- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
- This seems to be a pretty experimental release to test some new stuff before the next LTS is scheduled to drop in April. - I’ve actually been running sudo-rs on my machines since the last CVE in plain sudo and it seems to do what I want, at least. - But expecting some smoke for this smoke test release :) - The odd - .10releases are always short term support, they test the system nicely for all us even- .04enjoyers 😄
 
- RVA23 is pretty nice. This is the first RISC-V profile that’s really viable for desktop class CPUs. (But I still wouldn’t buy a RISC-V chip expecting to run Linux on it until they have proper support for UEFI, ACPI, etc. and “unified discover” is specified, which won’t be for probably 3-5 years.) - I hope those things will come but no need to hold off if the performance is there. UEFI, ACPI, etc. are really about the boot process. For SBC class hardware, having a device tree in the kernel works fine. Even Apple Silicon Macs use device trees (no ACPI). - On Apple Silicon, there is a project to add ACPi in software (firmware) so that they can boot operating systems that expect ACPi (like Windows). You do not need it for Linux. - Of course, dynamic device discovery and power management would be nice. Bit it is not a deal-breaker for me. 
 
- Nope. No more Ubuntu. - I hope you had the time of your life. 
 




