 Sorry about filming the screen with the camera. I always apologize. I hate when I do that. I couldn't install a screen recorder on here, but I'm going to be flipping back and forth between different display managers so there's no way to record that fluidly. So you may not be able to see anything, but I'm going to explain stuff real quick. In the previous video, I just talked about the Chromebook. Now I'm going to just show some usage of it. So again, you have Chrome, you have Chrome extensions. Again, I talked about a previous video about how there's a lot of things where if I was to open this up and type in Linux, or that's Linux Mint, Linux, just to do a search on Linux. Lots of times when I would click on a link, it worked that time, but lots of times what it ends up doing is it thinks I long click and it brings up that menu. But that's not a problem because I have Vimium. And if you use Chrome or Chromium, I suggest installing Vimium. I'm sure that there's probably an extension or plug-in or whatever they call them on Firefox. That's the same thing. But basically with Vimium, I'm able to use my keyboard to interact with stuff. So if I was to click on the Linux.org and bring that up, now I can hit F on my keyboard. And what it does is it puts these little yellow tags next to each link. And I know you can't see that, but they're letters and I can type in the letter and go to that link. So if I type in SD, it's going to bring me to that link right there. So I don't have to click stuff. And Vimium is just a great thing to have. If you're used to Vitton key bindings and you want to use them in your web browser. So that's just a side note on that. Again, I talked about installing Turmux. So here I have Turmux. And if I go into... I have it set up just like I do on my Android device. I have a hidden folder called .bin in my home directory with my own personal scripts. And again, I use Turmux because it allows me to interact with Chromium OS. Chrome OS. There is a Chromium OS though. With the clipboard and stuff like that. For example, I have a tiny URL command. And the biggest drawback to this on my regular desktop, when I'm on my desktop or i3 on this. I've created keyboard shortcuts for pretty much all these scripts. Where on this I actually have to go here and type it. But let's say I was at filmsbychrist.com and I wanted to get a tiny URL for that. I just copy that URL and I type tiny URL in my shell and it's going to grab a tiny URL, put it in my clipboard for Chromium OS and give me a QR code just like it does on my Android device. And that is why Turmux is so nice because it will interact with Chromium OS. You can install that API. So check out my videos on Android about that. And you can have it open the web browser if you want. So if I type in... So that URL should be in my clipboard now. I should be able to say Turmux, I think it's just Turmux open, Turmux open. And I can paste in that URL. Which one of the annoying things is normally on the shell you go use Ctrl Shift V to paste and Turmux it's Ctrl Alt V to paste and if you Ctrl Shift V it adds funny characters and you got a backspace. That's kind of annoying. But I can do Turmux open and say open that URL and it will open up the web browser here to that. And the biggest drawback for Chromium OS in that aspect is normally I create shortcut keys for that where this I have to usually tab into here and type out the command. I just type TIN and hit tab and there's the tiny URL one and I hit that and it's going to generate the tiny URL. There's nothing in the clipboard so I didn't get that there. But again this biggest drawback to this is it won't access my SD card. There's some sort of restriction on Chromium OS and the storage that way. Again it's a mixture of using Android applications which are confined on Chromium OS which is restricting the Android applications. It's annoying. But if there's an application I want that doesn't run in Turmux or I want to use a GUI application. In Chromium OS you can hit control alt T and that will open up this shell. And if you've put your device into developer mode you can easily type shell and you have a shell that you can now use pseudo commands and run stuff as root. And if you've used Crouton which I'm not going to go over the installation of Crouton I can type in again. I know you can't see it. Pseudo enter true root. I do that. Type in my password. Make sure you guys can't see my keyboard here and I'm pretty sure I just typed that wrong. Let me try again. Okay. And now I am in a full Debian shell here. So I can type in commands I can use apt aptitude apt get install whatever I want from Debian repositories with ease by default with the Crouton install you can tell it with desktop environment you want. I originally installed XFC but then I changed the script to load up I3 so I have it set up so I just type I3 and hit enter and now it's going to start up Xorg and this again is not a virtual machine. This is in a true root. So it's running natively. It's using the Debian file system. It's just using the Chrome OS kernel. And now in here again normally I use the Windows key Windows key with quotation marks there as my modifier key. You don't have it on here so I just switched over to the alt key which can be annoying in some programs but I can use alt enter opens up my shell here I have Tmux not termux but Tmux running in here so you can see like my conky output from when I started this command but I just hit ctrl a c to create a new shell and now I can install whatever I want I can type in things like blender which I installed at the end of the last video and it loads no problem here and I only play with this for a few seconds before I record this and it's a little confusing because of the mouse setup there is no right click you have to hit alt click I think to right click but if I had a separate mouse I think I'd probably be fine there's no F12 so again you have a row of keys here at the top which are in Chrome OS you know your brightness and contrast your volume keys that sort of stuff in Linux they work as function keys in Chrome OS you have to hit search and those keys work as function keys normally in blender F12 is your render key which you could probably change there is no F key only goes up to F11 here there is no F12 so I have to click the render button over here to render but it renders you know basic things like this cube no problem I can type in a sphere add a sphere grab that put it there I can clone that put it there clone that put it here clone that put it here I can add in a plane and I can scale that up like this again then I can click my render and just I mean this is very basic you're not going to go do an in-depth render but it took one second to render that out if I normally I add I like doing ambient occlusion environment lighting and changing that to multiply and then again can't hit F12 I'll go back to here and click render and here it's taken a little bit longer probably two or three seconds three seconds to render that out so again you're not going to be doing in-depth blender stuff but like at the intro of my videos I'll have you know little blender animations with text and stuff and this is at half of 1080p resolution let me put it up to a full 1080p and re-render it again you're not going to get much power out of this but it is it is doable and I'm going to bet let's see five six probably close to 10 seconds for one frame which if you're doing a video at 30 frames a second let's still go in okay just shy of 12 no just over 12 seconds for one frame so no it's you're not going to do you could do stuff but it's it's rendering out it's gonna take forever if you do it at full resolution and even at half 1080p it's gonna be resolved but you could do it and same like I said with Caden live you could work with proxy files and I bet you can edit it no problem but when you go to render it it's probably gonna take forever to render it it's but you know what back in the 90s I had my computer was slower this than I did rendering yeah I wasn't doing 1080p was doing you know 720 by 480 resolution but yeah back then I had to say yeah this five minute video render it and then I go to sleep and wake up the next day it's done you could do that with a machine like this so yeah control Q to kill that but you can see I can also start up GIMP and load up GIMP but right here this is the same as running you know a regular Linux distro if I want to go back to Chrome OS I hit control shift alt and this arrow key here arrow back and now I'm back in Chrome OS control shift alt I go back to my Debian desktop with I3 I can go back and forth because I'm using Tmux not turn up to Tmux in my shell the actual same shell it's over there I have here I do think that if you're running stuff like if I try to open do I have fun are installed so turn off file browser I try to run that here in the shell I think it kind of hangs until I go back obviously it's not going to pop it up in Chrome OS but yeah as soon as I got back here it loaded it up so it's like you're trying to load xorg stuff while you're not an xorg it kind of hangs until you get to x into xorg if that makes sense if it doesn't then you probably have no clue what I'm talking about in any of this video but yeah full Debian install and I can quickly switch back and forth and that's it that's just a quick look at Chrome OS and running Linux in a chur root and again I used Crutan which is a very popular very easy to use script but if you're familiar with chur roots and the bootstrap you can pull down your own and install it but this is very easy because it's got xorg configuration set up it automatically shares your download directory which I have had some permission issues with if I'm trying to save files to the download directory I think so if I move into downloads here let me try to touch a file touch to well that work no problem so I have a touch file and if I come into here and open up my file browser and I go to downloads up it's right there that's the empty file I just created so you can interact back and forth in here in term X there's some issues of going into sd card I actually made a shortcut link in my home directory under Debian called SD card mp3s because that's just one of the SD card was called and now I'm on my SD card and I can interact with this which as you can see is actually a bootable Linux is true this SD card is actually carrying a copy of Debian for this chur root and it's also carrying Linux mint that I can boot into but again I had keyboard issues which are probably easily fixed but that's just a quick look at using a Chromebook and having full Linux even though my machine isn't supporting the Linux apps which a lot of new Chromebooks are it doesn't matter because I can flip over this and I'm running Debian anyway yeah so it like I said if I want to run Gimp in here I could I guess I could run Gimp in Chrome OS if I had a newer Chromebook but I don't need to I can just do it here and yeah I have i3 running which is pretty lightweight it's not really using that much more processing power than it would if it was in Chrome OS anyway that's it that was just a quick look to show you how this works biggest drawbacks are just the keyboard not being a standard keyboard but there's workarounds for that I do thank you for watching as always I hope that you visit films like chris.com that's for decay there's a link in the description as always I hope that you have a great day