| > What's so difficult to understand here? (I could offer to switch to German in case you have issues in understanding English). Please read the posting guidelines: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html > In Comments: Be kind. Don't be snarky. [...] Comments should get more thoughtful and substantive, not less, as a topic gets more divisive. [...] Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith. > But porting any OS I like to Apple devices is as easy as doing that for any other open and properly documented hardware, right? Apple's hardware is not open nor properly documented, nobody here is arguing that either of these is true. My original statement was: M1 Macs are more open than most of Apple's hardware, and Apple is not doing anything to discourage tinkering and porting - quite the opposite, they left the escape hatches open, and even made later changes[1] specifically to accommodate third-party OS's. So again: what point are you trying to make? Non-open platform is non-open, but despite being less non-open than most other non-open platforms out there, it's somehow still worse, because...? [1]: https://web.archive.org/web/20211217132913/https://twitter.c... |
Yes my friend, you should do this once more. And than reconsider most carefully what you've actually written before.
> Non-open platform is non-open, but despite being less non-open than most other non-open platforms out there, it's somehow still worse, […]
Yes. :-)
Do you even realize how weird this statement is? A "non-open" platform (is this Apple's marketing speech for closed platform?) is in fact "non-open", even if it claims to be "less non-open" [sic] than something else. Very very true.
At least we're now on the same page regarding the fact that Apple's platform isn't open in any way. It's a closed ecosystem, hostile to anything that could threaten its gatekeeper (and in some parts monopoly) position around Apple's broader offerings.
Of course this makes it easy to run any OS you like on Apple hardware, right? ;-)