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by ActorNightly
33 days ago
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Mac will appear to give some leeway to fake being dev friendly, but they are not. There is a reason why still Asahi is in its state - lack of any real documentation from Apple. If Apple was dev friendly, they would just bring those people on board and give them the documentation and have them develop a fully working linux for free. But Apple fundamentally DGAF about linux users. RDMA over Thunderbolt is going to be used only with Mac devices. Apple has a history of keeping things within their own ecosystem. You gotta be insane to think that they are going to just magically allow you to plug in a graphics card and it will work natively. The point of bringing up Android is because that is what being dev friendly. Samsung or Google have nothing to really gain to enable the desktop mode. But they do it anyway because it increases the usability of their devices. Ask yourself again, if Apple already runs arm on all of its devices, why not enable a desktop mode for the iPhone? Its EXACTLY for the reason to squeeze more money from consumer. Its why they do the thing they do with app store, that why they own all the advertising streams on their devices. So if you wanna stay deluded about what Apple does, be my guest. Just don't be surprised when nothing turns out like you hoped. |
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When it comes to Apple hardware, they're offering pretty good performance per watt and the machine form factors they are offering with the level of perf they have is where I really start to care (small compact footprint with good perf, runs any kind of unix/unix-like system).
You may well be right, and we may not see productized eGPUs in mass on Apples platforms, but I am liable to go grab a GB10 over some PC tower at that point.
As far as the software stack and OS, its also kind of irrelevant (to me anyways). If the hardware is good and the OS has decent performance for builds and jobs I am going to use it to do my work. The rest of it is just fashion as far as I can tell.