The document "Deprecated methods for Windows 11 ARM installation.pdf" linked below now contains these instructions if you really want them. The instructions have been removed from the Companion Guide as of version 12. Note that building from ISOs from and installing a VM from Windows 11 ARM Insider Preview VHDX files are now considered deprecated. Update on ETA of fix for Ubuntu 22.10 kernel issues.Minor change to Windows 11 ARM installation procedure, eliminating the reboot of the VM while installing VMware drivers.Procedure for installing Fedora 36 from ISO has been moved to Appendix B as Fedora 36 is now End of Life.Added section on how to fix errors encountered while installing the iCloud app from Microsoft Store on Windows 11 ARM.This issue has been fixed for some time now, and users are unlikely to encounter it. Removed section that described kernel issues with Tumbleweed updates.Added section for a VMware KB article that describes guest OS requirements for Fusion on Apple Silicon.Added section on where to find VMware Fusion product documentation.Appendix B and Appendix C have been removed since user installation of open-source utilities are no longer required.Users are no longer required to install open-source utilities, MacPorts/Homebrew or Xcode to convert the Microsoft ESD to ISO. MAJOR CHANGE: Updated procedures for ISO creation from Microsoft ESD using version 3.0 of w11arm_esd2iso.Make sure you are using version 3.0.1 of w11arm_esd2iso. Version 17 has been re-published as the problems with the w11arm_esd2iso utility have been fixed. The manual that VMware didn't publish and the one that you will need. The Unofficial Fusion 13 for Apple Silicon Companion Guide So, tl dr Unfortunately, you will have to pester Ubuntu on the topic, and convince them to provide Arm images for the 'Flavours'.Using inspiration from (and with apologies to) David Pogue's 'Missing Manual" series, I humbly present: Once this becomes more mainstream in Linux land, and if there is a stronger demand, someone will create something that either simplifies this or automates the process (if someone hasn't done so already, say on github). They do work on Arm based devices such as Chromebooks, Raspberry Pis and the like.Īlso no idea how the whole virtual machine thing works on Apple Silicon.Īpple M2 support in Linux is far too new, and far too niche at the moment, maybe. Ubuntu have arm rootfs as well as most of the package archive ported to Arm, though I have no idea if these are compatible with Apple Silicon. Plus a completely different set of boot loaders. Ubuntu provides arm images and full desktop roootfs already for itself, but don't provide or develop this for any of the Flavours.Īrm is not at all like x86 architecture, in that each and every separate device/board/platform requires a completely different kernel, at the very least. This is what Ubuntu do to build Kubuntu's ISO images. Kubuntu just supplies Plasma, which is basically slapped on top of an Ubuntu rootfs. You would have to ask Ubuntu proper, they are the ones who make the actual OS. Why can't kubuntu do what both OpenSUSE and Fedora have already gotten together?What do Fedora and OpenSUSE provide for this?
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