Ken,

I have been toying with that idea for a 2009 17-inch MBP (I think it may be MacBook3,1). I really like the 'book; it is my main machine for playing around, web surfing etc. (using mostly Riccardo & your build of 104fx on Snow Leo). Apart from that, it is the machine I use mostly MacPorts-installed software on, which exists on Linux as well.

Do you have somewhere a list of the "shenanigans" to get things running? I know the graphics is a potential issue, I'd rather use the dedicated card.

Thanks,
Uli

On 4/5/20 3:21 AM, Ken Cunningham wrote:
Although many here, including me, are focused on bringing current software to 
older Apple hardware within the constraints of the software capabilities last 
available on that OS version, there is another alternative; to install a 
current version of linux, such as Ubuntu, on those systems. I spent some time 
doing that on an older MacBook 2,1 today, and I was pleasantly surprised at the 
success, in the end.

A fairly current Ubuntu 18.04.4 will install, in a 64 bit version even on Macs 
with 32 bit EFI (with minor shenanigans) so long as the processor is 64 bit. 
Most of the the familiar MacPorts ports are there, without the issues with old 
libc versions or lack of thread_local or lack of other modern features. Most of 
the hardware has drivers with a bit of looking, like the integrated camera. 
Seeing a Macbook 2,1 run the current versions of Spotify, Google Chrome, and 
Zoom was kind of surprising, to be honest.

I float this for information only, in case people get too frustrated with their 
hardware not running some current software offerring they really desire...

K

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