Enough rebellious and satisfying
It's great to see. Though I will likely not partake, I'm excited to see the architecture working with Linux. That's a great step and great progress. Kudos to the development team.
The following is
my thoughts on the matter and I'll leave it simply at that.
I really want to buy into this architecture but Apple has been really repair-unfriendly lately.
Granted, they make good stuff and have a warranty, but that warranty ends far sooner than the useful lifespan ends and I don't actually live anywhere near an Apple store. Hardware breaks. It happens. You can't even swap components (many of them, an example being a simple hinge switch) effectively.
So, I just can't do it. I'm not the least bit worried about the price of admission. That's fine.
I guess I could 'solve the issue' by buying an iMac, which is easier to work on and repair, but then I'm still paying the beast.
I've given up many things, including ceding my privacy in exchange for services, but the right to repair is a bridge too far for me. I just can't get over that hurdle. To be frank, I might not even bother fixing a laptop that broke after a 'reasonable' amount of time. Still, I can't jump that hurdle.
If you're interested, you could run some benchmarks and let us know the results (in a separate thread)...
Today's article will teach you how to benchmark your Linux box with Geekbench 5. It's a fairly simple exercise, even for a beginner.
linux-tips.us
I doubt I'm the only one who is curious. Again, it should be a separate thread 'cause this thread is for screenshots.