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Boot Chrome OS from a USB drive
Today a new build is doing the rounds on torrent sites, one that will let you run Chrome OS from a USB drive instead of on a virtualized environment. The folks over at Engadget were able to put it to the test on a Dell Vostro A90 netbook and were pleased with its performance as well as the improved boot time. From power up to the login screen, Chrome OS took around 22 seconds to load and was immediately ready to start browsing.
One major setback right now is that its device drivers are in the very early stages of development. That means some parts of your computer may not respond when using Chrome OS, and in fact Engadget's demonstration didn't include Wi-Fi functionality. Nevertheless if you are feeling adventurous, you can try it out on your netbook by grabbing the bootable image based on the Chromium OS build of Twitter user Hexxeh.
Setup instructions are available for Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux. Also, be sure to check out Google's list of devices that are known to work with the latest development version of the upcoming OS.
User Comments (53)
Post a comment|
Guest
on November 29, 2009 6:20 AM |
This is Awesome! only works on one of my USB keys though, a Sandisk 4gb, worth the couple of pound extra. Will be amazing with full WIFI driver set. Google does it again!! |
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claycc
on November 29, 2009 8:49 AM |
It sounds pretty interesting to me, esp. if it runs really well on a netbook. You don't need a lot for a netbook so a simple OS that is good for surfing the web and working on documents would be perfect. |
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Guest
on January 13, 2010 2:12 PM |
Wow, what an utter disappointment. It did boot fast (and logged directly into my google account, to show me ads), but on my high end machine there was a noticeable delay in typing and everything else. Even if that was some technical issue, ignoring it, it looked like a direct rip-off of a tabbed small "kiosk" distro I have seen, that worked much better. Heck, I even created the functionally same thing with stripped ubuntu, with a startup command in the gnome config that started Seamonkey before it started xwindows. Booted just as fast. I use it all the time on my legacy very low end laptop (p3, 190kb ram), except unlike Android, when I simply close the Seamonkey, it completes the boot to a full os, with disk drives and everything. oh, and its ugly. I have a Mac, a Vista, and linux I use all the time. I wouldn't put Android on my exwife's computer. |
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