The Ultimate Sub $200 Computer?

Pat Anderson

New member
I continue to be amazed by my Chromebook with Ubunutu installed! Here is a screen shot of the ChromeOS Window Switcher screen (F5 on Chromebook).

Screenshot_2016_10_23_at_9_24_19_AM.sized.jpg

The left window in the screenshot is simply Gmail under Chrome in ChromeOS. But the right window is Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty with the XFCE desktop. And notice the the green C down at the bottom of the screen on the ChromeOS taskbar. I can either go to Ubuntu through Switcher or (even easier) simply click that green "C" and Ubuntu appears in a regular Chrome tab, which I can maximize to full screen, run as a regular tab or minimize.

So far, I have installed LibreOffice, Gimp, VLC and Audacity in Ubuntu. So now my Chromebook has (1) a full office suite with a real word processor, spreadsheet, database, drawing program, presentation program and math formula program, (2) the best free image manipulation program. (3) a capable media player and (4) the best free audio recording and editing software. I have not decided what else I might want to add to Ubunutu!

Here is a screen shot of the LibreOffice home screen in Ubuntu running full screen.

Screenshot_10232016_09_58_18_AM.sized.jpg

A couple of limitations. My Chromebook only has a 16 GB drive. But I can add a big SD card and put all my data on that. Biggest one though is the Chromebook (apparently) has no was to add a GPS dongle, so OpenCPN is apparently out. I say apparently, because so far Google is telling me the lack of GPS capability is a hardware limitation of the Chromebook, but I am not quite ready to give up on that yet!

The biggest advantages? The Chromebook with Ubuntu is now a full featured laptop. Also, the Chromebook with Ubuntu is now substantially decoupled from the Cloud. A plain Jane Chromebook can do a few things without internet connectivity, but it really needs a connection to do most anything (other than a simple calculator app) well. Google Docs does run offline but it is just not a full-featured word processor. Ubuntu, like a real computer, can run the full world of Linux software, most of which does not depend on an internet connection.

Does this seem like magic? Are you looking for your next computer but choking on spending $1,200 or more for the bottom of the line Mac or a bit less for a Windoze computer? You don't have to! Get yourself a Chromebook, spend a bit more than I did, I have the bottom of the line Acer CB3-111, which is about $170 right now. Spend your money first on a larger drive, and then whatever other better hardware you like if you feel like spending more. Then go to these two articles on HowToGeek. The first one tells you about the steps required to install Ubuntu, which starts with a script by Google employee David Scheiderman called "crouton," and the second one explains what is required to run Ubuntu in a Chrome tab under ChromeOS. This is also courtesy of David Scheiderman, the Chrome integration extension, which must be added to Chrome. The second one also explains about installing different versions of Ubuntu. I started with 12.04 precise because that is the default crouton script gives you. After reading the second one, I switched to Trusty 14.04. You can choose your desktop, Unity, XFCE, KDE and so forth. I think XFCE will feel most like other computers you are used to. Amazingly, none of this is difficult! Yes, you have to use the command line in Terminal, but you are just following a couple of recipes, mostly copy and paste and press Enter.

Or just do it because you are a nerd and love playing with this stuff!
 
Oh but all but the all seeing eye of Google, Plus the Ubuntu clan , will follow your every move from now on thru eternity; You have drunken of the forbidden fruit! :amgry

Neat stuff--with the limits it has--but you are now a serious geek!
 
I sense your excitment! :D

I've had a chromebook for the last 5 years and it has held up well and served well as a travel device.

I have never investigated any of the other operating systems like you describe, but it certainly seems like a lot of programs at no cost.
 
Latest program installation on Ubuntu on the Chromebook: OpenCPN! Not sure the hardware is up to it, but it actually runs, I have all the NOAA and USACE charts on an SD card. I think i will get a USB GPS dongle for both the MacBook and the Chromebook just for fun! If you can't tell, I am having a LOT of fun playing around with Linux on my Chromebook!
 
Fun is good Pat! Keep having it and don't let anyone slow you down too much. After visiting with you guys, we bought a chromebook for Aven so she is in the club as well and loving that device for homework and Netflix.

Greg
 
We have been known to get a little geeky at times but in our house we actually get by just fine with only one actual laptop PC for the three of us.

Less than 400 bucks goes a long way for us. But we do have smart phones and one tablet plus the chromebook as well. Aven has a smartphone (no data) plus the tablet and Chromebook so she is obiously the geeky one.

The machine we use....

http://www.bestbuy.com/site/toshiba-sat ... Id=4517800

Greg
 
Greg, I have kind of decided on my next venture into geekdom - a Raspberry Pi 3B. They keep making it more powerful but hold the price at $35. I'll buy a power supply, a case, a big SD card, and I can hook it up to keyboards, mice and monitors that I already have. Howtogeek.com just ran a pair of articles about "all you need to know to get started with a Raspberry Pi," with more to on projects follow. We gave our son Barrett a RP for Christmas, and he has it programmed as a DNS server that strips ads (that is what he said).
 
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