I'm thinking of replacing Chrome OS on an older Chromebook (Acer CB-314) that's been slowing down a lot. I don't know what Google is doing but it feels like planned obsolescence. It's becoming unresponsive even for regular web browsing and VOD. Based on some online guides I think I need to open the device to flip a hardware switch that makes the firmware write protected, so I need to convince my significant other to let me do it, because it's her laptop, but she keeps complaining :)
I was thinking of putting Mint on it, I want it to be super simple.
I would also consider some atomic distro so she can't break it :) Maybe Fedora Silverblue or something like that.
I am aware of the limitations. She is a really BASIC user. Just uses the web browser (Chrome, because it's a Chrome OS, well — I'll switch her to Firefox and she won't notice ;) ), she surfs the net, watches YT and VOD (I know the DRM limitations, again, not an issue with her, she's perfectly happy with 720p in a window) and chats Facebook Messenger (sadly). I think an atomic distro can do all that out of the box and there's nothing to install that's not a web app or a Flatpak.
Is rpm-ostree how you get the other packages? I don't know much about it apart from what's on Fedora's website, my understanding is it modifies the local system image so whatever you install from RPM becomes part of it. But, again, she won't need it. She's the compete opposite of a power user.