Spyke

It works fairly well. A "daily driver" if you don't mind tinkering. Installed some basic dev tools, runtimes, and container workloads. You'll miss some QOL and efficiencies compared to macOS, and I couldn't quite get the trackpad to feel as good, but that's pretty par-for-the-course when it comes to running a non-macOS OS on a MacBook.

Since dual-boot is the default install option, doesn't hurt to carve other some space for Asahi and give it a whirl. You're intended to be able to use both on the same system as needed.

20

I have plenty of RAM and I run Linux on a VM. Works like a charm. You can even use open source hypervisors like UTM.

I wouldn’t bother running it on bare metal just yet.

9

This, I do most of my work in a Lima VM. Looking forward to replacing macos though

5
lemmy.world

Too early. Only recently it got support to control display brightness. Get an AMD or Intel notebook for good support.

6

Could you provide a link to the up-to-date feature table/list? I tried to google but couldn't find an informative summary.

2

Thanks! Will look into it. My needs are simple so as long as I can handle a few things I want to try.

2

I'm using Ubuntu on mine almost daily as a VM with UTM in hypervisor mode. Can't call 3d acceleration stable yet, it can lock up often... but with that, I only get about one lockup a week.

2

Asahi is the only Linux for M1/M2 MacBooks. You install it dual-boot, so no reason not to try it (if you have sufficient space and Linux knowledge) It is constantly updated and improved upon.

1

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Linux on an MacBook Air M1 | Spyke