![]() To make it a one-for-one comparison I gave it the exact same system settings in terms of memory, number of CPUs, etc. For the ARM64 Virtual Machine benchmarks I already have a licensed copy of Parallels Desktop I also tweaked the memory to give it 4 GB of RAM instead of the 512MB it came with. I had some problems with figuring out the right QEMU settings that would work so instead I just downloaded a pre-built Ubuntu 14.04 VM image and then installed Ubuntu Server 20.04 over top of it. ![]() That would easily allow me to run an 圆4 flavor of Linux. I found a convenient UI front end to QEMU I ran these all on my 2020 M1 MacBook Pro which runs at 3.2 GHz. To test the question about whether this is possible or not I started with doing some performance benchmarks just to get a rough scale of what the performance hit would be. Is it practical though? Sadly, no it is not. Is that possible even with the performance hit of running emulation? Yes it is very possible. Make it possible to use Intel x86/圆4 Linux on their platforms at reasonable speeds, or at least 圆4 only apps as needed within ARM64-based VMs? The conversation ended with the point that for most of my needs all I really need is to be able to build 圆4 Linux apps on my machine. Will the hypothetical new Rosetta for Linux We all got into a bit of a conversation spiral about running Intel x86/圆4 VMs and code under emulation. In Jupiter Broadcasting’s Matrix General Chat room ![]()
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