Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup
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@scottalanmiller said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
@Pete-S said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
A hack to me is when you have to reverse engineer everything to get working drivers because the manufacturer wont share anything.
This very well may end up being the case. But it seems like something that they would have done in the past, but have thus far avoided. But this is a new scale of opportunity for them to be extra proprietary, so easily they will jump on it and take advantage of that.
However, I don't think that that is a sensible business model for them. They make 100% of their money selling the hardware and lose money on the software. Getting Linux folks wanting their hardware is purely a win for them. In theory, at least.
I agree with you and I hope you're right for everyone's sake but I'm very sceptical. Very.
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@marcinozga said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
That 16GB RAM limit though.... Previous gen Mac Mini went up to 64GB. And no 10Gbit ethernet
Ehhh USB4 we'll have adapters in no time.
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@scottalanmiller said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
And on PowerPC before that.
and Motorola before that!
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@Pete-S said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
For instance, ubuntu has had one or several mobile OS working on some devices. It's all ARM cpus. Have any of these ever worked on any Apple tablet or phone or watch or...?
Apple has API's for Byve. Technically I think we use them for some of our container run time stuff so we can call metal etc. You may never see Linux run bare metal on Macbooks but if it runs in a Virtual Machine that abstracts the hardware (IE in Fusion) do you really care?
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@StorageNinja said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
@Pete-S said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
For instance, ubuntu has had one or several mobile OS working on some devices. It's all ARM cpus. Have any of these ever worked on any Apple tablet or phone or watch or...?
Apple has API's for Byve. Technically I think we use them for some of our container run time stuff so we can call metal etc. You may never see Linux run bare metal on Macbooks but if it runs in a Virtual Machine that abstracts the hardware (IE in Fusion) do you really care?
Well, when the RAM options are so limited, lol.
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@scottalanmiller said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
@Pete-S said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
A hack to me is when you have to reverse engineer everything to get working drivers because the manufacturer wont share anything.
This very well may end up being the case. But it seems like something that they would have done in the past, but have thus far avoided. But this is a new scale of opportunity for them to be extra proprietary, so easily they will jump on it and take advantage of that.
However, I don't think that that is a sensible business model for them. They make 100% of their money selling the hardware and lose money on the software. Getting Linux folks wanting their hardware is purely a win for them. In theory, at least.
Will never happen.
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@StorageNinja said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
@marcinozga said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
That 16GB RAM limit though.... Previous gen Mac Mini went up to 64GB. And no 10Gbit ethernet
Ehhh USB4 we'll have adapters in no time.
And they will probably suck, USB overhead is crippling for anything that gets near it. Thundebolt to 10G ethernet will probably make more sense.
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@marcinozga said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
@StorageNinja said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
@marcinozga said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
That 16GB RAM limit though.... Previous gen Mac Mini went up to 64GB. And no 10Gbit ethernet
Ehhh USB4 we'll have adapters in no time.
And they will probably suck, USB overhead is crippling for anything that gets near it. Thundebolt to 10G ethernet will probably make more sense.
USB4 is TB3 compatible.
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@scottalanmiller said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
USB4 is TB3 compatible.
Intel removed licensing for TB3 as part of agreement to make part of USB4 spec.
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@StorageNinja said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
@scottalanmiller said in Apple Officially Releases their ARM M1 Powered Lineup:
USB4 is TB3 compatible.
Intel removed licensing for TB3 as part of agreement to make part of USB4 spec.
That's great. The two have been way too close.