Asahi Linux is interesting, to say the least. To say the most, it seemed to stutter a lot when I was first using it but that stopped. Ended up running KDE Plasma, which is still on version 5.27 as Fedora is still on 39. A lot of software is not available, and a lot of flatpaks tend to have errors that their RPM counterparts do not have. I have kind of given up on flatpaks for this install, to be honest.

The actual install itself was pretty easy, but removing it was another situation involving one script that I though was the complete script, but the answer marked solution on the fedora forums was wrong! I thought I had already bricked the laptop, but a lot of troubleshooting and eventually a complete revival (yes, that’s what it was called) fixed the issue, and I was able to get the installation the way I wanted it.

Still working on setting up, but it seems to be working. I would obviously reccomend it to anybody who already has a macbook, it’s stable and has all of the software I needed (not wanted, sorry Civ 6), including Mullvad VPN. However, if you are looking to get a new laptop, unless it’s the only option (screm3) I would recommend getting something x86_64 because the ARM processor is simply not up to par with x86_64 in terms of software availability and comparability (flatpaks). The battery life is much better though, I will give it that. I don’t know how macbooks tend to fair against other laptops with similar specs, but the screen and lid-durability are much better than on my old laptop (it had stress marks from me opening and closing it so much).

Sent from Fedora Asahi Linux badeline-heh madeline-deadpan

  • neo [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    7 months ago

    Nice! I’ve been wanting to the same but I’m waiting for Asahi packages built for Fedora 40, also.

  • hello_hello [comrade/them]@hexbear.netM
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    7 months ago

    niko-wonderous Linux running on Apple Silicon is the coolest shit ever that’s hard to express in words.

    Flatpaks are a difficult issue since some flatpaks are built non-transparently using pre-compiled blobs meant for amd64, this is a problem on Flathub with some apps but I think fedora-flatpaks shouldn’t have this issue (if it does then that sucks). Deep in my heart I also want to get an Apple Silicon machine since they are fan-less but the soldered SSD is a no-go, unless there’s a new model with a swappable ssd (very unlikely), I can’t recommend apple silicon hardware to anyone in good faith.

    Waiting for the RISC-V laptop that inevitably drops in China in 5-6 years that compares to m1 and amd64 laptops (more than 8gb RAM and swappable large SSDs). I can’t wait to roll up to work with my Chinese laptop running entirely free software.

    • EcoMaowist [she/her, they/them]@hexbear.netOP
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      7 months ago

      fedora-flatpaks shouldn’t have this issue

      I think some Fedora Flatpaks were fine, but I know at least Libreoffice was not launching.

      Waiting for the RISC-V laptop

      Same, RISC-V is very exciting. Hopefully people will have added support to their software by the time a major release happens.

      they are fan-less

      I did not know that. Explains the quiet!

      soldered SSD is a no-go

      Kind of expected that but yikes, if anything happens to that SSD this laptop dies capitaldcolon

      • hello_hello [comrade/them]@hexbear.netM
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        7 months ago

        1500 dollary-doos oh no ma’am i use linux cause im POOR /hj

        All this stuff looks really cool but it’s still in its infancy right now and also Fedora doesn’t have good support for RISC-V processors (they’re still working on ARM and hopefully apple silicon speeds that up).

        • SwitchyWitchyandBitchy [she/her]@hexbear.net
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          6 months ago

          Yeah I was disappointed seeing that too. I was hoping there’d be a cheap-ish netbook like variant just to play around with building and testing software for it. Though there are affordable-ish motherboards for desktops by the looks of it. Though keep in mind those are MIPS, not RISC-V. Both are RISC ISAs but MIPS has been around in computers much longer, but also isn’t very popular compared to ARM so software compatibility bmihht be an issue. I think the largest use of MIPS architecture was the PS2 processor.