I'm trying it now to upgrade a 2017 Acer Chromebook.
I guess for $3 it's not really a cash-grab or anything. Kinda nice to see vendor-supported live USBs honestly
That way, the ChromeOS USB key can be an add on to the purchase of some old laptop that can barely run Windows anymore.
Honestly that's not a lot. It probably won't make a dent in either ChromeOS or Linux without considerable marketing effort and the right user expectations.
Obviously for the HN crowd there are workarounds (my mom has actually been getting along with PopOS pretty well), but this could probably have met her needs just as well.
Back in the netbook era, there were quite a few that tried to be internet browser focused like peppermint OS, though I don't know how well any of them faired with the rise of chromeos.
It also didn't try to be internet browser focused, it just gave you easy ability to make the OS browser focused. Out of the box, it was like a better Lubuntu. You had the opportunity to chose what web based apps/services you would add.
Not sure if ChromeOS Flex is supposed to wipe the host OS or just run on top of it.
Is there a reason you cannot install Linux ? Linux can be installed from a USB and should work on any system running windows 10.
If Linux is too heavy for your system, there is always NetBSD. I have NetBSD on an AMD 300MHz (= PII) with 512 MB memory and it runs fine.
I got it for nostalgia, the physical design of the laptop even though it's a thique brick
I think this actually installs ChromeOS Flex? I guess Google will do anything to increase their ad-delivery surface?