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 ...
The newest update of the Linux kernel, version 5.13, has been released with support for the Apple Silicon system-on-chip, the M1. Previously available in May as a release candidate for public testing, ...
Asahi is the Japanese name for what we know as the McIntosh Apple—the specific fruit cultivar that gave the Mac its name. Asahi Linux is a fledgling distribution founded with the specific goal of ...
You may think, "what's the problem? Doesn't Linux run on practically every processor on the planet from 80386s to IBM s390x to the ARM family of which Apple's M1 chip is a child?" Well, yes, yes it ...
Chris Wade, Corellium's CTO, announced on Twitter that "Linux is now completely usable on the Mac mini M1." Mind you, it's not perfect yet. For example, you can't use the M1's built-in ...
The crowdfunding Asahi Linux project has published the first progress report detailing its effort to port Linux to the Apple Silicon platform with the M1 Macs. Apple’s new processor architecture is ...
While we’ve seen a variety of different efforts to bring Linux support to the M1 Macs, official support could be coming sooner than expected. As reported by Phoronix, the upcoming Linux 5.13 cycle ...
The sheer impressive power of the Apple Silicon M1 processor has made developers, hackers, and tinkerers daydream about possible use cases beyond what Apple intended or would even allow. Some have ...
There are several different ongoing projects to bring Linux to the latest Macs – including the news back in January of a working version based on a variant of Ubuntu for Raspberry Pi – but we may soon ...
It is not the first time that Linux has been attempted to be ported to the M1. Corellium released a proof of concept for utilising a custom kernel in January. However, that was not an effort to ...
Apple processors have a unique kernel boot, multi-core addressing and interrupt controller, among other non-standard tech that Linux doesn't normally support. Corellium not only had to create a ...
Apple's best SoC ARM-based chip for the Mac, the M1, now has the chance to meet one of the best and top tier computer-based operating system, Linux OS, thanks to Corellium who recently released its ...
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