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Chromebooks will soon be a lot more useful for Linux power users

 2 years ago
source link: https://www.androidpolice.com/chromebooks-will-soon-be-a-lot-more-useful-for-linux-power-users/
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Chromebooks will soon be a lot more useful for Linux power users

By David Gonzales

Published 7 hours ago

Support for running multiple Linux containers at once is incoming

It took a long time for Linux to become officially supported on Chromebooks. In fact, it spent three years in beta until the release of Chrome OS 91. Now, anyone who wants to can install and run Linux on their Chromebook, with the caveat that they can only use one container at a time. A new update aims to remove this limitation.

On the latest version of Chrome OS, users can create multiple containers if they want to (though it's a highly involved technical process). However, issues arise when there is a need to use separate containers for separate projects at the same time. As an example, even though a high-spec Chromebook could run one container for gaming while another container for development is also active, it can't.

The fix comes in the form of an experimental settings UI for extra containers that's currently in development. As explained in one active thread on the Chromium Gerrit, this new feature adds a Chrome OS settings section titled "Manage extra containers," which shows the current containers as stored in prefs. It allows you to create a new container via a dialog and stop or delete containers via a popup menu.

The thread also states that this new section is behind a new "crostini-multi-container" flag which is still being worked on and is disabled by default. Apparently, each container will also have its own tab in terminal, presumably much like tab groups. All of this is still a work in progress at this point, and there could be more changes between now and the final release.

After adding native Linux support, this seems like the next logical step for Chromebooks. Let's hope the company is also planning on making it easier for laypeople to create new containers while at it. Expect an update or an announcement about it through official Chrome OS channels, perhaps including the Chrome OS Beta Community which was just launched for the most dedicated users.

About The Author

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David Gonzales (7 Articles Published)

David is a big fan of new tech, particularly in phones. That's why Android has been such a great source of interest for him ever since the first "droid" phone was released in 2008. Outside of tech, he prefers to spend his time watching football and movies, listening to music, and playing video games. But mostly he uses it to take care of and play with his one-year-old son.

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