Last week I flashed the last of the chromebooks.
(At least all the ones in the cabinet -- Maybe Peter has another
stack.)
Now they all have an unlocked bios firmware and ready to
take an OS.
Most of the chromebooks are Google "Candy" (have the
plastic bezel around the screen) with a
few of Google "Wolf" (all glass screen) Both are 4GB ram
and 16GB storage soldered in place with no upgrade.
16GB makes Windows impossible. And even for Linux it is
hard to get a modern experience.
Linux: (on Candy, I haven't checked Wolf)
You can get some of the media keys working if you change
keyboard layout to "chromebook"
(Volume works but I don't think screen backlight control
works)
Sound: Works in full featured distros but then you run out
of space in the 16GB emmc.
Minimal distros miss some things that are needed for
sound:
Need the sound chip firmware. On Debian it is sof-firmware
so "sudo apt install sof-firmware"
Even after installing the firmware many times the speakers
are muted
Run alsamixer from terminal ("sudo apt install alsa-utils"
if alsamixer is not available) By default the Intel digital
audio is selected. F6 to change soundcard but on the
chromebook the F keys are shared with the media keys. Depends
on the layout but either search (key with mag glass icon) or
right ALT key is the Fn key. Hold Fn key (search or R ALT)
and press "lower backlight" (small sun icon or count 6 from
ESC) When the right sound card is selected press arrow keys
until "Left speaker left dac" and press "m" to unmute then
"Right speaker right dac"
Should work now.
Unless you have a minimal Linux distro without an audio
server installed. Then "sudo apt install pulseaudio
pavucontrol" Some distros need pulseaudio-alsa (Arch) Some
desktop environments may need plugins for the GUI (XFCE need
xfce4-pulseaudio-plugin)
Disk space: This is a tough one because we have only
16GB. There are many very small Linux distros but they are
not easy for the noob or non-expert Linux user. And if you
start small and try to add you end up chasing the stuff that
doesn't work. (like Try to install wifi gui but
wpa-supplicant is not automatically installed?) You can start
with something a little too big like Lubuntu then "sudo apt
purge" to free space (purging Libreoffice gets Lubuntu to
around 8GB)
I will try some more distros and have some recommendations
soon.
Thomas