This post did not contain any content.
-
-
@mia @a1ba @RedTechEngineer Porting coreboot and then cleaning the proprietary software out seems extremely hard, but maybe it's easier than getting freedom on a ARM SoC?@Suiseiseki @a1ba @RedTechEngineer nah. the real problem with those is just device drivers (and the terrible quality of vendor drivers that end up in the kernel tree)
-
@Suiseiseki @a1ba @RedTechEngineer nah. the real problem with those is just device drivers (and the terrible quality of vendor drivers that end up in the kernel tree)@mia @a1ba @RedTechEngineer Having to reverse engineer hardware to turn proprietary drivers into free drivers (and running into copyright issues etc) can be harder than working out how to configure coreboot's build system with the correct options to produce a working image (as there's a free chipset driver and free RAMinit etc already).
-
@mia @a1ba @RedTechEngineer Having to reverse engineer hardware to turn proprietary drivers into free drivers (and running into copyright issues etc) can be harder than working out how to configure coreboot's build system with the correct options to produce a working image (as there's a free chipset driver and free RAMinit etc already).@Suiseiseki @a1ba @RedTechEngineer idk i fixed the DTBs for the specific board revision of an espressobin that i had, and did some work to get the internal ethernet switch to init properly (i.e. not bridging WAN and LAN at bootup). that was not hard at all
-
@Suiseiseki @a1ba @RedTechEngineer nah. the real problem with those is just device drivers (and the terrible quality of vendor drivers that end up in the kernel tree)@mia @Suiseiseki @RedTechEngineer I love installing vendor fork of linux 4.19 with broken drivers for all IP blocks made by them in house in 2025
-
@Suiseiseki @a1ba @RedTechEngineer idk i fixed the DTBs for the specific board revision of an espressobin that i had, and did some work to get the internal ethernet switch to init properly (i.e. not bridging WAN and LAN at bootup). that was not hard at all
-
@Suiseiseki @RedTechEngineer @mia does vendor's u-boot and atf forks can be considered proprietary software?
They published the source code. And there is nothing in between except what's in maskrom -
@mia @Suiseiseki @RedTechEngineer I love installing vendor fork of linux 4.19 with broken drivers for all IP blocks made by them in house in 2025@a1ba @RedTechEngineer @mia Imaginary property does not exist; https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/not-ipr.html
Vendors have broken drivers for peripheral devices and even the main SoC - with the only property being you being property of the vendor if it's proprietary. -
@a1ba @RedTechEngineer @mia Imaginary property does not exist; https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/not-ipr.html
Vendors have broken drivers for peripheral devices and even the main SoC - with the only property being you being property of the vendor if it's proprietary.@Suiseiseki @RedTechEngineer @mia it doesn't change the fact about vendor being unable to write drivers for what they literally made -
@Suiseiseki @RedTechEngineer @mia it doesn't change the fact about vendor being unable to write drivers for what they literally made
-
@a1ba @RedTechEngineer @mia Why would they bother?
The whole idea is that they provide something that barely works and then the device goes out of support in a year and then you need to buy the next model and see if that works better (it works worse).@Suiseiseki @RedTechEngineer @mia like with the whole computer industry, they are not really special in that regard. -
A awoo@gts.apicrim.es shared this topic