M1 Mac Linux 6.2 support is now available – an achievement that Linux creator Linus Torvalds originally saw as an impossible task. It can be run on the M1, M1 Pro, M1 Max, and M1 Ultra chips. Torvalds ...
Great hardware with some frustrating gaps ...
If you have been patiently waiting for the ability to install and run native Linux on the new Apple M1 silicon processors you will be pleased to know that Jeff Geerling has been able to load and run ...
Apple Silicon Macs have gotten mostly glowing reviews on Ars and elsewhere for their speed, power efficiency, and the technical achievement they represent—the chips are scaled-up phone processors that ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
Most Linux types get massively bent out of shape when a PC isn't 100% Linux-able, yet here we are trying to make possibly the MOST un-Linuxable, MOST proprietary computer not to mention one of the ...
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 ...
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 ...