Remember that second hand Chromebook I bought for a client years ago? They upgraded and gave it back, so let's put Linux or Ubuntu on it. I'm going to see if I can put a distro in there and switch between Chrome OS and Linux. It took longer to find the correct package to install than anything else. Out of the proverbial Chrome Development Mode box, it doesn't recognize apt, apt-get, yum - Nor does it recognize any attempts to install them. Actually going through the Chromebook's Linux option puts Penguin on the machine., the default container to run Linux. It struggled to even get started, so I deleted the Linux container and am trying again. Most of the instructions I've found say to make your Chromebook Developer Mode and then open a certain type of terminal; Instead of that, I've found that you have to enable Linux Penguin through the Chrome OS (Easy, check your settings) and then go through that containerized version. When you do this, Crostini is already ...
I research and implement products + infrastructure for the Cloud, software, and other interesting things. My tailored Cloud Project Portfolio is at runtcpip.com