reallyzen OP , 1 month ago Asahi supports M1 and M2 chips because that's what they own. https://asahilinux.org/fedora/#device-support M3, (and then M4) isn't there because the cheapest hardware, the Mini, doesn't exist with them... And also because work isn't finished on M1/M2. https://social.treehouse.systems/@marcan/112277289414246878 The way apple sees its computer customer base now as they see their iPhone base (Must Own Latest Must Buy Shiniest), I do hope for the Asahi Linux project they don't keep on iterating endlessly with new hardware twice a year.
Asahi supports M1 and M2 chips because that's what they own.
https://asahilinux.org/fedora/#device-support
M3, (and then M4) isn't there because the cheapest hardware, the Mini, doesn't exist with them... And also because work isn't finished on M1/M2.
https://social.treehouse.systems/@marcan/112277289414246878
The way apple sees its computer customer base now as they see their iPhone base (Must Own Latest Must Buy Shiniest), I do hope for the Asahi Linux project they don't keep on iterating endlessly with new hardware twice a year.