you think school districts pay their IT departments enough to deal with that shit? If they even have one, at least here in Texas a lot of schools just hire random dudes to come in every so often
Even if you manage to get the chromebook into developer mode and put a new BIOS to install Linux through USB theres something baout the chromebook firmware that doesn't like it. I installed Zorin on my personal chromebook and after 2 weeks the hard drive got randomly wiped.
Capitalists use planned obscelence and perceived obscelence to manipulate market demand and encourages wasteful spending. These is against liberalism where business goals should align with market demand and not that other way. The wasteful spending also allow profits from free riding over former European colonies and child slavery and inheritance thief from Indian Residential fake schools that supposedly ended in 1998 and continued later in secret. They claimed that these rigged market system is good when they are not blaming Communists for allegedly commiting the acts.
Kimathi Bradford, a 16-year-old Oakland tech repair intern, has looked into whether there was a way to replace the outdated Chromebook software with a non-Google brand, but it ended up being a lot of work, Kimathi said, and the open-source replacement wasn’t up to par.
I call major BS on this. Unless chromebooks have even more built in jails and tyrants (like cpu throttling and BIOS emprisonment), the modern GNU/Linux more than satisfies the average student.
Issue is that Chromebooks have "googled" UEFIs specifically meant to lock down the system, and the Chrome OS boot directory is even on ROM, so it's super difficult to actually get rid of Chrome OS for another operating system. I also imagine you can't just boot a "regular" full featured Linux distro on it without, like they said, a ton of work.
If you can get mainstream Linux working, then yes it should satisfy the vast majority of students, but as far as I know you need highly specialized distros specifically designed to circumvent the hardware lockouts, which are rather niche and don't get the same level of development as a mainstream distro.
That's horrible. It seems like the only viable solution is to ban all proprietary software in schools to prevent this kind of power imbalance in the future.