@markus99@lemmy.world to Linux@lemmy.ml • 1 year agoLinux hits 4% on the desktop 🐧 📈gs.statcounter.commessage-square231fedilinkarrow-up1967arrow-down119cross-posted to: linux_gaming@lemmy.mllinux_gaming@lemmy.mllinux@lemmy.mllinux_gaming@lemmy.mllinux@lemmy.mllinux_gaming@lemmy.mllinux@lemmy.ml
arrow-up1948arrow-down1external-linkLinux hits 4% on the desktop 🐧 📈gs.statcounter.com@markus99@lemmy.world to Linux@lemmy.ml • 1 year agomessage-square231fedilinkcross-posted to: linux_gaming@lemmy.mllinux_gaming@lemmy.mllinux@lemmy.mllinux_gaming@lemmy.mllinux@lemmy.mllinux_gaming@lemmy.mllinux@lemmy.ml
minus-square@mrshy@lemmy.mllinkfedilink2•1 year agoI don’t know but it might be inextricably linked to Googles content servers or reliant on services in such a way that it can’t simply be stripped of the telemetry in the way VSCodium is for example.
minus-square@jollyrogue@lemmy.mllinkfedilink2•1 year agoChromeOS uses a custom display server for the moment, but Chrome + <random Linux distro> is pretty similar. 🤷🏽♂️ ChromeOS is moving to Wayland as their display server, to make it even more of a standard Linux install.
I don’t know but it might be inextricably linked to Googles content servers or reliant on services in such a way that it can’t simply be stripped of the telemetry in the way VSCodium is for example.
ChromeOS uses a custom display server for the moment, but Chrome + <random Linux distro> is pretty similar. 🤷🏽♂️
ChromeOS is moving to Wayland as their display server, to make it even more of a standard Linux install.