• ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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    134 years ago

    It’s very insidious what happened with the mobile market. PCs started out open because they predate the idea of locking users out of their own hardware. And traditionally there has been a lot of resistance to that because desktops and laptops are seen as general purpose computing platforms.

    However, when smart phones started coming out they were treated as appliances. And the companies locked users out of them from the start. Now it’s just become accepted practice in name of security and protecting the users from themselves. It’s an absolute tragedy that it’s practically impossible to buy an unlocked phone nowadays that you can install whatever operating system software you want on. What’s worse is that this is starting to leak into computing as well with stuff like surface and chromebooks.

    • @schwartz
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      04 years ago

      Chromebooks have typically allowed alternative OS installs. I bought a Chromebook 6 years ago to learn web development on. I installed Ubuntu and all was good. What difficulties have you had?

      • @AgreeableLandscapeM
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        44 years ago

        Pretty sure you can never actually remove Chrome OS from the system.