tperry2x wrote: ↑Tue Sep 05, 2023 10:49 am
OpenXTalkPaul wrote: ↑Tue Sep 05, 2023 8:07 am
I don't yet have an AppleSilicon based Mac to build / test properly on that architecture ... The thing I don't like about them is that everything is soldered on / non-upgradable.
This is exactly my point, but it's what is happening across the entire computer industry (and has been for quite some time). Everything is deemed 'non-replaceable' or 'non-upgradable' and is soldiered on to never be removed again.
Yes, much like 'digital downloads' (no-more boxed physical media delivery), it is an industry trend, one that I don't particularly like. Although I do understand there are technical reason for it, at least to some degree, faster communications between all of the pieces, without that old nothbridge/southbridge stuff, everything directly connected, and less electricity used to boot. I think they could still add like 12 ram slots (like my PowerMac 9600 had).
(Unless you look at Framework laptops, where everything is designed to be replaced)
I have, they look very nice and it is an idea that is highly appealing to me, I hope the succeed and buck the trend.
Plus, Apple being Apple - they have the T2 security chips, which detect and prevent swapping of any hardware they deem non-apple.
There's at least one Mac that is still supported in Sonoma betas that lacks the TPM chip.
Besides being great for Hackintoshing, OpenCore OC legacy patcher can boot Ventura (and Sonoma betas) on no longer officially supported Macs (provided the chipset is Intel Haswell or newer). I may give it a whirl on my 2017 iMac core i7 workstation.
Also, Apple being Apple, if something can be unplugged they make sure it uses a proprietary Apple-esque connector and do not go with the industry standard (example would be the SSDs they put in everything from MacBook Airs upwards). They do not use the standard SSD nand connection.
I expect that will change very soon, or at least all of their new devices will support a standard USB connector, perhaps along with their proprietary ones. Not because Apple wanted that, but because of EU regulations they must now comply with. I actually like Apple's double sided contacts lightning connector design better then USB3-C.
There were people who got MacOS to boot on an ARM-based Pi, but I'm not advocating breaking any license agreements, SO DO NOT DO THIS. The idea behind it though was to be able to develop for ARM on newer versions of xCode and not pay the Apple tax for hardware. For a while though, Apple had an option of an ARM-based mac minis to interested developers. Not sure if this is still a thing though.
WHAT? I hadn't heard that, that is amazing!
I know they got ARM Windows and ARM Linux to boot on AppleSilicon, but I hadn't heard of a reverse effort being successful. I'll have to look into that. I read rumor that Apple is planning cheap Chrome-book competitor MacBook-Airs to try to retake some of the Edu market.