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Ubuntu Software Hardware

Open Source Project Aims To Make Ubuntu Usable on Arm-Powered Windows Laptops (techrepublic.com) 37

A group of programmers and device hackers are working to bring proper support for Ubuntu to Arm-powered Windows laptops, starting with first-generation Snapdragon 835 systems, like the HP Envy x2 and Asus NovaGo. From a report: The aarch64-laptops project provides prebuilt images for the aforementioned notebook PCs, as well as the Lenovo Miix 630. Although Ubuntu and other Linux distributions support aarch64 (ARMv8) by default, various obstacles including the design and configuration of Qualcomm Snapdragon processors make these default images not practically usable. The aarch64-laptops project developers are aiming to address these difficulties, though work is still ongoing. Presently, the TouchPad does not work properly on the Asus, with all three lacking proper support for on-board storage and Wi-Fi, which rely on UFS support. According to their documentation, this is being worked on upstream.
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Open Source Project Aims To Make Ubuntu Usable on Arm-Powered Windows Laptops

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  • by Bert64 ( 520050 ) <.moc.eeznerif.todhsals. .ta. .treb.> on Thursday February 14, 2019 @10:27AM (#58120866) Homepage

    ARM laptops should really have been offered with linux from the get-go, the only benefit of windows is compatibility with the existing masses of x86 software and drivers for arbitrary peripherals - a benefit which is lost when running windows/arm. A linux/arm laptop would have the same software as linux/x86 as virtually everything has already been compiled for arm.

    Having windows/arm will only result in user disappointment, either because expected things don't work or perform poorly under emulation.

    • Having windows/arm will only result in user disappointment, either because expected things don't work or perform poorly under emulation.

      We went through some of this with netbooks, now they're repeating it all over again with armbooks. Netbooks could run windows software since they were x86, but they could only run it poorly because of memory limitations. Linux wasn't so memory-hungry at the time, so it made more sense.

      Unfortunately, the market rejected Linux then, because they wanted to run Windows software. Today, the people who would want a low-power laptop are probably more likely coming from the other end — they don't want a lower

      • the market rejected Linux then, because they wanted to run Windows software

        Are you sure? I suspect the market never got a look in. A bigger problem was that the staff at PC World were confused by the idea that the customer might want to know what the difference was, and went and hid in the washroom rather than face reality.

        • the market rejected Linux then, because they wanted to run Windows software

          Are you sure? I suspect the market never got a look in.

          At least for the first couple years, they definitely had Linux netbooks in the store. I don't doubt, however, that salesdroids who knew what it was were lacking in number.

    • ARM laptops should really have been offered with linux from the get-go, the only benefit of windows is compatibility with the existing masses of x86 software and drivers for arbitrary peripherals - a benefit which is lost when running windows/arm

      ARM Windows laptops can run legacy x86 software (though, I believe, not yet x86-64 software). They ship with an emulator that emulates the main executable and bundled DLLs but can call into native code for things that comes with Windows (e.g. all of the GUI drawing code, video / audio CODECs).

  • Damn you, camel case!

  • Please... we desperately need a FOSS alternative to the "spyware as an operating system" that is Windows 10.

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