While I don’t generally make a habit of buying brand new, just-released hardware, I made an exception for the M1 and bought a M1 Mac Mini to replace an Intel Mac Mini (which had replaced a perfectly function 2014 iMac I’d still be running if the monitor hadn’t failed - the display assembly, used, cost $600 in not-cracked condition). The fastest Linux machine I’ve ever used is a hardware virtualized install on the Apple M1 - and this post covers how to do it! I’ve also, as is usual for me, gone down some weird paths - like ARM Linux virtualization, x86 Linux emulation, and BOINC in an ARM VM! Apple did it, has shipped hardware, and I’ve had a chance to play with for a while now. About six months ago, I speculated a bit on what Apple might do with their upcoming (rumored at the time) ARM transition.
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