No, it works on a wide variety of hardware. Which systems are supported by Libreboot?
Comment on What I learned from 3 years of running Windows 11 on “unsupported” PCs
interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml 3 weeks agoDoesn’t that only work on three IBM laptops from 2014 ?
potentiallynotfelix@lemmy.fish 3 weeks ago
interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml 3 weeks ago
Most (all?) of these have been discontinued for a decade unfortunately
potentiallynotfelix@lemmy.fish 3 weeks ago
Yes, modern laptop manufacturers wouldn’t let you control your own device.
interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml 3 weeks ago
So, it’s going to take government to take back ring level -1 ?
mariusafa@lemmy.sdf.org 3 weeks ago
It’s only VERIFIED to work on old stuff. But you can try. The idea of libreboot is having an unbloated bootloader that is easy to install without having to configure all the setuip yourself. Because of that the libreboot community only verifies it on old hardware or few hardware that the testers have.
interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml 3 weeks ago
I mean, I’d like that, but what do you think are the chance the random motherboard in my PC isn’t going to get bricked by and the RAM, pcie 8x/8x bifurcation and srv-io are still going to work ?
mariusafa@lemmy.sdf.org 3 weeks ago
The most problematic is the stuff that is not standardized and the south-bridge of the chipset. You can always check on coreboot, they are not unbloated philosophy but you can try.