Rekall Incorporated@piefed.socialM to Hardware@lemmy.worldEnglish · 2 days agoFramework founder says that ‘personal computing as we know it is dead’ — vows to keep building ‘computers that you can own at the deepest level’www.tomshardware.comexternal-linkmessage-square142fedilinkarrow-up1516arrow-down134file-text
arrow-up1482arrow-down1external-linkFramework founder says that ‘personal computing as we know it is dead’ — vows to keep building ‘computers that you can own at the deepest level’www.tomshardware.comRekall Incorporated@piefed.socialM to Hardware@lemmy.worldEnglish · 2 days agomessage-square142fedilinkfile-text
minus-squareaesthelete@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up2arrow-down1·1 day agoI wouldn’t buy a Mac to install Linux on it for a number of reasons, but I assumed someone somewhere had tried to install Linux on Apple silicon and I was correct. Apparently, asahi works on it: https://www.linuxnest.com/how-to-install-linux-on-a-macbook-m1-m2-m3-intel-the-complete-2025-guide/ It sounds like limited support, and I honestly have no idea why someone would do this. I think a better path to even alternative silicon Linux (non-x86 stuff) would be buying some type of ARM.
I wouldn’t buy a Mac to install Linux on it for a number of reasons, but I assumed someone somewhere had tried to install Linux on Apple silicon and I was correct. Apparently, asahi works on it: https://www.linuxnest.com/how-to-install-linux-on-a-macbook-m1-m2-m3-intel-the-complete-2025-guide/
It sounds like limited support, and I honestly have no idea why someone would do this. I think a better path to even alternative silicon Linux (non-x86 stuff) would be buying some type of ARM.