LUP 359: Death of the Mac¶
- Air Date: 2020-06-23
- Duration: 47 mins 7 secs
About this episode¶
Why we think Apple just handed market share to Desktop Linux, and why you can kiss running Linux on the Mac goodbye forever.
Your hosts¶
Sponsored by¶
None
Episode links¶
- Generating cooking recipes using TensorFlow and a LSTM Recurrent Neural Network
- ARM-based Japanese supercomputer is now the fastest in the world
- Ampere donates Arm64 server hardware to Debian to fortify the Arm ecosystem
- Google’s Bringing Its Apple AirDrop Rival to Linux, Windows, and Mac
- Know when we’re going to be live. Check out the calendar!
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Apple is switching Macs to its own processors starting later this year
- Tim Cook says first Mac with Apple Silicon shipping to consumers by end of this year
- r/linux: How will Apple’s ARM announcement affecting Linux going forward?
- r/linux: Let’s suppose Apple goes ARM, MS follows its footsteps and does the same. What will happen to Linux then? Will we go back to “unlocking bootloaders”?
- Jared Domínguez on Twitter — Today’s cynical take: Apple supporting Linux VMs is a way to make devs feel good with minimal effort (offload the work to Parallels/BSD community) while allowing Apple to deprecate their already super stale Unix userland. macOS itself will become less accessible.
- unsilence: Console Interface and Library to remove silent parts of a media file 🔈
Tags¶
a cloud guru, adobe, ai, airdrop, ampere, apple, arm, arm servers, artificial intelligence, bhyve, blender, bsd, chrome, cloud, containers, cooking, debian, docker, ffmpeg, final cut pro, freebsd, fujitsu, google, hackintosh, homebrew, ibm, japan, jupiter broadcasting, linux podcast, machine learning, macos 11, microsoft, nearby share, nearby sharing, parallels, python, recipes, supercomputers, tensorflow, top500, unplugged, unsilence, xhyve