Comment by bayindirh 6 months ago I don't think the ability to cross-compile things will go away when Rosetta is phased out, though. 9 comments bayindirh Reply thw_9a83c 6 months ago But how can you test it if your ARM-based Mac cannot run it? Most software vendors will simply stop making x86_64 builds. bayindirh 6 months ago Keep older hardware at hand? thw_9a83c 6 months ago Sure! The point is that it wasn't necessary because of Rosetta. For example, I no longer have an Intel-based Mac, but I still want to build and test for x86_64. 6 replies →
thw_9a83c 6 months ago But how can you test it if your ARM-based Mac cannot run it? Most software vendors will simply stop making x86_64 builds. bayindirh 6 months ago Keep older hardware at hand? thw_9a83c 6 months ago Sure! The point is that it wasn't necessary because of Rosetta. For example, I no longer have an Intel-based Mac, but I still want to build and test for x86_64. 6 replies →
bayindirh 6 months ago Keep older hardware at hand? thw_9a83c 6 months ago Sure! The point is that it wasn't necessary because of Rosetta. For example, I no longer have an Intel-based Mac, but I still want to build and test for x86_64. 6 replies →
thw_9a83c 6 months ago Sure! The point is that it wasn't necessary because of Rosetta. For example, I no longer have an Intel-based Mac, but I still want to build and test for x86_64. 6 replies →
But how can you test it if your ARM-based Mac cannot run it? Most software vendors will simply stop making x86_64 builds.
Keep older hardware at hand?
Sure! The point is that it wasn't necessary because of Rosetta. For example, I no longer have an Intel-based Mac, but I still want to build and test for x86_64.
6 replies →