• El Barto@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    I don’t understand the point of this article. It said all that it had to say with the headline alone. Everything else is filler.

    “ChromeOS is Linux in disguise. But people already knew this.” Ok. And?

          • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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            2 years ago

            Good for you, and I’m impressed by your undefensive and unhuffy reply.

            Because the amount of entitlement I see about professional journalism really pisses me off, personally. There is a reason that much (not all) journalism is not the quality it used to be. It’s because nobody is frigging paying for it any more. Journalists are not the perpetrators in this story, they are the victims. The internet has caused their profession to implode. It’s their jobs that have disappeared on a huge scale, their salaries that have shrunk, their career choice that turned out to be a catastrophic bad move. All because of a technical innovation, basically. Well, personally I think we may come to regret the demise of this profession which served society well for at least a century. But the least we can do is stop the victim-blaming.

            Rant over. No, I am not a journalist. Very glad of that career choice.

  • YaBoyMax@programming.dev
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    2 years ago

    Maybe I’m mistaken on this, but I’m fairly certain the screenshot they describe as “Unity” is just a heavily themed GNOME. Also, I’ve never seen Xfce stylized as “XFCe.” I realize that’s not the point of the article, but just something that stood out to me.

    • sronweb@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      You can install from Android or from linux environment, but last one is a virtualization and it’s a bit slow.

  • dack@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Some Chromebooks are pretty hackable. I’ve got an older one that I reflashed with tianocore UEFI firmware. It makes for a pretty decent cheap and lightweight low power laptop. You can run basically any standard ARM Linux distro on it.

  • sronweb@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    In my desktop at home the main OS is Ubuntu, basically since more than 15 years, but I own also 2 Chromebooks laptops. I have a Lenovo Duet which i use mainly because I can run both Android and Linux apps, and it allow me to watch streaming services in offline. I would prefer to use any “gnu-linux” distro on a portable device, but if you wish to watch Amazon Prime or Netflix offline, you can only use a tablet with Android or iOs but on linux pc you are limited on web app typically, except in Chromebook which has some extra flexibility. Also I don’t find invasive so far, more or less we have the same privacy settings as in Android. As benefit it’s supported for 10 years for OS updates. And, in the future I may also decide to install a pure linux distro if I need.

    • Pantherina@feddit.de
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      2 years ago

      Its called torrenting my friend. Real control, real offline, no proprietary DRM bullshit

      • sronweb@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        I have used years ago different download platforms, years before Torrent, in the time of Napster, Emule etc. but so far the official streaming service provide a good offer, without wasting time. I don’t think it worst the effort to download illegally ie comparing with price of Prime. I see now a tendency when the platform cost will increase and users should, in theory have 10 platforms, where i may understand the reason for people returning to illegal download. The streaming service companies should think carefully before increasing the price or creating new rules to share the cost.

        • erwan@lemmy.ml
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          2 years ago

          Sure, they provide a good offer but force you to use a Chromebook instead of a regular Linux distro… Sounds like a big constraint to me.

          • sronweb@lemmy.world
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            2 years ago

            I understand. In this case we should blame the streaming companies about it and if I need this function I have not much choice apart illegal download.