Built-in software âdeath datesâ are sending thousands of schoolsâ Chromebooks to the recycling bin
Built-in software âdeath datesâ are sending thousands of schoolsâ Chromebooks to the recycling bin
The problem comes down to education institutions. I remember when we got Chromebooks in my highschool (8 years ago) admins forgot to turn of developer mode and half the school unenrolled the Chromebook managing to bypass all restrictions. This went on for half a year until one day our school needed to run a state exam (more for measure of schools performance not as a college entrance exam or anything).
The computerized testing program required deploying a specific chrome app accessible when chrome book is logged out (canât just download from chrome web store). When they tried to push the client since half of Chromebooks were unenrolled it failed. This required the school it to recall pretty much all chrome books to manually re enroll all of them and disable developer mode (prevents unenrolling and prevents sideloading Linux).
At least thatâs my two cents (not a school it admin just a memory from the past đ).
Problem is if older Chromebooks are used for Linux in an educational environment there would be nothing stopping a student from whipping up a bootable USB and dumping another distro (bypassing restrictions). Iâm also not sure if there is a enrollment mode equivalent Linux (there may be but not sure).