I think that Plan9Port using the underlying Linux OS might be a better choice.  I have also been thinking about cross-compiling from a Plan9 install (such as that on Raspberry Pi) to Samsung ARM based ChromeBook.  

Getting Plan9 to work with fastboot and implementing device drivers for the various ChromeBooks might be a lot of work.  Don't know enough to justify my assumptions though.

On 8 December 2014 at 06:35, Roswell Grey <orangecalx01@gmail.com> wrote:

It's no question that the Chromebook makes a wonderful candidate to integrate features of 9 into. The thing was practically BUILT for distributed computing, what with app servers and cloud integration tightly integrated into the hardware. What I was thinking was creating a chrome extension for 9P and the distributed file system, so that there'd be an easy way to connect 9 machines and maybe even create a chrome 9 grid for super processing. What would be your opinion on doing such a thing? Practical? Waste of time? Wanna help?