• @buzz86us
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    -35 days ago

    I would have rather seen an ARM Linux board for a more modest cost

    • @[email protected]
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      114 days ago

      If someone who makes ARM hardware wants to make a mainboard, I’d imagine Framework will work with them under the same conditions they’re working with DeepComputing on the RISC-V one.

    • @[email protected]
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      35 days ago

      From what I can see, arm Linux itself is still a very small market so I don’t see how a small company could work on it and make a profit from that. Maybe once it becomes more mainstream and there is a bigger demand for it, they would definitely consider it. I would rather have them focus on what they have and expand their production, cost and sales region at the moment.

      • @cmhe
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        134 days ago

        If ARM is a small market, RISC-V is even smaller.

        I personally like when boundaries are pushed, and welcome more independence on x86.

        • Cethin
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          64 days ago

          Yeah, but there’s no license fees for RISC-V, so they need to sell less volume to be profitable.

      • @[email protected]
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        23 days ago

        arm Linux itself is still a very small market

        • Android
        • Raspberry Pi and similar SBCs
        • data centers (someone linked AWS graviton)
        • Chromebooks

        The list goes on. Linux is well established on ARM, and outside proprietary software, pretty much everything works on it. Desktop linux has been ready on ARM for over a decade, and people would buy it if it existed in a decent laptop.

        If Framework can source decently fast ARM chips and board for a decent cost, people will buy then, myself included. If they include a trackpoint and physical mouse buttons (esp middle mouse button), I’d replace my Thinkpad today even if it’s still on x86.

        There’s demand for it today, it’s just probably in the thousands instead of millions.