it's interesting how most people haven't heard of our stuff at all! i hope this will change once the Reform Next is shipping.
@mntmn I would prefer one of yours over a framework, but tariffs...
Granted, I can't afford a framework either, nor am I sure how my workflow would manage on Arm.
@woody @socketwench this is confusing to me because you say that the Framework is an open source laptop, and i don't understand how it is supposedly more open than the MNT laptops?
about RISC-V: risc-v processors (the actual chip) might be marketed as "open" in a to me incomprehensible metric, but they currently are not. the only difference to ARM is that you don't have to pay a license fee as a chip maker for the instruction set. there is more in a SoC than the CPU: what about GPU etc?
@woody @socketwench also, "just an open source case design" feels almost insulting to me, because most of the electronics (and in the case of ls1028a module, all), meaning the circuit board designs, and the custom firmware, are open sourced by us (under CERN OHL and GPL etc). this is what i spent most of my working life on in the last years.
@woody @socketwench that said, i've been monitoring the risc-v space from the beginning and am always on the lookout for a chip that would actually make sense in a laptop (i.e. with good performance and not too much battery drain). so far i'm not aware of any. except in the case of system controller, we're moving to rp2350 which has risc-v cores (and their design is even open sourced on github).
@woody can you extend a bit on why you think Framework is "more open source" than the MNT hardware?
From what i understand it's essentially proprietary hardware moduls around a proprietary x86_64 SoC with closed sourced firmware almost everywhere...