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The world is full of obsolete desktops and laptops that were running on Windows. People toss them usually when the software gets too bloated or corrupted or perhaps the HD dies. They are perfectly fine computers if you give them a new Operating System life. I have given away numerous 'dead' computers which I scrounged for free, reformatted their hard drive and installed a simple Linux OS such as Ubuntu or Mint. Easy to do. I have been working the past few days on a stack of giveaways. I now have three laptops and three desktops that work just fine with a full software suite unless you are into high level gaming. When I do a build, I install TeamViewer so that I can manage most issues from afar over the Internet. Worst case scenario is that I might have to buy another HD for $30. Linux is not that complex and it solves my problems. I still have only one stupid Windows computer. I need that because Garmin, in their infinite wisdom, continues to refuse porting their Base Camp and Express software to operate under the Linux distributions. Where are you located? You could have one of these for the cost of a beer. :-)Patrick HayesFremont CAI don't touch Apple.I am in TX near Dallas; thanks for the kind offer but I am just experimenting on the cheap. I thought of Linux but since I have the Chromebook and like it, thought I might stay in the google camp. I also have a Raspberry 400 that runs a form of Linux and used it while waiting on the ASUS to arrive. And yes there are a lot of old Windows machines in need of a bit of TLC!! The HP 600 being one example.
After 40 years of IT support, most of it building and supporting Unix/Linux variations, I'm happy to use Chromebooks or Chrome boxes (both running Chrome OS) for the vast majority of my daily computing. It just works for things like email, banking, browsing, youtube, facebook, etc. I have 2 Windows PC's for those things that are just easier with MS (Visio, H&R Block, maybe a couple others). I have a raspberry pi that I run a daily reminder application on (that I wrote years ago in CTS 1100 and re-wrote in bash) that will text me about upcoming birthdays etc and let me practice my vi editting occasionally. Oh yeah, also an old dual boot pc with XP and Solaris.Many people poo-poo chromebooks but I really think for most people they're ideal. Nice too, if you manage your data well, if a chromebook dies you just buy a new one and everything is "just there" as if nothing happened.Brian
You want a Chromebox then instead of a Chromebook.-AJ
Pehayes, is there a hassle with drivers for some things when converting to Linux?