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    <title>archbook &amp;mdash; scraps of poetry and madness</title>
    <link>https://poetry-and-madness.writeas.com/tag:archbook</link>
    <description>following the brush</description>
    <pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2026 19:56:54 +0000</pubDate>
    <item>
      <title> The Origin of the arch-book</title>
      <link>https://poetry-and-madness.writeas.com/the-origin-of-the-arch-book?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[What began as an impulsive project on a Friday afternoon turned into a 4 - 5 day extravaganza. &#xA;&#xA;The arch-book is actually a Dell Chromebook 11 from a few years ago. It is old enough that the newer ChromeOS updates didn&#39;t run great on it, but it is otherwise a good machine with a nice, simple, utilitarian form factor. I really like it, and always lamented never using it to its fullest potential.  A few years ago, I messed around with putting GalliumOS on it. That was fine but a) I never worked on it long enough to get all of the kinks out, and 2) I never really decided how I would use it once it was set up. I never integrated it into my daily practice and habits. And that was fine, I suppose; it was a hobby project. But I still felt like I was wasting a cool piece of tech.&#xA;&#xA;Then last week with no warning, I decided to dust off this machine to see if I can make it a usable part of my day-to-day practice. &#xA;&#xA;!--more--&#xA;&#xA;My goals for this machine are to be able to:&#xA;&#xA;write markdown in a lightweight editor&#xA;browse the internet for blog posting, research, and light account/website maintenance&#xA;BONUS: update homomonstrosus.com in a simple, lightweight development environment&#xA;&#xA;That&#39;s it. I didn&#39;t want a whole office suite or full connectivity to all of my ecosystems all the time. And perhaps most importantly, I didn&#39;t want a general purpose device that could do a bit of everything. I like using this thing; I like playing with it. If I made it so it could do anything, all I&#39;d end up doing on it would be path-of-least-resistance type stuff. &#xA;&#xA;Instead, I wanted, Oh, you like playing with this? Well all it is, is a tool for writing. If you&#39;re going to use it, you&#39;re going to use it for that. For creation. I hoped that could trick myself into finding excuses to use it, and therefore to write... and I think its working.&#xA;&#xA;I will admit I was somewhat inspired by Only Lovers Left Alive in this project. I loved how Adam built all of these wonderful systems with old, &#34;outdated&#34; tech. I loved the idea that someone living through all of this technoligical change wouldn&#39;t need to be cutting edge. If something worked why move on to the next iteration simply because it was the next? There&#39;s no reason things can&#39;t be improved and integrated without being abandoned. &#xA;&#xA;With these goals in mind - actually, I couldn&#39;t say that. This project was so impulsive, I can&#39;t say I had any goal in mind when I started it. I didn&#39;t even set out to start a project per se. I randomly wanted to dust off this machine. Does it still work? Yeah? Oh, GalliumOS is shutting down? Damn. Can I put something else on it? Cool, I&#39;ll do that.&#xA;&#xA;And thus a thread was pulled and... here we are, almost a week later.&#xA;&#xA;This all happened in the way it did because I found a very thorough guide tailored not just to Chromebooks, but to THIS Chromebook, the Dell Chromebook 11 here:&#xA;&#xA;https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/DellChromebook11&#xA;&#xA;...and that&#39;s what caused me to put Arch Linux on it. I just wanted something and Arch had a detailed walk-through, so... sure! Later, deep in the process, I did start to remember some things I learned the last time I tiptoed into linux: that Arch is a little more dense or at least a little more hands on... and that it didn&#39;t come with a visual environment. But since I kind of blustered into this project in the first place, I just kept lumbering along, working through things. It was challenging but rewarding and continues to be so. Most of the time -&#xA;&#xA;...I just had to stop in the middle of this entry to go figure out why spellchecking wasn&#39;t working in my text editor. It was a bit of a wild goose chase. I came away knowing a little more about how linux, etc. works, but also realizing that 90% of my issues are from typos/details I miss. &#xA;&#xA;Setting up this machine has been ripe with these whack-a-mole sessions. I honestly do enjoy fixing and learning from them, but they also impede my momentum to actually get USING this thing. Every other step I take towards daily use I need to divert and walk around for 5 miles fixing some random issue. I am hoping that this sort of things tapers off the closer I get running this through my daily routines.&#xA;&#xA;ANYWAY.&#xA;&#xA;Here&#39;s what I did:&#xA;&#xA;1. mrchromebox&#xA;A few years ago, to get GalliumOS on this thing, I did... uh something to the BIOS? It wasn&#39;t bad - I didn&#39;t mess anything up - I just don&#39;t remember what exactly I did. Whatever it was, it came with an (known) issue where if the battery got completely drained, I&#39;d have to manually enable a certain kind of boot mode before I could load linux again. And I used the machine just infrequently enough that I never remembered exactly how to do it and had to look it up and stumble through the process every time. &#xA;&#xA;So at least this time, I decided to commit, and to follow these:&#xA;&#xA;https://mrchromebox.tech/#fwscript&#xA;https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/ChromeOSdevices#LegacyBootMode&#xA; &#xA;...and do, uh whatever-it-was thoroughly enough to avoid the above hassle.&#xA;&#xA;2. followed arch wiki&#xA;This well-written documentation:&#xA;&#xA;https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/DellChromebook11&#xA;https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/ChromeOSdevices&#xA;https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Installationguide&#xA;&#xA;...was detailed and accessible enough to get me through almost everything I needed to do. When I got lost in the google woods, it was usually because of a typo or something stupid I did. One setup step of note though, I....&#xA;&#xA;2a. partitioned &#xA;...1 gig swap, and 10 gigs for data. It was slightly nerve-wracking. &#xA;&#xA;https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Installationguide#Partitionthedisks&#xA;&#xA;And now, with everything installed, storage is a squeaky fit. I am using a SD card for additional storage as needed. &#xA;&#xA;If anything, this is inspiration to keep things very lean. I just hope having to keep such a close eye on storage doesn&#39;t end up bogging things down. So far, so good. &#xA;&#xA;Hard disk set up and base installation in the books, the next step was to...&#xA;&#xA;3. look for lightweight graphic environments&#xA;As I dutifully plugged away at the wiki, I soon realized that Arch was text-only and I had to go shopping for a window manager. Luckily there is tons of good data out there about lean setups for older machines. I went with LXQt because it was recommended, and so far I am happy with it. &#xA;&#xA;After that, I...&#xA;&#xA;4. installed &#xA;chromium, ghostwriter, featherpad&#xA;&#xA;I loved ghostwriter from my Gallium install. Can&#39;t remember where I first heard about it. But I love a good markdown writer and ghostwriter is a good markdown editor. I plan on spending a lot of time with it.&#xA;&#xA;That reminds me, in terms of installing things, I also got practice...&#xA;&#xA;5. installing apps from the arch user repo&#xA;&#xA;https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/ArchUserRepository&#xA;https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/ArchUserRepository#Installingandupgradingpackages&#xA;&#xA;...etc.&#xA;&#xA;Didn&#39;t have many huge problems in the overall arch/LXQt install and set up, and I learned A LOT in the process. Tho there where a few...&#xA;&#xA;6. notable issues:&#xA;6a. emojis via noto fonts&#xA;&#xA;https://dev.to/darksmile92/get-emojis-working-on-arch-linux-with-noto-fonts-emoji-2a9&#xA;https://archlinux.org/packages/extra/any/noto-fonts-emoji/&#xA;&#xA;6b. the sleep debacle &#xA;&#xA;Was having an issue where, after a certain amount of time (like, hours), sleep mode would crash and reboot the computer. Did a lot of digging and went down some wrong paths. Ultimately, it seems to be a deep google problem with a known bug messing up the S3 sleep cycle(s):&#xA;&#xA;(Can&#39;t find the link to the bug report! Take my word for it!)&#xA;&#xA;My workaround has been to switch to a lighter sleep by setting this in sleep.conf :&#xA;&#xA;SuspendState=standby freeze&#xA;&#xA;https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/power/states.txt&#xA;https://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/102uljt/laptopwillshutdownsomehoursafter_suspend/&#xA;&#xA;...which avoids the behavior. I can sleep and wake up just fine, I just save less battery in this lighter sleep. Not thrilled with that, but at least its I can suspe.&#xA;&#xA;This is another opportunity to travel light and lean. And save often.&#xA;&#xA;By now, the whack-a-mole is dying down, and I&#39;m starting to integrate this into my daily life, along with other habits I&#39;m trying to cultivate. I&#39;m working to build a cyclic relationship being daily reading and daily writing - journalling, logging, etc.&#xA;&#xA;So far so good. The arch-book is becoming my go-to digital capture device. I&#39;m starting to use it like a digital notebook, and learning how it can compliment my paper notebooks. The separation of concerns between all of these devices, and the iPad, is working so far. Just a little friction to make the system tactile.&#xA;&#xA;Downstairs the macbook anchors this system, though now tethered to power most of the time. They are the workhorse, holding it all together. Things feel a little tenous, but I like stitching things together and am up for the challenge. &#xA;&#xA;posted: monday, 23 jan 23&#xA;tags:** #linux #archbook]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What began as an impulsive project on a Friday afternoon turned into a 4 – 5 day <em>extravaganza</em>.</p>

<p>The <strong><code>arch-book</code></strong> is actually a <strong>Dell Chromebook 11</strong> from a few years ago. It is old enough that the newer ChromeOS updates didn&#39;t run great on it, but it is otherwise a good machine with a nice, simple, utilitarian form factor. I really like it, and always lamented never using it to its fullest potential.  A few years ago, I messed around with putting GalliumOS on it. That was fine but a) I never worked on it long enough to get all of the kinks out, and 2) I never really decided <em>how</em> I would use it once it was set up. I never integrated it into my daily practice and habits. And that was fine, I suppose; it was a hobby project. But I still felt like I was wasting a cool piece of tech.</p>

<p>Then last week with no warning, I decided to dust off this machine to see if I can make it a usable part of my day-to-day practice.</p>



<p>My goals for this machine are to be able to:</p>
<ul><li>write markdown in a lightweight editor</li>
<li>browse the internet for blog posting, research, and light account/website maintenance</li>
<li>BONUS: update <a href="https://homomonstrosus.com/" rel="nofollow">homomonstrosus.com</a> in a simple, lightweight development environment</li></ul>

<p>That&#39;s it. I didn&#39;t want a whole office suite or full connectivity to all of my ecosystems all the time. And perhaps most importantly, I didn&#39;t want a general purpose device that could do a bit of everything. I like using this thing; I like playing with it. If I made it so it could do <em>anything</em>, all I&#39;d end up doing on it would be path-of-least-resistance type stuff.</p>

<p>Instead, I wanted, Oh, you like playing with this? Well all it is, is a tool for <em>writing</em>. If you&#39;re going to use it, you&#39;re going to use it for that. For <strong>creation</strong>. I hoped that could trick myself into finding excuses to use it, and therefore to write... and I think its working.</p>

<p>I will admit I was somewhat inspired by <em>Only Lovers Left Alive</em> in this project. I loved how Adam built all of these wonderful systems with old, “outdated” tech. I loved the idea that someone living through all of this technoligical change wouldn&#39;t need to be cutting edge. If something <strong>worked</strong> why move on to the next iteration simply because it was the next? There&#39;s no reason things can&#39;t be improved and integrated without being abandoned.</p>

<p>With these goals in mind – actually, I couldn&#39;t say that. This project was so impulsive, I can&#39;t say I had <em>any</em> goal in mind when I started it. I didn&#39;t even set out to start a project per se. I randomly wanted to dust off this machine. Does it still work? Yeah? Oh, GalliumOS is shutting down? Damn. Can I put something else on it? Cool, I&#39;ll do that.</p>

<p>And thus a thread was pulled and... here we are, almost a week later.</p>

<p>This all happened in the way it did because I found a very thorough guide tailored not just to Chromebooks, but to THIS Chromebook, the <strong>Dell Chromebook 11</strong> here:</p>
<ul><li><code>https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Dell_Chromebook_11</code></li></ul>

<p>...and that&#39;s what caused me to put <a href="https://archlinux.org/" rel="nofollow">Arch Linux</a> on it. I just wanted <em>something</em> and Arch had a detailed walk-through, so... sure! Later, deep in the process, I did start to remember some things I learned the last time I tiptoed into linux: that Arch is a little more dense or at least a little more <em>hands on</em>... and that it didn&#39;t come with a visual environment. But since I kind of blustered into this project in the first place, I just kept lumbering along, working through things. It was challenging but rewarding and continues to be so. Most of the time -</p>

<p>...I just had to stop in the middle of this entry to go figure out why spellchecking wasn&#39;t working in my text editor. It was a bit of a wild goose chase. I came away knowing a little more about how linux, etc. works, but also realizing that 90% of my issues are from typos/details I miss.</p>

<p>Setting up this machine has been ripe with these whack-a-mole sessions. I honestly do enjoy fixing and learning from them, but they also impede my momentum to actually get USING this thing. Every other step I take towards daily use I need to divert and walk around for 5 miles fixing some random issue. I am hoping that this sort of things tapers off the closer I get running this through my daily routines.</p>

<p>ANYWAY.</p>

<p>Here&#39;s what I did:</p>

<h2 id="1-mrchromebox" id="1-mrchromebox">1. mrchromebox</h2>

<p>A few years ago, to get GalliumOS on this thing, I did... uh something to the BIOS? It wasn&#39;t bad – I didn&#39;t mess anything up – I just don&#39;t remember what exactly I did. Whatever it was, it came with an (known) issue where if the battery got completely drained, I&#39;d have to manually enable a certain kind of boot mode before I could load linux again. And I used the machine just infrequently enough that I never remembered exactly how to do it and had to look it up and stumble through the process every time.</p>

<p>So at least this time, I decided to commit, and to follow these:</p>
<ul><li><code>https://mrchromebox.tech/#fwscript</code></li>
<li><code>https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Chrome_OS_devices#Legacy_Boot_Mode</code></li></ul>

<p>...and do, uh whatever-it-was thoroughly enough to avoid the above hassle.</p>

<h2 id="2-followed-arch-wiki" id="2-followed-arch-wiki">2. followed arch wiki</h2>

<p>This well-written documentation:</p>
<ul><li><code>https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Dell_Chromebook_11</code></li>
<li><code>https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Chrome_OS_devices</code></li>
<li><code>https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Installation_guide</code></li></ul>

<p>...was detailed and accessible enough to get me through almost everything I needed to do. When I got lost in the google woods, it was usually because of a typo or something stupid I did. One setup step of note though, I....</p>

<h3 id="2a-partitioned" id="2a-partitioned">2a. partitioned</h3>

<p>...1 gig swap, and 10 gigs for data. It was slightly nerve-wracking.</p>

<pre><code>https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Installation_guide#Partition_the_disks
</code></pre>

<p>And now, with everything installed, storage is a squeaky fit. I am using a SD card for additional storage as needed.</p>

<p>If anything, <strong>this is inspiration to keep things very lean</strong>. I just hope having to keep such a close eye on storage doesn&#39;t end up bogging things down. So far, so good.</p>

<p>Hard disk set up and base installation in the books, the next step was to...</p>

<h2 id="3-look-for-lightweight-graphic-environments" id="3-look-for-lightweight-graphic-environments">3. look for lightweight graphic environments</h2>

<p>As I dutifully plugged away at the wiki, I soon realized that Arch was text-only and I had to go shopping for a window manager. Luckily there is tons of good data out there about lean setups for older machines. I went with <a href="https://lxqt-project.org/" rel="nofollow">LXQt</a> because it was recommended, and so far I am happy with it.</p>

<p>After that, I...</p>

<h2 id="4-installed" id="4-installed">4. installed</h2>

<p>chromium, ghostwriter*, featherpad</p>
<ul><li>I loved <a href="https://ghostwriter.kde.org/" rel="nofollow">ghostwriter</a> from my Gallium install. Can&#39;t remember where I first heard about it. But I love a good markdown writer and <strong>ghostwriter</strong> is a good markdown editor. I plan on spending a lot of time with it.</li></ul>

<p>That reminds me, in terms of installing things, I also got practice...</p>

<h2 id="5-installing-apps-from-the-arch-user-repo" id="5-installing-apps-from-the-arch-user-repo">5. installing apps from the arch user repo</h2>
<ul><li><code>https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Arch_User_Repository</code></li>
<li><code>https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Arch_User_Repository#Installing_and_upgrading_packages</code></li></ul>

<p>...etc.</p>

<p>Didn&#39;t have many huge problems in the overall arch/LXQt install and set up, and I learned A LOT in the process. Tho there where a few...</p>

<h2 id="6-notable-issues" id="6-notable-issues">6. notable issues:</h2>

<h3 id="6a-emojis-via-noto-fonts" id="6a-emojis-via-noto-fonts">6a. emojis via noto fonts</h3>
<ul><li><code>https://dev.to/darksmile92/get-emojis-working-on-arch-linux-with-noto-fonts-emoji-2a9</code></li>
<li><code>https://archlinux.org/packages/extra/any/noto-fonts-emoji/</code></li></ul>

<h3 id="6b-the-sleep-debacle" id="6b-the-sleep-debacle">6b. the sleep debacle</h3>

<p>Was having an issue where, after a certain amount of time (like, hours), sleep mode would crash and reboot the computer. Did a lot of digging and went down some wrong paths. Ultimately, it seems to be a deep google problem with a known bug messing up the S3 sleep cycle(s):</p>

<p><em>(Can&#39;t find the link to the bug report! Take my word for it!)</em></p>

<p>My workaround has been to switch to a lighter sleep by setting this in <code>sleep.conf</code> :</p>

<pre><code>SuspendState=standby freeze
</code></pre>
<ul><li><code>https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/power/states.txt</code></li>
<li><code>https://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/102uljt/laptop_will_shutdown_some_hours_after_suspend/</code></li></ul>

<p>...which avoids the behavior. I can sleep and wake up just fine, I just save less battery in this lighter sleep. Not thrilled with that, but at least its I can suspe.</p>

<p>This is another opportunity to travel light and lean. And save often.</p>

<p>***
By now, the whack-a-mole is dying down, and I&#39;m starting to integrate this into my daily life, along with other habits I&#39;m trying to cultivate. I&#39;m working to build a cyclic relationship being daily reading and daily writing – journalling, logging, etc.</p>

<p>So far so good. The <code>arch-book</code> is becoming my go-to digital capture device. I&#39;m starting to use it like a digital notebook, and learning how it can compliment my paper notebooks. The separation of concerns between all of these devices, and the iPad, is working so far. Just a little friction to make the system tactile.</p>

<p>Downstairs the macbook anchors this system, though now tethered to power most of the time. They are the workhorse, holding it all together. Things feel a little tenous, but I like stitching things together and am up for the challenge.</p>

<p><strong>posted:</strong> monday, 23 jan 23
<strong>tags:</strong> <a href="https://poetry-and-madness.writeas.com/tag:linux" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">linux</span></a> <a href="https://poetry-and-madness.writeas.com/tag:archbook" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">archbook</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <guid>https://poetry-and-madness.writeas.com/the-origin-of-the-arch-book</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 23 Jan 2023 17:19:42 +0000</pubDate>
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