There are few things quite as emblematic of late stage capitalism than the concept of “planned obsolescence”.

      • @thepianistfroggollum
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        11 year ago

        Yeah, bulk imaging computers is really only limited to how many you can hook up to the network. I used to have to image hundreds of computers a day at times, and really the longest part was walking around and restarting them all so they’d PXE boot. The actual process maybe took 2 hours since all the computers were on 100Mb/s connections.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          11 year ago

          I converted one of these Chromebooks to Linux as a test project and the results were, not good.

          To start, they have a bootloader lock screw under the motherboard, so you have to take the entire laptop apart to load anything but unsupported ChromeOS.

          Then you have to use a Google tool, can’t remember the specific one, to swap the bootloader. That might be possible to automate but I didn’t look into it because…

          … The hardware sucks. We’re talking like 4GB of storage on a lot of these Chromebooks. The driver support is all over the place, and there are issues everywhere even on “supported” distros.

          With the vast amount of junk Chromebooks out there, I’m sure community hospice support will get better, but it’s never going to be an easy bulk conversion because of how common the bootloader locks are.

      • Marxism-Fennekinism
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        fedilink
        11 year ago

        I am actually curious as to how you would make a locked down managed linux OS akin to ChromeOS.

        Because Linus Torvalds stupidly refused to change the Linux license to GPL3.