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by wtallis
203 days ago
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I don't think your link contains the evidence you think it does. I'm not seeing anything that looks like Qualcomm contributing device trees on behalf of system OEMs, for any of the Snapdragon X products, so I don't see how you can claim that they're being selective. It looks like the device trees are mostly being reverse-engineered by the community, adding new system support derived from device trees for systems that already have some support. Do you have any clear instances of Qualcomm contributing something that's specific to Snapdragon X Elite parts and does not work for Snapdragon X Plus bins of the same silicon? Or even for the more general issue: have you ever seen a Linux driver include arbitrary restrictions that make it refuse to work on identical hardware just because the marketing name for that bin of the same silicon was different? |
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You're getting caught up by inconsistencies in an argument you brought up. Which suggests the argument itself is flawed.
My unchanged position is Snapdragon X Elite laptops have better Linux support than the Plus variants. You thought I was wrong on that count - but I wasn't (see the thread).
Qualcomm only ever pledged to support Elite processors, and perhaps not coincidentally all of the Plus laptops require reversing- this is enough for me to draw conclusions. If you need the technical root cause, feel free to delve into why the originally supported models with devicetres had Elite chips.