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원본 게시물 작성자: Jerry Wheeler

텍스트:

Generally no, it's usually not feasible. First of all, ChromeBooks don't come with the standard BIOS/UEFI firmware that Windows relies on for interfacing with the hardware.

Secondly, Windows is primarily geared toward Intel processors and your ChromeBook is running a Samsung Exynos 5 Dual 1.7Ghz CPU. I'm not familiar with it, but I strongly suspect it's based on the ARM CPU architecture. At any rate, a standard Windows release won't run on that processor.

Given the rather anemic processing power of that computer putting Windows on it is going to make it run even slower. The device page lists complaints about the speed of the processor as an issue for your laptop and that's running ChromeOS; you put Windows on it and it's going to slow down to a crawl.

So even if you could accomplish that very dubious task, you'd hate the results.

현황:

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