On Sat, May 30, 2020 at 12:34 PM Roger Heflin <rogerhef...@gmail.com> wrote:

> those workstations would be the expensive cards.  A yearly redhat
> support license is enough that no one is going to buy one for a $1000
> machine because in 3 years that license will cost more than the HW, so
> the "cheap" hardware that is being discussed like any of us would use
> isn't something they will likely run into in the enterprise market.
> There is a significant amount of HW used on this list that they simply
> will never be supporting on the enterprise end.

You really need to keep up.  For many years Fedora devs (kernel, and
bios) have spearheaded the effort to make Linux in general, and Fedora
specifically a priority on desktops and laptops.  Tremendous amount of
work went into the kernel and UEFI compatibility, particularly the way
M$ was pushing for "secure boot".  So much so, Fedora kernels were
controversially secure boot compatible earlier due to a (digital)
signing agreement with M$.  Fedora has also contributed significantly
in making FOSS radeon drivers reliable, and advanced noveau despite
hostility from NVidia.

As for recent developments, if Fedora doesn't want to support regular
installs, how come ThinkPads are going to be shipped by Lenovo with
Fedora pre-installed?

  https://fedoramagazine.org/coming-soon-fedora-on-lenovo-laptops/

And you still haven't read the BZ I linked in my OP, and going on and
on about hypothetical scenarios.  Please inform yourself better.

-- 
Suvayu

Open source is the future. It sets us free.
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