I'm honestly suprised the amount of effort and awesome stiff went into this. Like its functional and usable. I can't say all hardware gets the same treatment.
Fedora Asahi is great on my M1 MBP.
No speaker support, no good sleep support, battery life is much worse than OSX.
But sweet sweet Linux on absolutely beautiful hardware.
All my old macbooks eventually get the Linux treatment. On modern hardware, however, the trade-offs of non-macOS just don’t make sense to me.
For now, Apple Silicon has made a fanboy out of me. I can’t overstate how big the jump in performance felt going from intel to my first M1 – not to mention the improved thermals. And obviously part of that is due to excellent alignment between hardware and software.
Still, once that first M1 hits retirement, I’ll no doubt experience that familiar pang of gratitude towards those engineers that put up with the trade-offs of running Linux on it today in order to get everything working.
I don't see the point, very few people who buy this device for Apple will ever want to do this and we definitely shiuldn't promote that piece of garbage, a single look at the iFixit score or a teardown video tells everything you have to know!
I don't like Apple products either but the silicon Macbooks are the best laptops in the market, there just isn't much competition. Every other company threw in the towel and make weaker laptops with half as much battery life due to x86 in the same pricepoint. Not to mention the screen and touchpad are usually worse.
I won't deny that, they got the edge in terms of ARM CPUs but that doesn't make those the best Laptops on the market, it's literal EWaste and judging from Apples history that thing probably has a few desing flaws that will lead to breakage with no coverage from their site too. If you ask me you just got your priorities wrong if you buy one of those but I am one of those privacy freaks too so call me crazy if you want.
I agree with you, Apple shouldn't be supported in any way and I think of them as e-waste as well - their repairability is a joke.
But before I knew anything about GNU/Linux I bought a Microsoft Surface Book 2. A friend introduced me to Linux and the project linux-surface convinced me to get rid of every Microsoft software I had.
Maybe Asahi will do the same for other people.