• Possibly linux
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    376 months ago

    Honestly Arm and Risc-V are under rated. Not all are libre compatible but there are a few that work well with exclusively free software and have much less power draw.

      • @Mnem667
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        326 months ago

        Hasn’t that been said for like 30 years?

        • @ReveredOxygen
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          426 months ago

          never said when it’s gonna change everything

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          All even half-way relevant architectures but x86 and z/Architecture are RISC nowadays: ARM, Power, MIPS (The Chinese tried to revitalise it but they seem to be switching to RISC-V), Atmel AVR. Oh speaking of microcontrollers: Z80 (CISC) still lives though arguably it’s genetically an x86. And then of course RISC-V which most of all is an open standard, and a clean slate. Also, the first vector insn set that also runs on hardware that isn’t a supercomputer.

    • @[email protected]
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      76 months ago

      If you want to talk about underrated look into POWER CPUs.

      Motherboards like the tallos 2 are completely open source( except for an nvme storage controller) and they already offer x86_64 levels of performance. The only con right now is software support and the cost.

    • cum
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      46 months ago

      There’s like 2 arm laptops out there and like 0 risc-v though, that’s why they’re underrated lol

      • Clegko
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        16 months ago

        There’s quite a number of ARM laptops, even ignoring Apple.

        • cum
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          06 months ago

          I’m waiting for a good one to come out at reasonable price to finally upgrade

          Really hoping that Snapdragon X Elite ARM chip becomes wildly available and compatible with Linux!

      • Possibly linux
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        16 months ago

        There are bunch of single board computers and motherboards. If your interested that’s the way to go.

        Keep in mind you will be likely limited to software in the Debian repo.

        This is because it is still very new and adoption takes time.

    • @[email protected]
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      -106 months ago

      Not only will ARM and Risc-V likely not save Linux it will most likely harm it. I doubt there will be many Linux computers running Arm and Risc-V and the few computers that use those architectures won’t run Linux well. M series Apple computers only run with reverse engineering and even then many basic features don’t work.

      • Possibly linux
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        56 months ago

        Maybe I’m missing something, how will arm kill Linux? We already have good arm support.

        • @[email protected]
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          -76 months ago

          Most software doesn’t work on arm and despite many distros supporting arm there aren’t many arm computer manufacturers supporting Linux. There is a small possibility that Qualcomm could announce that their desktop CPUs support Linux but I’m not so sure.

            • @[email protected]
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              -16 months ago

              Walk up to a random person and say “yeah recompile this software for a different architecture while having no support as the architecture is unsupported”

                • @[email protected]
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                  16 months ago

                  Yeah I could personally do that with minimal effort but keep in mind the vast majority of people aren’t willing to. Most new Linux users get scared when they see a terminal, how are we supposed to convince people to give up tons of basic hardware features and tell them recompile software when they can keep using a proprietary operating system?

                  • Possibly linux
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                    16 months ago

                    Well for now that question is unanswered. We only have demo boards and small embedded systems right now.

                    I think the rise of proprietary systems has already happened and we can only get more free from here.

          • @[email protected]
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            36 months ago

            The proprietary video drivers for ARM SoCs have definitely been a problem for years and we can’t rely on third party alternatives or first party support from linux popularity.

            As far as software supporting arm, there are translation layers that can run x86 binaries on it and I am confident with more development and more powerful chipsets that won’t be much of an issue for most applications.

            • @[email protected]
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              16 months ago

              That’s the problem, right now arm development boards for Linux are limited which limits development of arm software on Linux which decreased the incentive to run Linux on an arm device. What computer manufacturer that uses arm processors that are comparable to standard Intel/AMD CPUs also supports Linux?