Looking for an ARM Chromebook, or should it be a tablet?

Open link in next tab

Anyone using an (ARM) Chromebook with ChromiumOS or Linux? - programming.dev

https://programming.dev/post/18593091

## A small, efficient laptop I am looking for a laptop which is as efficient as an android phone, small, fast, and cheap. I would prefer a stripped down Fedora Kinoite, but tbh ChromeOS is a masterpiece of efficient and secure OS design. Even on 4GB RAM it just works, boots in seconds, while still having encrypted storage. The issue is of course, that it is based on Google Chrome, and even Chromium is completely full of Google (use googerteller with e.g. Fedora Chromium and you see it pings Google all the time). — ## ARM Laptops with Linux support The new Snapdragon laptops are extremely impressive, and will have real Linux support in a short time. But they are damn expensive, and I am looking for something for light tasks, with the focus on: - being light and small (11in or so?) - being inexpensive - long battery life - very low standby battery use (like my GrapheneOS pixel, 1% over night) - reasonably big battery for use - okay specs for light tasks I watched a talk on getting Coreboot working on Chromebooks [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7HFIQi835wY] (ccc website [https://events.ccc.de/congress/2023/hub/event/turning_chromebooks_into_regular_laptops/]) and while elly also got Fedora working on an ARM Chromebook, that sounded like way above my skills. The x86 ones still have awesome batterylife (on ChromeOS), but using x86 in 2024 for an efficient machine… sounds like a waste of money. ## Docs for Linux on ARM Chromebooks? Neither chrultrabook nor mrchromebox touch ARM, at all. There are some small scripts and projects that do this, like this one [https://github.com/hexdump0815/linux-mainline-on-arm-chromebooks]. ## Bottlenecks Chromebooks have often nice chassis’ and displays, but kinda bad keyboards with missing keys. Also, too little RAM. Using Fedora with ZRAM in an aggressive mode (to compress all RAM) might be a workaround, but cause reasonable CPU overhead (it uses zstd for compression). And then, too little storage. I find this hard to discover, are there ARM / modern x86 Chromebooks with upgradeable NVME or at least eMMC? Using an SD card would be a workaround, which is btw. also not possible on Pixel Tablets (thanks Google). ## The Problems with Chromebooks Google uses a custom userspace, the boot (on ARM) is not really u-Boot anymore, they dont seem to test the mainline kernel and are slow with patches. Personally I think you can clearly see how they often just do the least amount of work possible to comply with the GPL. Like, visiting their code repo is already privacy invasive. Also a ton of firmware problems like broken audio, USB, sleep, input devices, which I couldn’t fix. ## Alternative: Pixel Tablet & GrapheneOS The good A Google Pixel Tablet would be an alternative. It runs GrapheneOS, which (I know) has awesome battery life and efficiency. GrapheneOS is also fully degoogled and runs all my FOSS apps, as well as having support for banking and stuff I might want. GrapheneOS is extremely secure while also being extremely stable (in both ways). I know that I can rely on my phone when I managed to break my Laptop again. The bad The Tablet is the first edition, a MVP pretty much. For drawing, a standards-compliant pencil can be used, but it has quite some latency and no palm rejection (video source [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h_j5bpSRiUc]). It is also very expensive, considering that it has no SD card slot, and 128GB of storage go for 300+€ on the used market. There seem to be less people disappointed from it than I expected. — You see, I also dont really know what I want XD - a small appliance device, just for travelling and watching stuff there? - Should it have a keyboard? I hope a 5-pin one, no garbage bluetooth - Pen I think yes, as it is probably awesome for sketching things (I am tired of not being able to do that, and a drawing tablet is not portable) It may be that a Pixel tablet is actually better here. But a ton of good Linux software is simply missing on Android. Like, a PDF editor that does it’s job, Libreoffice, GIMP, Inkscape, a real Firefox (with addon support and sandboxing). There is some progress in virtualization [https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/google-now-pays-250-000-for-kvm-zero-day-vulnerabilities/], I might be able to use Termux with VNC to some extent, but it would suck for batterylife and probably also UX. — I guess a modern AMD or Intel Chromebook with supported, tested firmware, would be the best option for a compact, opensource, efficient laptop. Meanwhile a Pixel Tablet would work 100%, be possibly way more energy efficient than a normal Linux distro could ever be, also more secure, mostly never have broken software. I would like to test this though, tuned, stripped down KDE Plasma, power profiles, … but at the level of firmware issues, this could stop being fun. But, fun is relative, right? What do you do? Do you run ChromiumOS, or Linux on a Chromebook? Or do you use a Pixel Tablet as a Laptop replacement? Cheers!

Sign in to add comment

I know it's a cross-post, but since this is not on the cheap, but rather on the libre side: Have you checked out the MNT Pocket Reform?

Very cool device for sure!

But it is so small, I have no use case for it. At that form factor I would use a phone, too small for any desktop application, also the keyboard...