| ▲ | geerlingguy 2 days ago | |||||||||||||
It takes a few years, but the Broadcom chips in Pis eventually get mainline support for most peripherals, similar to modern Rockchip SoCs. The major difference is Raspberry Pi maintains a parallel fork of Linux and keeps it up to date with LTS and new releases, even updating their Pi OS to later kernels faster than the upstream Debian releases. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | QuantumNomad_ 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
Also, unlike a lot of other manufacturers who only provide builds of Linux for their own hardware for a couple of years, it seems that even the latest version of the official Raspberry Pi OS supports every Raspberry Pi model all the way back to the first one with the 32-bit version of the OS. Likewise, the 64-bit version of the OS looks like it supports every Raspberry Pi model that has a 64-bit CPU. | ||||||||||||||
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