Comment by hu3 15 hours ago Native, no. That would cannibalise Apple services which is a huge source of revenue for them. 11 comments hu3 Reply dymk 15 hours ago Nobody is moving to Linux because there’s an iCloud replacement waiting for them over there… Retr0id 13 hours ago Have you confirmed this? I haven't seen anyone concretely describe the boot policy of the Neo yet (it should be an easy enough check for anyone who has one in-hand). alwillis 12 hours ago Like any other Apple Silicon Mac, you can't currently boot into Linux but Apple has native container support that Linux works on [1].[1]: https://github.com/apple/container Retr0id 12 hours ago I'm writing this from Linux running natively (not virtualized) on an Apple Silicon mac (M1 Pro) 7 replies →
dymk 15 hours ago Nobody is moving to Linux because there’s an iCloud replacement waiting for them over there…
Retr0id 13 hours ago Have you confirmed this? I haven't seen anyone concretely describe the boot policy of the Neo yet (it should be an easy enough check for anyone who has one in-hand). alwillis 12 hours ago Like any other Apple Silicon Mac, you can't currently boot into Linux but Apple has native container support that Linux works on [1].[1]: https://github.com/apple/container Retr0id 12 hours ago I'm writing this from Linux running natively (not virtualized) on an Apple Silicon mac (M1 Pro) 7 replies →
alwillis 12 hours ago Like any other Apple Silicon Mac, you can't currently boot into Linux but Apple has native container support that Linux works on [1].[1]: https://github.com/apple/container Retr0id 12 hours ago I'm writing this from Linux running natively (not virtualized) on an Apple Silicon mac (M1 Pro) 7 replies →
Retr0id 12 hours ago I'm writing this from Linux running natively (not virtualized) on an Apple Silicon mac (M1 Pro) 7 replies →
Nobody is moving to Linux because there’s an iCloud replacement waiting for them over there…
Have you confirmed this? I haven't seen anyone concretely describe the boot policy of the Neo yet (it should be an easy enough check for anyone who has one in-hand).
Like any other Apple Silicon Mac, you can't currently boot into Linux but Apple has native container support that Linux works on [1].
[1]: https://github.com/apple/container
I'm writing this from Linux running natively (not virtualized) on an Apple Silicon mac (M1 Pro)
7 replies →