Comment by philistine
10 months ago
Are you saying that PCs do not usually have the ability to plug into a monitor, to charge, and to connect to a USB hub for the rest of your devices from a single USB-C port?
You guys still plug three cables each time you sit at a desk?
My Linux laptop can charge, provide USB ports, connect to my monitor and provide Ethernet connectivity from a single cable.
This laptop came out 7 years ago, but I'm sure much older models can do this just fine too.
The problem is that Apple does DP Alt mode in a different way top everyone else, which apparently requires a large amount of changes to the kernel
When was the last time you touched a PC, 2003? They most certainly do, when the OEM actually supports it: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/admin-guide/thunderbo...
It's not ever coming to Apple Silicon on Linux since post-Thunderspy, Thunderbolt is dangerous to implement even in the best of circumstances. You'd have to reverse-engineer and update Apple's IOMMU, write software drivers for the port since it doesn't have firmware and test it across a variety of vulnerable devices to see how secure it is.
> when the OEM actually supports it
that sentence carries a lot of weight. How many millions of users are left in the dust? Last time I touched a PC, the USB-C port could charge the laptop, unless the battery was empty. Then only the barrel plug could be used. It. was. infuriating.
That's terrible, caveat emptor. My point is that you won't see people porting Thunderbolt to Asahi in a post-Thunderspy era.
Once you're finished astroturfing, you're welcome to rejoin the greater discussion.