Date: Wed, 31 Mar 2021 16:21:57 +0200 From: =?utf-8?Q?Klaus_K=C3=BCchemann?= <maciphone2@googlemail.com> To: Greg V <greg@unrelenting.technology>, freebsd-arm@freebsd.org, dan.kotowski@a9development.com, rivers@dignus.com Subject: Re: Any good alternative to Raspberry for Arm64? Message-ID: <03D4DC97-1F65-4CF3-A85B-6744A401931D@googlemail.com> In-Reply-To: <6136F5CE-0E73-4A36-B3B0-CA17C8BEE9AA@unrelenting.technology> References: <202103310043.12V0hFqg023324@office.dignus.com> <6136F5CE-0E73-4A36-B3B0-CA17C8BEE9AA@unrelenting.technology>
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> Am 31.03.2021 um 14:18 schrieb Greg V <greg@unrelenting.technology>: >=20 > On March 31, 2021 12:43:15 AM UTC, Thomas David Rivers = <rivers@dignus.com> wrote: >> I'm wondering why the Mac M1 machines haven't been mentioned? >> (Like the newest MacMini...) >>=20 >> Would they not make a good ARM64 machine? >=20 > Currently only using virtualization. >=20 > Someone would have to make lots of drivers to run bare metal. OpenBSD = and NetBSD have some already, but I'm not aware of any efforts in = FreeBSD yet. >=20 > Apple hardware is *very* non-standard, they don't even use the GIC, = having a custom interrupt controller instead. well, I have mentioned M1 in post #9 of this long thread as the most = interesting =E2=80=A6.. really interesting : https://reviews.freebsd.org/R10:3a314eb5bb444ec019457e5aefaabb656fcb3d54 > Am 31.03.2021 um 00:52 schrieb Dan Kotowski = <dan.kotowski@a9development.com>: >=20 > Yes, I'm currently swapping between a CACE AirPcap NX (otus) and a = Microchip LAN7800 EVB (muge) from = https://www.microchip.com/Developmenttools/ProductDetails/EVB-LAN7800. # > They're ugly but functional. lol, that made my day :-) Ha Ha =E2=80=A6 my whole desk is cluttered with all the ugly crap, but thanks to Apple, it looks impressive all in all :-) Regards K.
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