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Comment by philistine

3 months ago

What are you going to do once Intel is no longer supported ?

Nothing, I'll just stick the last usable version, just like I'm stubbornly sticking to 10.14.6. I'll fight moving up each and every version by narrowing the software I use. Already happening and it's fine.

  • How long do you think you'll go?

    You'll inevitably have to switch because available hardware will become scarce, what platform will you go to then?

    • This argument is deeply depressing to me.

      Most days I hope that we (as a planet) get past all those obfuscated vendor lock-ins but over the last decade we’ve watched the, get worse and tighter as they get backed up by lobbied laws. And now I’m worried that you’re 100% right.

      But we can still be saved by big ideas. We (modern humans) have done it before. I just hope the seeds of it are already planted.

      1 reply →

    • The hardware just keeps on working (7 years and counting). If you don't abuse it PC hardware just keeps on going.

      But just to be sure, I've stocked up on compatible motherboards and processors.

      I'll be here till the bitter end. I'll probably be buried with my Hackintosh.

      1 reply →

    • I’m in a similar position and I’m learning the KVM/QEMU way. So I hope I’ll manage to stay on Linux and add virtualised macOS and Windows apps to my stack. If it would work as I expect, then there’s no real need to even update those virtual systems. Since I need them only for some apps that aren’t on Linux (yet?). In my case those are Adobe After Effects on macOS or Windows and Pixelmator Pro on macOS. Other apps has decent counterparts on Linux for me.