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by bacchusracine 1359 days ago
Thank you for the response. I was busy so I didn't see it at first.

You helped me see what was happening too, so thank you for that too.

I'm not for a second saying that if people want to hack away on the hardware to have fun, to scratch their own itch, etc etc they shouldn't be allowed to do so. They want to do it, they should have as much fun as they can while doing so. I wish them well. No on is served by petty administrator types demanding the whole world act as an offshoot of their corporate needs and abandon what is fun for them to work on the stuff that any one individual needs. Linux grows like it does because so many people are having fun with it and I'd never want to stop that.

The people I don't understand are the ones who buy Apple hardware with the intention of running Linux. They're the ones taking the gamble and buying something which was never intended to work under Linux from a vendor who is actively hostile to them doing so. At these prices, why gamble? Why fight? Do you want a toy for geek cred or are you buying hardware to use?

It's different if they're planning to develop on the hardware alongside the hackers getting Linux to run or are trying to target their code on the ARM type that Apple is using with hopes of future portability. That makes sense and is their business, whether for work or for pleasure. I just don't understand why the average Linux user would want to do this.

Sure Apple's ARM processor is pretty much leading the pack when it comes to ARM hardware set up for daily use. The hardware is very cool and I dearly hope that someone will release something intended for Linux that can compete and give them a run for their money. I just don't think it's a gamble worth pursuing if your goal is to simply use the hardware as opposed to developing or hacking on it.

Thanks again for your response, it helped me understand how I was coming off and I apologize to everyone for the misunderstanding my wording caused.