I have an old Chromebook with a slightly broken casing that used to belong to my wife. It’s still perfectly usable, and I hate throwing tech away unnecessarily. I decided to set it up as a dedicated Home Assistant terminal, and it’s way more useful than I expected.
A Chromebook is surprisingly well suited to Home Assistant
Almost everything happens in the browser
Chromebooks are designed to be used primarily with the browser and web-based apps, rather than software that runs on the hardware itself. It makes a Chromebook fast to start up and easy to use for browsing and simple everyday tasks.
At first, it doesn’t seem like a Chromebook would be a good fit for Home Assistant. However, I’m not using a Chromebook to run Home Assistant; it’s running in Proxmox on my mini PC. The Chromebook is simply being used as a terminal to access my Home Assistant server.
While there are Home Assistant desktop apps you can use, you can also access the UI with any browser, and that’s exactly what I’m doing with the Chromebook. There’s a huge amount you can do from the browser; with the Terminal & SSH add-on, you can even access the Home Assistant terminal in a browser tab without the need for an SSH client.
- Dimensions (exterior)
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4.41″L x 4.41″W x 1.26″H
- Weight
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12 Ounces
Home Assistant Green is a pre-built hub directly from the Home Assistant team. It’s a plug-and-play solution that comes with everything you need to set up Home Assistant in your home without needing to install the software yourself.
I gave Home Assistant the attention it deserves
Having a permanent workspace changes your habits
One of the benefits of using the Chromebook as a Home Assistant terminal is that it makes it far easier to just jump in and start working. The Home Assistant UI isn’t the most conducive to productivity; my sidebar continues to grow longer and longer and navigating through menus can be a painful experience.
With the Chromebook, I can open individual tabs for the key pages, such as Automations, Devices and Services, HACS, the Home Assistant logs, ESPHome, Zigbee2MQTT, Node-RED, and more. After a reboot, Chrome can restore all these tabs automatically, recreating my workspace in seconds.
Because my Chromebook Home Assistant terminal is ready to go in a matter of seconds, it’s much easier to jump in and fiddle around when I have a spare five minutes, instead of having to open Home Assistant on my main computer and wade through the sidebar or menus before I can even do anything. I’ve found that since I’ve set up the Chromebook, I’ve got through far more of the quick, boring maintenance tasks that I would have put off in the past.
I Found the Best Way to Install Home Assistant
Sometimes, I forget I even have Home Assistant running because it’s so reliable now.
I can now keep smart home work separate from everything else
No more digging through dozens of browser tabs
The problem with using Home Assistant on my main computer was that it was always competing with the other apps that were running. If a Slack message would pop up, I might lose focus on Home Assistant to get caught up in a thread about some geeky tech topic. The same was true when emails would arrive and distract me from what I was working on. Even the other tabs could be enough to take my focus elsewhere.
With my Chromebook, there are no other apps to distract me, and I make sure that the only tabs that open are ones directly related to Home Assistant and my smart home. It means that I don’t have to wade through a mix of work, fun, and smart home tabs to find what I want, meaning that I get much more done using the Chromebook than I used to on my main computer.
It was better than throwing the Chromebook away
Old hardware is more useful than you might think
One of the main reasons that I decided to try this was because I didn’t want to simply throw the Chromebook away. My wife had replaced it with a better laptop, and I wasn’t going to use it as my daily driver. Despite the broken housing, it was still a perfectly usable device.
It took me a while to land on the idea of using it as a dedicated Home Assistant terminal, but I’m glad that I did. It’s been more useful than I ever really expected. Having tabs open to all the key areas of Home Assistant makes it far quicker to navigate, and it’s something I’d not really considered before, since the tabs would have been competing with all the other open tabs on my computer.
Now whenever I have a few minutes spare, I can open the Chromebook, select the appropriate tab, and get to work updating integrations or trying to figure out the cause of the errors that are popping up in the logs. With the boring stuff out of the way, it gives me more time to devote to the fun stuff when I have more time to get stuck in.
I never thought I’d become a Chromebook user
I never understood the appeal of a Chromebook, but then I’m not the target market. I didn’t expect to end up using one on a daily basis, but now that it’s set up as my Home Assistant terminal, the Chromebook has become a genuinely useful part of my setup.

