![]() To make space, I backed up my recovery partition to my external hard drive and deleted it using Diskpart. It booted perfectly from the USB drive, so I installed it to my SD card…and couldn’t get it to boot from there. Then I tried Android x86 – the CM13.1 version. I could get the USB drive to boot, but the install menu wouldn’t respond to touch or click input, so I scrapped that idea. ![]() As far as I can tell, it’s got 32-bit Windows installed over a 64-bit UEFI, leading to all sorts of confused forum posts across the Internet.įirst, I attempted to use Cloudready to convert it into a ChromeBook, or a ChromiumBook as the case may be. It’s a year or so older than the one my dad has, though I’m not sure the exact release year. It’s got a MicroSD slot that I’ve stuck a 32GB card into. It’s the 10″ model, with 32GB of storage, 2GB of RAM, and an Intel Atom processor of some kind. While waiting for various files to copy, I started on the other machine I have lying around – my ASUS T100 Transformer Book. ![]() At this point, I’m still deciding between messing around with superuser commands, or wiping it and trying something else. This was more stable but much heavier, and I still had Steam client crashes. Then, discovering incompatibilities that made my screen flicker, I overwrote it with Ubuntu Gamepack. First it was my old semi-functional laptop, where I installed SteamOS – via ISO, because the suggested installer wouldn’t work with my legacy BIOS. Instead of doing something more productive over the long weekend, I spent Saturday through Monday running around my house installing Linux on things.
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