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Like I have said I believe the gradual encroachment of blobs and
corporate control will end up leaving coreboot dead in the water and
eventually even code not related to platform initiation will be
blobbed, coreboot will be an open source project only in theory not
in reality - the only boards that work with coreboot v8 or w/e will
be unobtainable development boards requiring not just blobs but an
NDA and special connections to obtain.<br>
<br>
Lets say 10 years from now, will there be a coreboot? I doubt it -
you can't sustain a project like this without passion and people who
believe in freedom not fake "freedom" (ie: a certain company who
entertains the idea that x86 can still be free with some kind of
magic)<br>
<br>
Then again in a decade you probably won't even be able to run the
programs you want on a computer without approval and submission of a
scanned passport and CS masters degree let alone firmware - look on
the list today and you will see people who entertain the concept
that computing freedom is simply not "safe" for those not blessed
and tell me that isn't the future?<br>
<br>
On 04/30/2018 11:11 PM, Zoran Stojsavljevic wrote:<span style="white-space: pre-wrap; display: block; width: 98vw;">>
>> OpenPOWER's actually shipping open POWER9 systems right now
>> with source code. Why not go down that route?
</span><br>
Here here! - freedom today not tomorrow!<br>
<br>
<span style="white-space: pre-wrap; display: block; width: 98vw;">>
> The only obstacle to this one is the price. If the price goes 2x down,
> it would be the perfect technical solution. :-)
></span>If you assemble your own TALOS 2 it costs less than a
proprietary intel/AMD platform with equivilant performance and
features, and I consider this a miracle - it isn't meant to compete
price wise with a bargain basement x86 dell "server" or what not.<br>
<br>
The idea too is that you will have it for quite longer than a normal
PC, as it is very fast, high quality (assembled in usa!), and you
will continue receiving security updates for much longer than with
most boards.<br>
If someone is very broke they can always get one of the cheaper
coreboot-libre boards which still function and are easily available.<br>
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