> Everything works… and works perfectly. All the hardware (Bluetooth, audio, HDMI, USB, 10G Ethernet, WiFi, and GPU) performs flawlessly with the drivers created by the Asahi team this past year, and there isn’t a single piece of software I want or need that doesn’t run beautifully in Asahi on this system.
So I am expecting everything from proper GPU acceleration, power management and sleep to the Touch ID keyboard to be 100% working perfectly fine, all guaranteed then?
OP is using a Mac Studio, which is not a laptop. I don’t think you can take their claim of it 100% working on their hardware and apply it to a completely different machine.
In addition, it’s open source software. Not some corporate organization selling you a product. Nothing is guaranteed.
> OP is using a Mac Studio, which is not a laptop.
You're telling me that the Mac Studio has no "power management" or "sleep" functionality at all? Not even in macOS? Nor does it have a 'GPU' for GPU acceleration either. We both know that it isn't exclusive to laptops. Everyone knows Touch ID doesn't work, both the seperate keyboard and on Apple Silicon laptops (and Intel Macs) and you know it.
> I don’t think you can take their claim of it 100% working on their hardware and apply it to a completely different machine.
Yes I can, and I just did since Asahi Linux is aimed at specifically supporting all Apple Silicon machines. OPs machine included.
Just admit that the OP is getting carried away with the claim that "Everything works… and works perfectly" when we know that isn't true. A dose of skepticism is needed to cut through wild claims during bouts of hype and euphoria.
Even some have already questioned [0] the 'everything works' claim and are still waiting for sleep and power management support [1].
I don’t need to admit anything. You can read into anything as disingenuously as you like, and go rant off into corners; but you’d get equally far yelling at a wall.
OP claimed that all of the hardware they tested (with an enumerated list of said hardware) worked as they expected. For you to take that as some guarantee that you should then have a perfect experience on a completely different (or even the exact same) piece of hardware is your issue. It’s an opinion/experience editorial, not a professional expert/authority on the subject.
> I don’t need to admit anything. You can read into anything as disingenuously as you like, and go rant off into corners; but you’d get equally far yelling at a wall.
Yet you decided to reply back and evaded answering my question. By doing that not only you indirectly admitted it, you already know that not 'everything' is working and anyone can check that for themselves.
> OP claimed that all of the hardware they tested (with an enumerated list of said hardware) worked as they expected. For you to take that as some guarantee that you should then have a perfect experience on a completely different (or even the exact same) piece of hardware is your issue.
It's Asahi Linux's problem to solve, not mine. Why would I bother to run something that has missing and less functionality than macOS and what part of the nonsensical claim of "Everything works… and works perfectly" don't you understand?
As I said before, the whole point of running Asahi Linux is to support all Apple Silicon machines which means both laptop and desktops. The hardware is not 'completely different' and we both know, and even those asking in the links in [0] and [1] also know that GPU acceleration, sleep and power management and also Touch ID is not exclusive to laptops nor is it properly working or even functional either.
Yet another one [2] questioned the "Everything works… and works perfectly" claim. It's almost as if it's better to be skeptical about someone hyping and claiming that 'everything works' about running alpha software these days...
> Repeating your disingenuous and misdirected points ad infinitum is the definition of talking to a wall.
Says the one still replying here and cannot answer a basic question about the obvious falsehood being claimed by the OP.
Assuming you have read the links in my previous comment and in [0] and especially about feature support, you do already know that not everything is supported or even functioning properly? Yes or No?
> Go do it, it’s a better use of your time and infinitely less annoying to the rest of society.
Surely you can think of a better response that actually answers my question about proper Apple Silicon support rather than dodging again since you're having a difficult time giving a straight answer.
So I am expecting everything from proper GPU acceleration, power management and sleep to the Touch ID keyboard to be 100% working perfectly fine, all guaranteed then?