Hmm so I've concluded running Asahi Linux on an M1 Mac was the wrong route to get me off Mac OS. No shade to the Asahi team, I think they did a great job, more that the job of changing the OS on an M series Mac is very hard and Apple are cunts.

The cost of a second hand ThonkPad is significantly less than an M1 and whilst the M1 chip is amazing for music production (I still haven't maxed out a session like I used to do every day). The trade off being trapped by Apple hangs like an extra bad fart.

So what next? Well I'll be deep in Mac for at least a couple of years, it depends how much mileage I get from my 2020 machine, it's great for audio. Maybe by the time I retire it Ableton and PluginAlliance will support Linux? Or maybe I'll find tools that can replace them? (Yes I know about Bitwig but I don't have a spare £300).

Someone made an Ableton style GUI for Reaper, I need to test that. I've also seen a couple of interesting PlugIn developments on Linux this week... Ableton and VideoSync are a great combo for me and to switch I'd need alternatives at least as good. (If you know of such things I'm all ears!)

At least my Office/Internet stuff is all Linux now and I can streamline MacOS for audio only, see how much shite I can get rid off!

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I'm an amateur, but been using Reaper with Linux Mint on a 2017 Thonkpad. Other than a few plugins being wonky, it runs exactly like it did on Windows. And thanks for the zap!

Nice! Are you using Wine or anything for the Plugins or have you found native Linux ones?

Haven't messed with Wine yet. Native Linux ones have been working, although I did struggle to get them into the right plugins directory at first. Reaper looks identical across OS. I felt trapped in Windows the way you did MacOS. All part of a move to disengage from Big Tech. I've been 100% Linux since January and I love it. Using Proton for email, calendar, and cloud. ONLYOFFICE for Linux is a dream. Its what Microsoft Office should have been.