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Anything cheap, sorry if I offended someone, should have said low priced. Few years ago a neighbor's daughter brought over a HP laptop she'd received as a Christmas present from her mother. It was "running slow". Per her mother she paid some $290 or so.Believe it or not, people are still bringing in $99 Chromebooks from Walmart, expecting miracles. When I tell them Chrome stopped supporting its own operating system in September of 2021, they pretty much get that "I give up" look. But you get what you pay for and a couple customers have death grips on theirs, because they are used to them.
I've taken 2 in trade but only give $10 for them. I have a wifi lounge in half of my shop so, if someone comes in without a laptop, they can rent mine for $5/2 hours but only if they're using them in the lounge. For temporary use, they're perfectly fine and easy to reset after each use.
If they don't take the time to do their research before buying, they get what they get. Sometimes the time involved in upgrading hardware and updating software is worth more than the original purchase.Anything cheap, sorry if I offended someone, should have said low priced. Few years ago a neighbor's daughter brought over a HP laptop she'd received as a Christmas present from her mother. It was "running slow". Per her mother she paid some $290 or so.
W10 Home, 4GB RAM, Intel Celeron (yes you read that right) Processor, and a screaming 1TB 5400 RPM spindle. "thought 1TB would make it really fast". After dumping all the bloatware I got boot time to desktop down to 7 minutes or so from 15. Told her that was all that I can do. "I'm willing to pay you some money". Then buy a new laptop.
Many years ago I remember having the option to "gift" a NYT login to someone. I did so with my daughter. But it looks like that's gone away. Or maybe it's just corrupted memory.........Same with the NYT, just as a data point.

The problem isn't that Chromebooks expire, it's that people haven't researched their lifespan before buying. All technology is on a life cycle and seven or eight years is a long time to expect a device to be used in most environments.
I worked for a school district for a very very short time that had literally one million chromebooks in their google dashboard. Kids absolutely destroy these things and a huge number of them need repairs over and over because of abuse and accidents. A more expensive device, like Windows or Mac, would be far more expensive in its life for this simple reason.
Well, imagine an elementary school building repurposed into a repair facility. The gymnasium, with a basketball sized court, surrounded all the way around with chromebooks stacked seven feet high, and in the middle boxes of new parts. I think like 12 or 16 repair stations in the gym where people come and spend a shift of either 4 or 8 hours. Individual classrooms dedicated to specific models / repair types.That could probably keep a dozen guys busy year round if they actually wanted to repair them lol. I can't even imagine how many of those get demolished in a single school year.
They did customize their own Linux distro. That's exactly what chrome os is. It's just a very purpose built os, and the purpose is to live in the Google ecosystemChromebooks were designed to be 100% disposable. They're basically dumb terminals. Google would have been better off designing a full OS to compete with Windows and Mac OS. Then they could sell actually decent laptops and we'd have an alternative between Windows, which Microsoft screws up more and more with each update, and Mac OS, which sucks royally. I don't know why Google didn't do this. They didn't even have to start from scratch. All they had to do is customize their own Linux distro. If they did that then Linux would actually catch on instead of having the pitiful adoption rate it's had for 20+ years.
They did customize their own Linux distro. That's exactly what chrome os is.