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Linux for Apple Silicon

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Future Tech

Curated by Surfaced EditorialยทOperating Systems & Hardwareยท2 min read
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Asahi Linux is an ongoing project dedicated to porting Linux to Apple's M-series silicon chips found in modern Macs. The recent 'Progress Report 7.0' highlights significant advancements, particularly in bringing GPU acceleration to the M2 chip, a critical step for desktop usability. This involves reverse-engineering Apple's proprietary hardware and writing open-source drivers, allowing a fully functional Linux desktop experience on hardware previously locked to macOS.

Why It Matters

This effort democratizes hardware by allowing users to run an open-source operating system on expensive Apple devices, breaking vendor lock-in. It's crucial for developers, researchers, and privacy-conscious users who prefer Linux but are drawn to Apple's hardware quality. While full hardware support, like Thunderbolt and speakers, is still a work in progress, the GPU acceleration breakthrough makes Asahi Linux a viable daily driver for many. The timeline for complete feature parity is likely still a few years out, but it signals a major shift towards hardware freedom.

Development Stage

Early Research
Advanced Research
Prototype
Early Commercialization
Growth Phase
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