• arc99@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    Doesn’t matter if they encourage it or, not, the option is there. So if kids want to mess around, compile stuff, run Linux games they can totally do it. The main purpose of the laptop however would be to do work, save / submit stuff to the cloud, run all day and be cheap so if it gets stolen or broken it’s less expense to replace. I think in that role the Chromebook is the best solution anyone came up with. And there were a long line of contenders.

    • papertowels@mander.xyz
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      16 hours ago

      Is the option actually there, as in it’s allowed by school policy? Would you be able to show an example confirming this?

      I highly doubt a school IT department would be okay with this. The very post were discussing asserts that it was marketed to schools as something that can be locked down.

      I’d also argue that even if it was allowed, whether or not it was encouraged undoubtedly matters.

      These are kids we’re talking about, not engineers. Additionally, were discussing technical competence at the generational level, so we’d have to rule out outliers, which I’d handily believe “kids who installed linux on their school Chromebooks” would fall under.

      • arc99@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        I don’t have my Chromebook to hand but I believe the setting is in the Prefs. When you set up Linux it’s a virtualized Debian that you can pretty much do anything with but it can’t mess with ChromeOS outside. Not all Chromebooks support it since it’s space / CPU dependent but if it does then it’s Linux. I was even running graphical apps since the screen is a Wayland server.

        • papertowels@mander.xyz
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          14 hours ago

          I don’t…think that answered my question?

          Would this be against school policy? Are there examples to confirm this?