Decades ago, if you had a hospital that wanted to look at MRImages a normal way to get Freesurfer onto a computer was using a disk image of a linux with it successfully installed and some virtualisation chicanery. Now we are decades into the cloud hellscape. I speculate that there are two potential avenues for deployment to low skill users now, one heavy and one light. The heavy way is very popular: Because it is so obscure to have a usable and offline device, single board computers are all the rage. For less than a hundred dollars, you can have something like a sane physical device hopefully untouched by cloud miasma. Less than a hundred is still a pretty big number and what are you gonna do, carry around 10 devices? So I call it heavy. Here is the light way I want to try- given how fast and large USB drives are now, I think that software can be distributed as pen drives = modern game cartridges, and the proprietary OS hung around the low skilled user's neck can just be skipped. Live media OSes are already popular depending on the circles you move in, and fast/big-enough thumb drives are kind of cheap. The forces of anti-freedom have been experimenting with devices where non-proprietary usb image boot is mysteriously broken and will never be fixed like some Microsoft/Googlebooks (and of course iOSBSD). And besides, what are the boot options for this device? Still I think it is promising because other than censoring a device's ability to boot, the approach is hidden from cloud and based on widespread cheap physical devices.