underlying hardware is irrelevant as long as there's a full featured interpreter (e.g. Dalvik).

    • @sorinl8467
      @sorinl8467 Год назад

      It's a cut edition. Some kind of shareware but buy a Chromebook if you want more.

  • @jayrome8764
    @jayrome8764 Год назад +28

    I'm running actual ChromeOS (rammus) via brunch framework on a Thinkpad T550 and I am very happy with it. I can run Android apps and I even rooted the Android container. ChromeOS absolutely flies on this machine (16gb ram, i7). I dual boot it with Windows 11. I get better battery life running on the ChromeOS side, so it is my daily driver. I only boot into Windows to run software unique to Windows.

  • @mjdxp5688
    @mjdxp5688 Год назад +185

    This could have a lot of uses that people aren't really thinking of. It could be great for schools with older, out of support Chromebooks which no longer officially received ChromeOS updates. I guess this could be useful for developers as well for testing.

    • @mxmobile5619
      @mxmobile5619 Год назад +22

      Older chromebooks have no support under chromeOS flex due to their locked down boot protocol

    • @helloworld145
      @helloworld145 Год назад +5

      @@mxmobile5619 With some modding, you can get past that locked boot protocol on some chromebooks.

    • @mxmobile5619
      @mxmobile5619 Год назад +22

      @@helloworld145 “with some modding”. Yes you can with some modding but realistically most people will look at the underpowered hardware and lack of official support and call it a day.

    • @KisameSempai
      @KisameSempai Год назад +10

      @@tanawatjukmongkol2178 You don't understand. in the most recent chromebooks, the bootloader is locked and you cannot install linux or even chromeos flex. that made me not buy a chromebook. I bought a used windows 10 business laptop instead and boot win10, ubuntu, fedora, android and chromeos on it.

    • @kevinwong_2016
      @kevinwong_2016 Год назад +1

      @@mxmobile5619 yeah I thought that

  • @ynotaz
    @ynotaz 11 месяцев назад +2

    I put Flex on an old thinkpad. It works great. Theo is right about it not having a lot of app options. For basic everyday use and browsing it is handy.

  • @annonymous3033
    @annonymous3033 4 месяца назад +5

    This is clickbait, the dude said chrome OS its actually chrome OS flex, which doesnt have access to playstore like the real chrome OS

  • @hamzapuris
    @hamzapuris Год назад +3

    Great video and an idea! Great for testing and learning about ChromeOS while using old hardware.

  • @StoneThrower04
    @StoneThrower04 Год назад +1

    @ThioJoe the list of manufacturers is there because it is the chromebook recovery utility. it was used to recover chromebooks before it was used to download chromeos flex

  • @allanmacleod1899
    @allanmacleod1899 Год назад +1

    I am ruuning chrome os flex on a 2007 macbook it works great and gave this old laptop new life .I only have 2 gig of ram but it is still fast,

  • @fexploder3281
    @fexploder3281 Год назад +162

    I don't know about you but in my opinion I am like "Who wants to install Chrome OS on their computer" because I don't like Chrome OS but anyways, nice video. Keep it up!

    • @aleksandar6056
      @aleksandar6056 Год назад +18

      I don't like Chrome even as a web browser... Even Edge is better

    • @KEN4K
      @KEN4K Год назад +30

      @@aleksandar6056 which is funny because edge is chromium based

    • @affyne
      @affyne Год назад +15

      @@KEN4K without any bloat* under the hood edge is based on chromium sure but i must say that chrome itself sucks, too much memory usage and whatnot. i've been using chrome for like 6-7 years and i am not even a microsoft fan but Edge IS way better than chrome in all aspects.
      that microsoft who is infamous for the bloat in their apps, for once they are doing good in something lol

    • @jean-olivierjanvier6030
      @jean-olivierjanvier6030 Год назад +4

      ChromeOS is, to me, the iPad OS of computers

    • @n124ajdx
      @n124ajdx Год назад +4

      I'll install Chrome OS just to try it for like a week but I won't stick with it.
      Just like how I install a random Linux distro from time to time.
      Edge has the necessary tools that a browser needs without the garbage bloatwares of chrome

  • @abaneyone
    @abaneyone Год назад +34

    I like this but I think doing a fresh install of a Linux distribution, installing Linux over the existing operating system is a better idea. I've installed Linux on old laptops and PCs many times, always 100% success.

    • @sticky59
      @sticky59 Год назад +1

      Now your talking !

    • @chemicallust77
      @chemicallust77 Год назад +1

      Agreed...the limitations of the Chrome OS don't make it very appealing...I have something like a netbook (definitely more powerful) HP 3105m with 8gb RAM that I run Mint on and it works great...mostly use it for work and music in my den/workshop...I'm kind of curious if a version of the Chrome OS can be made to side load on an older Android tablet 🤔

    • @tartara3315
      @tartara3315 Год назад

      Just installed Manjaro, Zorin and Mint linux distributions one after another on an old laptop - only one of those worked with internet and that one only recognised Ethernet too (others straight up denied both Ethernet and WiFi), I tried everything but couldn't get it to work although on windows they work just fine so issue is not hardware related. it's a 32 bit based CPU so not a lot of options to choose from (even among Linux distributions), just what's available soo yeah now I'm trying Chrome OS!
      Btw I tried win 10 32 bit too but it was too slow and laggy and Win 8.1 32 bit was a tad bit faster but still not very good...

    • @tartara3315
      @tartara3315 Год назад

      Tried windows 7 32 bit too, worked wonderfully but as Microsoft's official Win 7 ISO isn't available, I had to get a 3rd party version with plenty of viruses and trojan on it... so I gave up on it

    • @gary4689
      @gary4689 7 месяцев назад +1

      I am happy that google added this functionality, however. I think it might serve as a gateway drug to Linux, considering that ChromeOS is essentially a specialized version of it.

  • @butlerwm
    @butlerwm Год назад

    I installed it on a 2008 Toshiba laptop. Runs better on that than my Lenovo Chromebook. For all my browsing and streaming needs, it does a very good job. Tried installing only my HP laptop (2002 model) and had problems. Determined it was a bad memory module. Replaced it and installed just fine. I lets me put some machines back in service that had hit end of life.

  • @UNICORNSF3ProgameplayProRACER
    @UNICORNSF3ProgameplayProRACER Год назад +4

    Great material!

  • @thelakeman2538
    @thelakeman2538 Год назад +37

    Just install a linux distro at that point, you will be actually getting a full desktop os, or just stick to whatever old windows os came preinstalled with that laptop unless you wanna use the internet. My advice is to try some lightweight linux distro.

    • @durschfalltv7505
      @durschfalltv7505 Год назад +5

      Exactly.

    • @Username-xr5bx
      @Username-xr5bx Год назад +5

      IDK why some people choose spyware over freedom

    • @bandiddums
      @bandiddums Год назад +3

      Honestly I'm only interested because of the possibility of running android apps but since that doesn't seem to be possible it's pretty much useless for me

    • @durschfalltv7505
      @durschfalltv7505 Год назад +2

      @@Username-xr5bx they want to give responsibility to someone else.

    • @durschfalltv7505
      @durschfalltv7505 Год назад +1

      @@bandiddums wdym you can run Android apps on Linux. There is way droid for Wayland.

  • @m4rt_
    @m4rt_ Год назад +18

    Just use Linux for giving old stuff new life, it is less bloated.
    Linux is also good for new computers, tbh everyone should use Linux, it's great

    • @vaseklepic12
      @vaseklepic12 Год назад +3

      I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you’re referring to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I’ve recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX.
      Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called “Linux”, and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project. There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use.
      Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine’s resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called “Linux” distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux.

    • @turle8645
      @turle8645 Год назад +1

      Average Linux user

    • @m4rt_
      @m4rt_ Год назад

      @@vaseklepic12 you know what I mean by linux

    • @m4rt_
      @m4rt_ Год назад

      @@turle8645 linux is the best os

    • @godlesssociety498
      @godlesssociety498 Год назад +1

      GNU/Linux is only great for server room trolls and basement dwelling IT goblins. Some of us use computers to make money, literally I quit my day job and now make money off of my pc. There's really no time for "Linux" I installed it last week and lasted 2 days and reverted back to windows. I actually just received a notification that I've been paid for the month, something that would be impossible using "Linux". It's pretty, it's fast and secure (I suffered a ransomeware attack which prompted me to switch to Linux) but none of my upgrades work properly such as my audio and gpu. Nah thanks

  • @chriskasprzyk6235
    @chriskasprzyk6235 Год назад +1

    Watching this on an old low power intel nuc that I threw chrome os flex on. Works great for what I am wanting it to do.

  • @sofiaknyazeva
    @sofiaknyazeva Год назад +41

    For me, it'd be much better if I use a lightweight Linux distro, instead this one but still interesting, since I never installed/used it before.

    • @famousmwofficial8046
      @famousmwofficial8046 Год назад

      it's a light weight Linux distro made by Google. give it a shot 😉

  • @mla_den
    @mla_den Год назад +17

    Tip: you can install chrome os on any drive you want you just have to tinker a little in the terminal
    You can hit ctrl+alt+f2
    Enter “chronos” for the username
    Type in “sudo fdisk -l” and find the exact name of the drive you want to install on
    Then you can type in “sudo chromeos-install --dst /dev/DRIVENAME --target-bios efi” and boom
    Edit: never mind, the shortcut was disabled in the stable release along with shell access in general

    • @themonkeyman2790
      @themonkeyman2790 Год назад +1

      But he installed chrome os "flex" in this video

    • @mla_den
      @mla_den Год назад

      @@themonkeyman2790 that doesn’t matter, they’re essentially the same thing just for different hardware, the command still works

    • @themonkeyman2790
      @themonkeyman2790 Год назад

      @@mla_den 👍

    • @kr6to409
      @kr6to409 Год назад

      So we gonna go for the Dev one?

  • @Hodenkat
    @Hodenkat Год назад +7

    I personally don't have a reason to install ChromeOS on anything right now, but I can see where it might help those who are not technical and need limited choices like doing everything through a browser. Windows just has too many settings and things that can get a user into trouble. The same applies to Linux. For a lot of seniors this is more than enough.

  • @AMKpolka5
    @AMKpolka5 Год назад +26

    Nice video but for anyone interested installing this on an old desktop or laptop please make sure that the devices motherboard supports UEFI/Secure Boot otherwise, even if it says you installed Flex OS successfully, you won't ever be able to boot onto the OS.

    • @breadone_
      @breadone_ Год назад +6

      google moment

    • @KatyushaLauncher
      @KatyushaLauncher Год назад +6

      Not necessarily true, I was able to install Chrome OS Flex on an old HP OEM PC and an old Lenovo Thinkpad both which neither support UEFI or Secure Boot but was still able to boot and tinker around with Chrome OS Flex

    • @ericodijk
      @ericodijk Год назад

      My 16 year old laptop runs perfectly, no UEFI or whatever, just standard Bios. And I even managed to let it multiboot with Linux.

  • @KISSFanDan1995
    @KISSFanDan1995 Год назад +2

    I remember those netbooks. I had one (2010-13) and it ran horribly on windows 7 starter so I just downgraded it to Windows XP Pro and upgraded the Ram from 2 to 4 gigs and it ran flawlessly.

  • @anshumanmishraw
    @anshumanmishraw Год назад

    Amazing work, Thanks Joe.

  • @Puzzlers100
    @Puzzlers100 Год назад +5

    I find this bizzare, but I never used my school chromebook until my school let me keep it when graduating, where I forced it to run Gnu+linux rather than Google+linux and now I'm really happy with it.

  • @Omooze
    @Omooze Год назад +17

    If chromeos flex added play store support i would definitely install it

    • @pyp2205
      @pyp2205 Год назад +1

      Well it was just released recently, so I guess Google might add Google Play support at some point.

    • @AlphaDango
      @AlphaDango Год назад

      Just install Android then?

    • @barracuda861
      @barracuda861 Год назад +1

      I wonder if Bluestack will work. Then you will have game support. This program works great on my Windows 11 laptop.

    • @alvzcizzler
      @alvzcizzler Год назад +2

      There's a modified version of Chrome OS that supports Google Play for all computers

    • @linuxization4205
      @linuxization4205 Год назад

      Just emulate an arm64 virtual machine?

  • @stevenadams9915
    @stevenadams9915 Год назад +1

    Hey bro, I really enjoy your content fantastic work.

  • @prowler1567
    @prowler1567 Год назад

    Thanks for the heads up Joe.

  • @martinus_mars
    @martinus_mars Год назад +26

    Very few reasons to get Flex. The installation drive issue is critical and so obvious that it's hard to believe that it wasn't done on purpose, but I do not know why they would do that

    • @elmariachi5133
      @elmariachi5133 Год назад +11

      Down dumbing. Today's mainstream consumer is not supposed to being able to do such complicated things like decide between 2(Two!) options.

    • @Qwerty-uiop
      @Qwerty-uiop Год назад +6

      If a person is advanced enough to go into boot manager, they can definitely select their boot drive. Maybe google thinks grandmas will install this

    • @chrismclean3848
      @chrismclean3848 Год назад +3

      I’m sure it’s a bug since flex is still in development. Maybe they just automatically install on the drive with more storage (which is still stupid).

  • @ranawaqashaider
    @ranawaqashaider Год назад +3

    ChromeOS Flex is really a nice initiative but I would prefer FydeOS for chromeOS. Its a solid OS for chromeOS flex alternative with playstore and drive features..
    By the way Nice Video. Keep it Up bro. Also would like to see your opinion about FydeOS.

  • @Thomas-cityd5_gixitxs
    @Thomas-cityd5_gixitxs Год назад

    That’s really cool for old out dated devices. 👍 nice revamp.

  • @DimusTech
    @DimusTech Год назад +2

    I tried it on an old macbook at work, honestly, works much better than a new macbook lol.
    But I'd really wish we could put an ISO of it on Ventoy or something.

  • @Eskom_SA
    @Eskom_SA Год назад +9

    Pretty sure ChromeOS is Linux based
    Which begs the question why use ChromeOS?
    When you could use an actually functional more
    lightweight OS that is opensource and doesnt require
    a google account and also allows any app to be installed
    much easier

    • @paulstubbs7678
      @paulstubbs7678 Год назад +2

      I'm a tad disappointed that Mozilla didn't do the same with Firefox - but then again a lightweight Linux with Firefox is about the same, it's just annoying that Google has the space all to itself.

    • @chrismclean3848
      @chrismclean3848 Год назад

      It’s good for people for use Google products a lot like docs or gmail. Just basic internet usage, good for older people

    • @chrismclean3848
      @chrismclean3848 Год назад

      @@paulstubbs7678 a Firefox os would have less bloat and Spyware than chrome os. Idk if it would be better than standard Linux tho.

    • @kevinwong_2016
      @kevinwong_2016 Год назад

      @@paulstubbs7678 there was fire fox os but it failed

    • @paulstubbs7678
      @paulstubbs7678 Год назад

      @@kevinwong_2016 Interesting, never saw that one mentioned anywhere, no wonder it failed.
      At that time (Chrome OS debut) all I remember from Mozilla was a new phone OS that wasn't compatible with anything, so kind of useless (as in what were they thinking)

  • @rikimaru1007
    @rikimaru1007 Год назад +4

    Good info. Not a chrome fan. I'm happy to install a low spec linux on old pc's. Xubuntu is my go to for now.

  • @lafamillecarrington
    @lafamillecarrington Год назад

    I have an old Chromebook that no longer gets security updates, so I installed Cloudready, only to find that the battery had died. Finally got a replacement battery, and discovered that Cloudready had been bought by Google, so now I'll be moving on to Flex! Thanks for the information.

  • @TirthOdharia
    @TirthOdharia Год назад

    Just tried flex right before your video went live🤔 what a coincidence!!

  • @MarkBarrett
    @MarkBarrett Год назад +3

    When I installed ChromeOS a few months ago as an alternate OS, it replaced my backup storage drive. (Thanks guys.)

  • @burgersnchips
    @burgersnchips Год назад +11

    I could have sworn I installed ChromeOS year ago on a random PC or a virtual machine when it genuinely was just a Web browser.
    Today though to revive old tech I'd prefer to just install a lightweight standard Linux distro for the flexibility.

    • @encycl07pedia-
      @encycl07pedia- Год назад

      @Matt React It depends. The Web has been built to be a kind of "safe" OS. With HTML5 and all the applications that run on Javascript libraries, you can do quite a lot within your web browser. I've even used a text editor designed to behave like vim attached to Google Drive all in the web browser.

  • @MKAdamski
    @MKAdamski Год назад

    I have a small micro PC (13*13*2cm) that I brought a few years ago. It has a 64 bit processor (Can't remember speed), 4GB RAM, 64GB Storage (Built in to motherboard) and came with Windows 7. The only upgradable part was the RAM. I had installed and used different Ubuntu based OSs and for the past 4 years had it attached to a TV and used it to view RUclips, Amazon Prime, Plex etc. I noticed that recently (last 6 months) it was lagging whenever I was streaming so tried a few minimal OSs. I tried a few different Chromium based OSs and none worked. This version worked perfect. boots in less than 20 seconds, no lag, no BS apps/programs taking space/memory. Like Thio.Joe I can't install anything from Playstore (but I don't need to as everything I need to access can be done via a browser). Thank you for the video

  • @HeltonsComputerRepair
    @HeltonsComputerRepair Год назад

    If you know how to change settings in the BIOS, you can manually disable what hard drive not to boot. It will make it easier then having to remove the physical hard drive.

  • @_SJ
    @_SJ Год назад +4

    Very informative. Will you still make a video about the cheapest Chromebook?

    • @ThioJoe
      @ThioJoe  Год назад +2

      Maybe, still looking into it

  • @Gokul_Yt
    @Gokul_Yt Год назад +10

    The thing that i do with old laptops is install a very small linux or get linux server and install the things Like a Gui and a browser but chrome os is a great way to solve the issue

    • @tilsgee
      @tilsgee Год назад

      Same, but i prefer Ubuntu with MATE / xfce UI

    • @Gokul_Yt
      @Gokul_Yt Год назад

      @@tilsgee i also prefer xfce as gui and brave as browser

    • @Cavi587
      @Cavi587 Год назад +1

      It's not that great actually, it's not fully open source. I wouldn't trust it. I prefer using a lightweight distro on the LXQt desktop enviroment of XFCE.

    • @Gokul_Yt
      @Gokul_Yt Год назад +1

      @@Cavi587 for noobies its good

    • @tilsgee
      @tilsgee Год назад

      @@Cavi587 hey, at least it's better than chromeOS Flex, right? XD

  • @camtoufan3704
    @camtoufan3704 Год назад +1

    I believe that installing a full version Linux distro on an old netbook is the better option. I have an 11 year old Acer netbook that have recently installed Linux Mint 21.1 Vera XFCE version on it, and it runs like a charm. It used to have a slow outdated unsupported Window 7 home edition on it.

  • @joaocabralpv
    @joaocabralpv Год назад

    I just installed chrome os flex on anold laptop just to see how it is and this is one of the first videos that poped up

  • @KristophM
    @KristophM Год назад +7

    Just use an actual GNU/Linux distro. I use Manjaro on my 10 year old Dell laptop and it transformed it as if it was brand new. Screw Windows. I'll have to check out Chrome OS just for the shits and giggles.

  • @jacobeii
    @jacobeii Год назад +3

    yknow, I feel like any beginner Linux distro would do the trick. chrome is is literally Linux but more locked-down and personally not a big fan of that lack of support

    • @chrismclean3848
      @chrismclean3848 Год назад

      It’s better for people who just need to use the internet or older people with no tech knowledge. I would never install this on my computer, but I might on my parent’s pc.

  • @DJ_G-Rod
    @DJ_G-Rod Год назад

    Not getting notifications on all your vids, so I had to comment to improve the suggestions so I don't miss your videos.

  • @busterj11776
    @busterj11776 Год назад +1

    Excellent, thanks

  • @pyp2205
    @pyp2205 Год назад +14

    Well I guess that means I can try Chrome OS again on a virtual machine.

    • @schnow265
      @schnow265 Год назад +1

      This is what I would do instantly

    • @ThioJoe
      @ThioJoe  Год назад +3

      You can try but it will take some work

    • @LauwieTech
      @LauwieTech Год назад +3

      @@ThioJoe i got it working now

    • @mjdxp5688
      @mjdxp5688 Год назад

      I tried getting this to work in VirtualBox but had no luck. The farthest I was able to get was a loading screen which got nowhere. Apparently VMware users have had better luck though.

    • @VitalVampyr
      @VitalVampyr Год назад

      @@schnow265 If you haven't done that already you can't do it instantly.

  • @kennystrawnmusic
    @kennystrawnmusic Год назад +6

    One thing I’m sure most aren’t aware of is that Chrome OS *is* Linux under the hood - more so than Android in fact because there’s an X server (on older builds) and a Wayland compositor (on newer builds) along with a full GNU stack that the Google stuff is running on top of, not just BusyBox and some obscure Java-based display server in the Android case. When you “install Linux” on a Chromebook you’re really just installing an LXC container. Gentoo’s Portage package manager is even used as part of the build process.

  • @JustPyroYT
    @JustPyroYT Год назад +1

    Great Video!

  • @nicholashoi3155
    @nicholashoi3155 Год назад

    Running this on my old Dell Latitude amd now it has become my secondary college laptop

  • @slomellos
    @slomellos Год назад +4

    I would install a lightweight linux distro rather than installing ChromeOS. It's also gonna be lightweight and it's functionality would be scalable as well.

    • @fantamagier
      @fantamagier Год назад

      A good benefit of Chromebooks are the Support for Android Apps. Linux hast this Feature too but you need more cpu

  • @floppa9415
    @floppa9415 Год назад +10

    No Android Apps is big L. Its in my opinion one of the Key Features of the regular ChromeOS.

    • @staidey5994
      @staidey5994 Год назад

      and that's exactly why they removed it

    • @chrismclean3848
      @chrismclean3848 Год назад

      Literally, I think the only other reason you could install it is for speed or if you mainly use the internet and Google stuff like drive

  • @josel.flores4617
    @josel.flores4617 Год назад

    Great! I can now upgrade my original Pixel Chromebook 2015, which google discontinued a while ago and no longer receives latest ChromeOS builds.

  • @jaypormei1881
    @jaypormei1881 Год назад +1

    At 10:30 you can't get these extensions under cros flex since they are not supported. cros flex had never been introduced to work with native android support but some chromium-based forked ones like FydeOS will does.
    However, official ones (or by using with brunch) works perfectly well on almost any netbooks from 2013 era. I got mine working android support using chrome os rammus image along with brunch framework. All stuffs worked pretty fine so far, however things like HEVC or 4k playback content is horrible even with VLC.

  • @williamlarson9227
    @williamlarson9227 Год назад +3

    I've tried it several times on my Dell Optiplex 755 because Microsoft keeps on telling me that it isn't ready for Windows 11. At first, there were several issues with the old nvidia graphics on my computer but with each update, it has improved to the point where the problems are nonexistent. While the computer has not had problems running Windows 10, I'm still looking around for a new daily driver since Microsoft has chosen to stop supporting older computers. Chrome OS Flex doesn't support Linux currently on my Optiplex. I don't understand operating systems, but I have no problem installing the current version or testing versions of Debian on my computer so I'm not sure why I can't install it through Chrome OS Flex. I know it is silly but the most important programs for me on any operating system are Microsoft Solitaire Collection and the ledger command line program. Currently, I can use those programs on both Windows 10 and a Chromebox or Chromebook. As far as Word Processing is concerned, since WordPerfect 6.0 for Dos I've been happy with any Word Processor along with Unix Text Processing systems such as Roff and family.

    • @Cavi587
      @Cavi587 Год назад

      I think just putting a Linux distribution straight on there would be a lot better to revive that Dell Optiplex system. It saves you all that playing around with ChromeOS which at the end of the day doesn't really give you a lot more possibilities than Linux. Maybe you can't have the actual Microsoft Solitaire Collection on there (although it's possible but needs some fiddling with Wine etc), but there's a lot of alternatives on there too. Linux is great when it comes to compatibility and support for old computers. I have a few old laptops and PC's that would simply refuse to run Windows 10 or even Windows 7 in some cases, but they work perfectly on lightweight Linux distributions that are always up to date and usable.

  • @maddog6620
    @maddog6620 Год назад +4

    You are awesome 😎

    • @ThioJoe
      @ThioJoe  Год назад +2

      No you're awesome

  • @runthenumbers9698
    @runthenumbers9698 Год назад +2

    You don't have to take out your drive to select the correct drive. You can disable all drives except the one you want to install to in BIOS

  • @marshall3412
    @marshall3412 Год назад +2

    i installed chrome os flex beta on an old hp 2000 notebook pc and it works very well 7.5/10

  • @BriefNerdOriginal
    @BriefNerdOriginal Год назад +9

    You can install Linux on any computer since ages. Don't make Alphabet have still a stronger hold onto your data than what they already have. Break free and support open source, open protocols, open formats, and open mind. Plus, nowadays Linux is very easy to install and works great.

  • @ervinnasiri4247
    @ervinnasiri4247 Год назад +17

    Hi 😊 I installed it on my HP 250 g3 and it was alright when I enabled the Linux beta but the fact that it couldn't run Android apps sucks 😞 but overall it is good for low end PCs that can't run windows 7 or newer versions

    • @stinkyrat8498
      @stinkyrat8498 Год назад +7

      just install a linux distro such as lubuntu or peppermint os i can assure you it will be faster than chrome os

    • @sihamhamda47
      @sihamhamda47 Год назад +2

      There's also a Chrome OS Flex alternative called Fyde OS. It's based on Chrome OS and it supports Android apps. But it requires at least 3rd gen Intel Core CPU or any 64 bit Intel and AMD CPUs released in 2012 and newer in order to run properly

    • @kittenzrulz2314
      @kittenzrulz2314 Год назад +3

      I recommend installing OpenSuse or Fedora KDE spin. Both are essentically ChromeOS but with a better UI, better app support, and dont have google spyware.

    • @ervinnasiri4247
      @ervinnasiri4247 Год назад +1

      @@sihamhamda47 I installed it and it's the best chrome os flex alternative 💪

    • @rfdiego777
      @rfdiego777 Год назад +3

      @@stinkyrat8498 I'm a big Linux user, but for some basic tasks (in particular the internet navigation) I find ChromeOs having better performances on lower specs notebooks

  • @Paasj
    @Paasj 5 месяцев назад

    Tried this on an old switch tablet book laptop I gave to the kid... It worked smoothly and was nice and responsive. Dealbreaker is not having google apps store. Think kid will have to have a regular Chromebook if he's gonna use it :) Anyhows! Great review and guide. -And oh, btw... If having trouble writing image to media in edge... Install chrome, and try again ;)

  • @7xyno446
    @7xyno446 Год назад

    Since im still a student this is really helpfull, i have a low end desktop

  • @miker8225
    @miker8225 Год назад +9

    I'm hoping that Google will eventually design a decent OS to rival Windows.

    • @ericodijk
      @ericodijk Год назад +2

      I hope not. Windows is already there, if you want to rival that: Linux.
      ChromeOS and Flex as well, they are perfectly fitted for the job they need to do. Don't let it get too big and allround like Windows.

    • @Cavi587
      @Cavi587 Год назад

      A big corporation made closed source OS to replace another big corporation made closed source OS? Seems like the same deal for me, just a different brand. Just use Linux, it's already better than Windows in most cases and it's not built to collect data on it's users. Gaming is one thing that still needs to be worked on, but since the Steam Deck came out (it runs on Linux) there's been many breakthroughs in Linux gaming. You can basically play most games comfortably now.

  • @user-nz6io3ji2h
    @user-nz6io3ji2h Год назад +3

    installing a lightweight Linux is better if you know how to use Linux. pop_os is really easy to use for basic tasks like web browsing, video calls, etc.

    • @jrdavis1992
      @jrdavis1992 Год назад +1

      I use Pop_OS myself. Works somewhat good on my Toshiba (Dynabook) Satellite laptop. It even supports a Bluetooth dongle I've been using. ChromeOS Flex doesn't seem to support external BT dongles, AFAIK.

  • @fluffyspark798
    @fluffyspark798 Год назад +1

    Today I actually just put manjaro Linux on a 2012 MacBook Pro and it works far better than Mac OS. I might try this as well

  • @FengLengshun
    @FengLengshun Год назад +2

    I'd be more interested if it has the ability to run Android apps like in proper Chromebook, but last I heard they specifically can't run Android apps on the Flex so there goes the one usecase that interests me over just dual-booting Linux and Win11.

  • @abdullah-_-.
    @abdullah-_-. Год назад +13

    From what I see, chrome OS flex is basically the last chance you have to save a really old computer to give to a child to watch videos or something or for other use

    • @abaneyone
      @abaneyone Год назад +5

      No. Don't forget Linux distributions.

    • @abdullah-_-.
      @abdullah-_-. Год назад +2

      mean I guess that's cool but I mean, still the rest is pretty much a plan b for anyone wanting to get an old laptop working smooth

    • @Cavi587
      @Cavi587 Год назад

      I think Linux is the better choice here for both the first choice and the last chance. Linux will just run on everything.

    • @abdullah-_-.
      @abdullah-_-. Год назад

      @@Cavi587 but chrome OS is a more mainstream version, allot of people don't know or haven't used linux and chrome OS is a more easier to use program

    • @Cavi587
      @Cavi587 Год назад +1

      @@abdullah-_-. I would disagree. 10 years ago I would agree, but as of right now Linux is a lot more friendly to new users. Basically if you've ever used Windows, you'll be able to use a Linux distro with any of the common Desktop Enviroments.
      Also, ChromeOS isn't completely open source. Linux gives you the freedom any other OS can't.

  • @gurusaran7193
    @gurusaran7193 Год назад +5

    Kind of good I wouldn't rlly use that but if there was options to add more apps then I would definitely try it
    And yeah I Absolutely Enjoyed the vid good job lol

  • @sakikfirenxo2842
    @sakikfirenxo2842 Год назад +1

    Awesome video

  • @robertaddicott5989
    @robertaddicott5989 Год назад +1

    Google did not develop this, they acquired a company called cloud ready. Cloud ready has been producing a version of Chrome OS that can be ported to PCS for some time.

  • @kote315
    @kote315 Год назад +3

    It's funny to see people talking about operating systems for "very old netbooks". I had a total of 4 netbooks. 2 of them had 32-bit processors. One had a 64-bit CPU, but it still refused to boot 64-bit systems (I believe this is a BIOS limitation). Only one of my netbooks actually had a working 64-bit processor. Single core. 1200 MHz. And 1 GB of memory (out of the box). Hmmm, for some reason it seems to me that Chrome OS will not work well on it. In any case, it won't work any better than any lightweight Linux flavor.

    • @STONE69_
      @STONE69_ Год назад +1

      You can install Antix Linux lxde on the 32 bit PC, its light with a full desktop and comes with a light weight Browser.

  • @garethperks7032
    @garethperks7032 Год назад +17

    Great video! I think Android-x86 or an OS based on it might be a more wholesome desktop experience with more app freedom.

    • @andrejbartulin
      @andrejbartulin Год назад +2

      I installed Android x86 in VmWare once

    • @GameMaker3_5
      @GameMaker3_5 Год назад +2

      I believe Remix OS exists which is basically Android x86 with a more desktop friendly GUI

    • @GoogleDoesEvil
      @GoogleDoesEvil Год назад +2

      Unfortunately, Android is far more locked down than Windows.

  • @xdragon2k
    @xdragon2k Год назад

    I have an old underpowered laptop that is struggling to run Windows on its HDD. I guess I could use this to see if we can start using it again for people that are visiting, etc.

  • @LegionIscariot
    @LegionIscariot Год назад +1

    Steam and Proton is coming to ChromeOS.
    And despite not being into ChromeOS at all, this whole thing seems interesting...

  • @psi808
    @psi808 Год назад +3

    If u actually want to give an old pc new life then just install Ubuntu or really any Linux distro

  • @cybercub4367
    @cybercub4367 Год назад +3

    Better to install linux on old devices, it's lightweight, no bloatware, better privacy and security.

  • @SirenGlitch
    @SirenGlitch Год назад

    Using the Linux shell VM you can actually run any Linux app and even Windows apps if using bottles/wine/CrossOver/what ever. Crossover is actually better for the chrome OS Linux shell in my opinion but you can use what you want.

  • @chad3328
    @chad3328 Год назад +2

    Just a note about the list of computer models in the Chromebook recovery utility. All of those aren't computers that Chrome OS Flex will work better on. They're a list of actual Chromebooks and other official Chrome OS devices that run "true" chrome OS which has more features than Flex such as being able to run Android apps. You must select Chrome OS Flex for any computer that is not a real Chromebook or Chrome OS device.

    • @radu1337
      @radu1337 Год назад +1

      Why? Every OS they ever did is focused on advertising. Just install an honest linux distribution.

    • @chad3328
      @chad3328 Год назад +1

      @@radu1337 Because this is a video about Chrome OS Flex and not anything else and I was pointing out a small mistake in the video? You can have your gripes about Google's advertising and data collection policies, but that's literally their business. They wouldn't exist at this point in time otherwise. Flex does a great job of what it's meant to do easily. The demographic for it and Linux are not the same.

  • @MWSfan18
    @MWSfan18 Год назад +3

    Might do this on my dad's old laptop. Save him from having to shell out hundreds of dollars on a new computer he really only uses for email and some light office work.

    • @kim-hendrikmerk4163
      @kim-hendrikmerk4163 Год назад +2

      Have a look around linux systems they are far more versatile if up to date apps are important have a look at fedora or if stability is important have a look at debian or look at any forks of both. They can be lighter faster have more apps and are much more customisable.

    • @MWSfan18
      @MWSfan18 Год назад

      @@kim-hendrikmerk4163 My dad is afraid of starting a nuclear apocalypse just by turning on his system. No way in hell I'm gonna give him a system where you need a masters degree just to launch the web browser.

    • @basilcat3111
      @basilcat3111 Год назад +2

      @@MWSfan18 What? You don't need a master's degree. Where did you hear that from?

    • @JacobP81
      @JacobP81 Год назад

      Linux is just as easy as Windows. If he can use Windows he can use most graphical Linux distributions. Put Lubuntu or Kubuntu in it and for most tasks it's just like Windows. Just pin Firefox on the taskbar and he can open the web browser in one click. I installed Linux Mint with Cinnamon on my friends computer (another great easy to use Linux) and she uses it to view photos she takes with her camera with no problem and she was computer illiterate.

  • @nin6246
    @nin6246 Год назад +4

    Please do some videos on Linux. It may take some time to learn but it's worth it.

  • @splatube
    @splatube Год назад +1

    10:40 Chromebooks have google play built-in, but chrome is flex disables this to force you to buy an actual chromebook (if you want android apps that is)

  • @maddog6620
    @maddog6620 Год назад +2

    Super awesome 😎 video

  • @Philipp..
    @Philipp.. Год назад +6

    At this point a Linux Distribution is a much better option

    • @pyp2205
      @pyp2205 Год назад +3

      Yeah totally, Linux running on an old computer with low ram runs pretty well. Plus there are so many distros to choose from.

    • @Marcel-dd9ch
      @Marcel-dd9ch Год назад

      Not for very basic computer users

    • @Philipp..
      @Philipp.. Год назад +2

      @@Marcel-dd9ch Even for them. Times have changed: It's very easy to install, runs very fast, does not sell your data, can run the basic programs needed by a "basic computer user" out of the box, is way more capable and adaptable than Chrome OS.

    • @Marcel-dd9ch
      @Marcel-dd9ch Год назад

      @@Philipp.. But you Linux apps collect and use your data in common linux distributions after a normal installation, until you harden your system. And no, not all Open Source tools are secure. Take logj ss an example.

  • @lamborghinigamer
    @lamborghinigamer Год назад +3

    But why would you when normal Linux distributions exist?

    • @Marcel-dd9ch
      @Marcel-dd9ch Год назад +1

      ChromeOS is much more secure and easier to use for basic computer users. Any Linux applications can do anything with your data in a normal Linux distribution, if you don't do a lot to block that. On top of that, ChromeOS has sandboxes for everything. With Linux, you may use Flatpak, to reach the same level of security.

  • @4thblox
    @4thblox Год назад

    0:25
    the laptop on top (black one) is a 1/1 copy of my first laptop

  • @Rev4Life
    @Rev4Life Год назад

    I'm pretty sure you can "turn on play store" by going into the apps section in settings, i might be wrong but its worth a try.

  • @singletona082
    @singletona082 Год назад +3

    Right now i"m regretting that hte screen on my CR48 died.
    Be interesting to see if Flex would install on it.
    Pity Flex appears to not allow installation of Android Apps. That? honestly would be pretty amazing in terms of breathing life into hardware. I love the ChromeOS Interface, but the inclusion of x86 capible apps? That would open so many possibilities.

    • @fmphotooffice5513
      @fmphotooffice5513 Год назад

      Great point. I forgot you can install Android on a PC. That might be more flexible than turning the old hardware to a chrome book. Might experiment with that when I have the time...

  • @cyrilio
    @cyrilio Год назад +6

    Is this really worth it? Also, request to do a video about browsers. Especially alternatives to ‘data stealing’ chrome.

    • @Florianski
      @Florianski Год назад +4

      Firefox (and its spinoffs) is pretty much the only good browser left sadly.

    • @ThioJoe
      @ThioJoe  Год назад +1

      If it's an old computer you're not using maybe

    • @kittenzrulz2314
      @kittenzrulz2314 Год назад +3

      @@ThioJoe At that point Linux would make more sence (especially OpenSuse).

    • @mearetom
      @mearetom Год назад

      alternatives: librewolf(forked Firefox) Firefox, chromium(open source of chrome. there is more but these are good I know.

    • @kevinwong_2016
      @kevinwong_2016 Год назад

      @@kittenzrulz2314 why open suse

  • @bamboobrains
    @bamboobrains Год назад

    Thank you for the good content. That'd be great if you could review the flex os for kids and look if the popular games works and also Xbox app.

  • @aimx4
    @aimx4 Год назад +1

    You can download any linux app on a Intel based Chromebook and the playstore comes pre installed on all Chromebooks some apps downloaded on chrome os playstore will be customized for chrome os

  • @Whising
    @Whising Год назад +4

    Well for bad computers, ChromeOS will be the best to go for and for school

  • @RealThore
    @RealThore Год назад +5

    9:45
    I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you’re referring to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I’ve recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX.
    Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called “Linux”, and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project. There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use.
    Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine’s resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called “Linux” distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux.

  • @JimmyBoilol
    @JimmyBoilol Год назад

    I might try install this on mine

  • @KoenBezeg
    @KoenBezeg Год назад

    Love your network name

  • @xE92vD
    @xE92vD Год назад +4

    Back off, ChromeOS.
    Linux is the OS that is supposed to bring old computers to life again!

    • @richards1708
      @richards1708 Год назад

      Yes. 2022 Will the the year of the Linux Desktop!

    • @xE92vD
      @xE92vD Год назад

      @@richards1708 Nah, I'm pretty sure Linux will be more popular once Windows 10's life support ends.
      Windows 11 has too many requirements and I'm sure people are aware of them.

    • @richards1708
      @richards1708 Год назад

      @@xE92vD I could see that. But still when it comes to compatibility it's crazy how well even current versions of windows works.. I've seen Dos Based systems running on Windows 10!

    • @Marcel-dd9ch
      @Marcel-dd9ch Год назад

      Don't forget to setup SELinux and your firewall. ChromeOS would be more secure out of the box.

  • @AbominableHuman
    @AbominableHuman Год назад +3

    I already don't like Bill Gates snooping in on me, why would I want Google doing it even more than they already do?

    • @barracuda861
      @barracuda861 Год назад

      Use VPN to help keep your info safe. Plus go change settings so less info is shared.

    • @linuxization4205
      @linuxization4205 Год назад +3

      @@barracuda861 a VPN doesn't automatically fix everything, quit believing those nordvpn sponsors, normie.

    • @MV60
      @MV60 Год назад +1

      @@barracuda861 They still get your info, they just know it's coming from a vpn server instead of you, plus they still don't know where I am, on location based pages like google maps or even the ads fed through FB they think I'm either on the other side of town or even in any other state as I've never gotten a local relevant ad ever yet. Hooray to our nbn along with virtual isp's. Also vpn's log everything you do and will hand that info to the authorities with zero resistance as they know where you are and where you go.

  • @Marcel-dd9ch
    @Marcel-dd9ch Год назад

    I use normal Chromebooks privately for everything and as a Digital Content Creator (Bloger, RUclipsr, Writer, etc). I just need my MacBook Air for Video Editing and very seldom, complicated Photoshop edits. That may change in the future. LumaFusion and the first Chromebook with a dedicated Nvidia Chip are on the way. Maybe Davinci Resolve will be a thing, also! 😉

  • @LordDewi
    @LordDewi Год назад

    I was hoping someone would cover this. I couldn't figure out the compatability thing. Just need a new flash drive now.