Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Trash
  4. News

Chrome OS to soon run everywhere, including on PCs and Macs

Add as a preferred source on Google

Soon youou won’t need a dedicated Chrome OS-powered device, like a Chromebook, to run Google’s desktop operating system.

Google has announced an early access program called Chrome OS Flex that will bring its operating system to existing Windows and Mac hardware, making it easy and simple to not only run Chrome and benefit from security updates, but also to gain access to Android apps.

The back lid of the MacBook Pro.
Digital Trends

“Chrome OS Flex is a free and sustainable way to modernize devices you already own,” Google said of its latest initiative, which will be initially available for education and enterprise clients. “It’s easy to deploy across your fleet or simply try it to see what a cloud-first OS has to offer.”

Chrome OS Flex is available to try out for free right now through Google’s Enterprise portal.

Google’s Chrome OS Flex will essentially replace your existing Windows or MacOS installation on your current hardware, so this won’t be a dual-boot solution. However, if you’re unsure if you want to convert your existing work machine over to running Chrome OS Flex, Google also has a method to create a Chrome OS Flex bootable USB drive to test drive the operating system first.

The internet search giant claimed that it just takes a few minutes to install and load Chrome OS Flex onto an existing Windows or Mac desktop or laptop.

For enterprise users, the company boasts about features such as advanced security, granular device controls, scalable management, updates, and reporting and insights reports for IT managers. Chrome OS Flex devices can be managed and controlled alongside Chromebooks by your company’s IT department as an added benefit. And by breathing new life into aging Windows and Mac PCs, Google claims that Chrome OS Flex is a sustainable effort that could potentially lead to reduced e-waste.

Google’s latest efforts to transform existing hardware running on competing operating systems into Chrome OS computers comes on the heels of its acquisition of Neverware, which offered an application that performs a similar task.

For those who aren’t ready to fully dive headfirst into Google’s operating system, using a virtual machine can help you reap the benefits of multiple operating systems without having to commit fully to Chrome OS.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
AI is raising hell for Linux managers buried under a flood of dupe bug reports
Torvalds’ latest Linux update warns that AI-assisted reporting can create more maintenance work when contributors skip verification
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

AI may be finding Linux bugs faster than humans can sort them.

In the Linux 7.1-rc4 update, Linus Torvalds said the kernel’s security list has been swamped by AI-assisted bug reports, many of them duplicates from people using similar tools and finding the same issues. The release itself looks routine, with drivers making up about half the patch and GPU fixes leading the way.

Read more
Spooked by the MacBook Neo, Asus shows off affordable Intel Wildcat Lake laptops
Its new Wildcat Lake laptops bring faster screen specs to Apple’s affordable fight
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Asus isn’t waiting for Apple’s lower-cost laptop story to settle. Its new Intel Wildcat Lake Vivobook 14SE and 16SE have launched in China, giving Windows laptop makers an early chance to crowd Apple on price and visible hardware.

The sharper threat is the Vivobook 16SE, which starts at CNY 4,599, about $675, with a higher-end display model at CNY 4,999, around $734. That pricier version adds a 16-inch 2560 x 1600 screen with a 144Hz refresh rate, variable refresh rate support, and a 400-nit brightness rating.

Read more
Intel reveals Project Firefly to make cheap Wildcat Lake laptops that rival MacBook Neo
Project Firefly standardizes Wildcat Lake laptop designs so PC makers can chase Apple with lower prices and cleaner hardware
Crowd, Person, Audience

Intel is trying to make budget Windows laptops look a lot less bargain-bin.

Project Firefly, launched in China alongside Intel’s Wildcat Lake laptop chips, gives PC makers a common hardware playbook for thinner, cleaner, lower-cost systems that can take a more direct swing at MacBook Neo. The promise is simple, fewer compromises where budget laptops usually show them most.

Read more