Today, another one of Honor’s MagicBook 2019 lineup joins this Linux club.Īfter the Honor MagicBook Pro, the Honor MagicBook 2019 Ryzen lineup is also getting a Linux version. Similarly, Huawei and Honor’s notebook lineup is being relaunched with Linux on board.
The recently announced Mate 30 series comes without Google Apps despite running on the new Android 10 iteration. has left Huawei scrambling for alternative suppliers for its products. The ongoing trade war between China and the U.S.
But no… and so Linux gradually gets ruined in the same way the Why not HDCP? What happened to “Bad Vista” and “Defective by Design”? We don’t suppose that a Stallman-less FSF would do any better against such threats to our freedom.Īs a side note, Phoronix tries to remain neutral the above oughtn’t be interpreted as Michael Larabel’s endorsement of DRM. Had they done so, maybe AMD would at least have second thoughts about it. “What happened to “Bad Vista” and “Defective by Design”? We don’t suppose that a Stallman-less FSF would do any better against such threats to our freedom.”What’s most curious here isn’t that AMD follows Intel’s footsteps (that’s typical) but the lack of statement or complete silence from the EFF, the FSF, the FSFE…Īll those who claim to have opposed DRM didn’t keep their eyes on this ball. If you don’t want AMD HDCP support, at least for now they have it exposed as a Kconfig option so you can disable building the support via DRM_AMD_DC_HDCP.” This HDCP support could lead to enabling AMD to compete with other design wins for other Linux-powered devices. The HDCP support is actually good news in one respect as it’s likely at the behest of Google with AMD APUs now appearing in Chromebooks, similar to Google having pushed along Intel’s Linux HDCP support.
Granted, many open-source fans won’t be happy to hear about High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP) support coming to the AMD Linux driver but it’s already been supported by the open-source Intel driver and NVIDIA’s proprietary driver.
Yesterday Phoronix posted this update to say: “The recent work over the past few months on HDCP support for Raven Ridge and newer. “In simple terms it means that ‘fixing’ Linux by removing bad stuff from it (not the same as a fork) would produce an unsatisfactory outcome.”Some months ago Phoronix mentioned in passing that AMD was putting DRM in Linux (the evil DRM, not Direct Rendering). Ask people who use linux-libre in their distro. It’s not only “subpar” or “not ideal” it can be very messy.
What does that mean? In simple terms it means that ‘fixing’ Linux by removing bad stuff from it (not the same as a fork) would produce an unsatisfactory outcome. For instance, linux-libre issues were already mentioned the other day blobs are "bugs". THE technical limits of removal of blobs from Linux had been reached long before DRM landed inside Linux. Summary: The battle for digital freedom has long been lost in kernel space earlier this year Techrights analysed the complete source code of Linux to find DRM already well entrenched inside the kernel and it keeps spreading further (Linux is becoming the very thing the FSF objected to in Windows Vista it is “Open Source Proprietary Software”) Source: Protest against ATI nearly led to the arrest of RMS (2006)
Roy SchestowitzĪMD (now the owner of ATI) puts DRM in Linux through graphics drivers Posted in DRM, FSF, GNU/Linux, Hardware, Kernel at 3:14 am by Dr. 09.26.19 Linux is Not Free Software and It’s Getting Harder to Fix It