I now have a working Linux installation on my laptop. Honestly, I doubted I’d ever be here again.
I quit my sysadmin job a little over 10 years ago to pursue a non-technical career (law school, now lawyer), and I just didn’t have the mental bandwidth to keep up with all the changes being made in the Linux world: systemd, wayland, the rise of docker and containerization, etc. Eventually, by 2015, I basically gave up on Linux as my daily driver. Still, when I bought a new laptop in 2019, I made sure to pick the Macbook with the best Linux hardware support at the time (the 2017 13" Macbook Pro without the touchbar or any kind of security chip, aka the 14,1). Just in case I ever wanted to give Linux a try again.
When the reddit API/mod controversy was brewing this summer, I switched over to lemmy as my primary “forum,” and subscribed to a bunch of communities. And because lemmy/kbin seemed to attract a lot of more tech-minded, and a little bit more anti-authoritarian/anti-corporate folks, the discussions in the threads started to normalize the regular use of Linux and other free/open source software as a daily driver.
So this week, I put together everything I needed to dual boot Linux and MacOS: boot/installation media for both MacOS and Linux, documentation specific to my Apple hardware, as well as the things that have changed since my last Linux laptop (EFI versus BIOS, systemd-boot versus grub2, iwd versus wpa-supplicant, Wayland versus X, etc.). I made a few mistakes along the way, but I managed to learn from them, fix a few misconfigured things, and now have a working Linux system!
I still have a bunch of things to fix on my to-do list: sound doesn’t work (but there’s a script that purports to fix that), suspend doesn’t work (well, more accurately, I can’t come back from suspend), text/icon size and scaling aren’t 100% consistent on this high DPI screen, network discovery stuff doesn’t work (I think I need to install zeroconf but I don’t know what it is and intend to understand it before I actually install and configure it), I’d like a pretty bootloader splash screen, still have to configure bash (or another shell? do people still use bash?) the way I like it.
But my system works. I have a desktop environment with a working trackpad (including haptic feedback), hardware keys for volume (never mind sound doesn’t actually work yet), screen brightness, and keyboard backlight brightness. I have networking. The battery life seems to be OK. Once I get comfortable with this as a daily driver, I might remove MacOS and dive right into a single OS on this device.
So thank you! Y’all are the best.
You were a sysadmin then became an attorney? How do you have any faith in humanity left?
It’s kinda liberating to peek under the hood and confirm that society, like the internet, is mostly held together with figurative duct tape, that someone put there as a temporary fix that became semi-permanent. The concept of technical debt for software and technology projects exists everywhere, including in the backlogs of what our government agencies, court systems, and corporate organizations are doing (and what they simply haven’t done yet).
But the whole thing is still pretty resilient. The individuals who make the decisions that feed into the unimaginably complex web of interdependent relationships and rules might not actually understand every detail, and mostly aren’t even benevolent actors who want the best for everyone, but the system as a whole still trudges along, mostly making life better than if the system didn’t exist at all. And once you learn how at least some parts of it work, you can make some changes here and there for the better, either for yourself or for the people/issues you care about or for the entirety of the system.
deleted by creator
I’m with you OP. All of this controversy the last couple of months not only sent me to decentralized social media, but finally made me pull the trigger on FOSS hosting projects. Currently working on selfhosted cloud storage for photos and documents. I already have my phone’s camera backing up to a RaspberryPi server in my living room, instead of to Google Photos.
The end goal is to decouple as completely as I can from Google - and the spider’s web of interconnected and interdependent online services - to something that I own (or at least have a measure of control over).
The downside is that it’s been a long time since I was in the server game. The learning curve is more like a vertical cliff face.
I have been feeling the same! It’s so hard to justify leaving macos though when it’s Unix already, so I have another old laptop I tinker with Linux on (plus a homelab)
Needs another larger domino saying “I sell my Macbook and buy a Linux-oriented laptop (System76, Framework, Star Labs, Tuxedo Computers, etc).”
Or a thinkpad.
Those have proprietary firmware that’s running god-knows-what.
Doesn’t interfere with Linux.
if you took non-friendly hardware, don’t expect magic. ok, the macbooks up to 2012 were quite hacker friendly but thinkpads are really the to-go laptop for a perfect Linux experience. nowadays, we have more variety: system76, framework, etc…
The Asahi Linux project would like a word…
I think they would actually confirm that Apple is not Linux-friendly. ;)
It’s an awesome project, though!