I finally pulled the trigger on replacing my ChromeOS completely with Manjaro using the Mrchromebox script. Other than some glitching getting the audio to work correctly, everything runs great.

For the first two years I had this chromebook (Asus 433 flip) I thought that it wasn’t worth the risk and that running the debian container via Crostini was plenty good enough.

Well it turns out that:

  • A. No…it wasn’t much of a risk at all. It was actually really smooth, including disconnecting the battery to disable the hardware write protect. I honestly don’t know what I was worried about. and

  • B. I may have thought Crostini was good enough. But man oh man…it’s a night and day difference having Linux running natively on this old girl rather than through a container that had to boot up every time I use the first linux app of the day.

Anyway. Just wanted to share. Been using Manjaro on pretty much all of my computers for years, and now I can take the “pretty much” away and just say “all of them.”

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Manjaro - Enjoy the simplicity

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Manjaro is a GNU/Linux distribution based on Arch. It is a rolling release distro which includes a user-friendly installer, tested updates that try very hard to not break your system and a community of friendly users for support. Official releases include Xfce, KDE, Gnome, and the minimal CLI-Installer Architect. Community releases include Awesome, bspwm, Budgie, Cinnamon, Deepin, i3, LXDE, LXQT, Mate, OpenBox and builds for ARM devices like Raspberry Pi, Odroid etc.

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