Google wants to bring Chrome OS to your PC or Mac

Google wants to bring Chrome OS to your PC or Mac

2 years ago
Anonymous $jukOC22bR_

https://techcrunch.com/2022/02/15/google-wants-to-bring-chrome-os-to-your-pc-or-mac/

Google today announced Chrome OS Flex, an early preview of a new initiative that aims to bring Chrome OS to virtually any PC (and older Intel-based Macs). Built on top of CloudReady, which Google acquired in 2020), Chrome OS Flex is aimed at enterprises and educational users who want to prolong the lifetime of their existing devices, but anyone with access to a USB drive can use it to give an older PC — or maybe even a low-powered new one — a new lease on life. There is an obvious sustainability angle here.

The idea here is to bring the full Chrome OS experience to virtually any computer. Right now, that may not be the case, given that there is an infinite number of possible PC configurations out there. Google has published a list of certified machines (mostly laptops), but chances are others will work as well — and giving it a try is about as hard as trying out a modern Linux distribution, which Chrome OS is obviously based on.

Google wants to bring Chrome OS to your PC or Mac

Feb 15, 2022, 5:53pm UTC
https://techcrunch.com/2022/02/15/google-wants-to-bring-chrome-os-to-your-pc-or-mac/ > Google today announced Chrome OS Flex, an early preview of a new initiative that aims to bring Chrome OS to virtually any PC (and older Intel-based Macs). Built on top of CloudReady, which Google acquired in 2020), Chrome OS Flex is aimed at enterprises and educational users who want to prolong the lifetime of their existing devices, but anyone with access to a USB drive can use it to give an older PC — or maybe even a low-powered new one — a new lease on life. There is an obvious sustainability angle here. > The idea here is to bring the full Chrome OS experience to virtually any computer. Right now, that may not be the case, given that there is an infinite number of possible PC configurations out there. Google has published a list of certified machines (mostly laptops), but chances are others will work as well — and giving it a try is about as hard as trying out a modern Linux distribution, which Chrome OS is obviously based on.