Linux 6.2 brings native support for M1 processors on Mac, but it isn't totally finished or ready for primetime. Linux support on ARM processors, and more specifically, Apple's M1, M1 Pro, M1 Max, and ...
Linux 6.2 was released yesterday, and Linus Torvalds described the latest Linux kernel release as, "Maybe it's not a sexy LTS release like 6.1 ended up being, but all those regular pedestrian kernels ...
Apple is growing its laptop market withApple continues its growth in the laptop market with M series processors and setting new performance standards. However, MacBooks have weaknesses. Traditional ...
The ongoing Asahi project to bring Linux to Apple Silicon has reached a milestone, adding the first conformant GPU driver for the family of chips. The Asahi Linux project for Mac first teased plans to ...
When the Asahi Linux team released its first alpha version of a GNU/Linux-based operating system for Macs with Apple M-series processors in 2022, things were still pretty rough around the edges.
Yeah, I don't think Apple will ever release anything to help on the GPU front, so outside of clean reverse engineering/hacking the macOS driver, that's going to be hard to get a nice stable system.
Mac users looking for the best gaming performance from their Apple hardware will be excited to hear about the latest OpenGL drivers meeting industry standards. What will come as a bigger shock is that ...
If things had gone as planned, Apple Mac Linux fans would have been running Fedora Linux on their M-chip-powered Macs this summer. Oh well, better late than never! As of December 19, Fedora Asahi ...
Everyone’s third-favorite desktop operating system comes to the Mac. Image: PantheraLeo/Wikimedia Commons/D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac Correction: This story was based on a misunderstanding of the ...
Last week, I wrote a story incorrectly concluding that a full Linux desktop environment would soon run on Macs with Apple silicon. This was a misunderstanding of the facts. While some of the work in ...
When Apple’s laptop and desktop computers were shipping with Intel processors, it was relatively easy to port GNU/Linux distributions to run on Apple hardware. Things got trickier when the company ...
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