| ▲ | traderj0e 4 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
Can I put Ubuntu on this and it works exactly the same as on any other ARM machine? Supposedly yes https://docs.getutm.app/guides/ubuntu/ but have you actually done it? Honestly this and Crostini both look like there are too many caveats. I'd just SSH into an Rpi for anything that won't natively run in macOS. And would not even deal with Chromebook. P.S. I +1'd bigyabai's comment only to save it from being marked dead; why is someone downvoting that?? | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | inventor7777 36 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I've used UTM before to install Ubuntu on my Mac Studio (M4) and it even supported my 4K70 monitor. To be fair there is some config and tweaking required, but for a free tool it seems pretty good. Parallels has a better EXPERIENCE but I don't use VMs often; when I need raw Linux I just use one of my homelab servers. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | hirvi74 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> have you actually done it? Yes. What do you mean by "works exactly the same?" The same as Ubuntu installed on an ARM laptop? No, there is not GUI, DE, and a lot of tools are stripped. You can literally pull this down and get it up and running in minutes: https://hub.docker.com/_/ubuntu/ Rosetta is not necessary to get this working either. Now, there maybe some warts with DNS that you might encounter depending on if you have a certain VPNs running, use dnsmasq, etc.. But there are potential workarounds for many issues. If you want a full VM, I would recommend Lima/Colima. If you need a full VM with GUI and all, then maybe use something like Parallels, VMware Fusion, etc.. | |||||||||||||||||
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