• lproven@social.vivaldi.net
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    2 months ago

    @kristoff @purplemonkeymad But watch out: you will need a *huge* root partition, because it’s very easy to fill it with snapshots and if it reaches 100% it *will* corrupt.

    Btrfs is tricksy: it won’t give a straight answer to df -h and there is no working equivalent of fsck.

    • lproven@social.vivaldi.net
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      2 months ago

      @kristoff @purplemonkeymad All of these are in-place same-disk snapshots. The ChromeOS system is simpler and so can be automated but you only get 1 level of undo.

      I don’t know any mainstream OS that does dual-failover. Deepin Linux has 2 root partitions but I don’t know how it uses them.

      I think Valve SteamOS does something like this. It’s not just for games: it has KDE built in. There are guides to getting it running on your own hardware. You will want AMD graphics, though.

      • kristoff
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        2 months ago

        As I mentioned earlier, I guess chrome is more like android where you have a much more strict seperation between the OS, applications and user data. (I remember reading about all the different partitions on android and what they are used for, but I should bruch up my knowledge on this).

        Thanks for the additional into on brtfs! 👍

          • kristoff
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            2 months ago

            No apps at all ???

            So it really is like a dumb terminal. Now I know why I never used a Chromebook😀

            • lproven@social.vivaldi.net
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              2 months ago

              @kristoff You really should read my stuff on @theregister, you know. ;-)

              ChromeOS is Linux cut down to be a web browser and basically nothing else. It authenticates against Gmail, syncs files with Google Drive, and about the only local app is a file manager.

              That is its selling point. Simplicity means reliability and a low resource footprint: it fits in a 16GB SSD and 2GB of RAM, so a £200 Chromebook can be sold profitably.

              Commercial ChromeBooks can install and run Android apps in a VM. I haven’t tried this: I don’t own a ChromeBook. But I have 2 old laptops running ChromeOS Flex, which works fine. I use the built-in Debian container to run some Linux apps such as Firefox, Skype and VLC. It works very well.

              But the whole point of ChromeOS is that there are no “native” ChromeOS apps. It doesn’t need any.