For sure! H-node lists a lot of hardware that is compatible with Trisquel,
you can use that as a reference guide :)
So, you can run Trisquel without it?
I don't know, to be honest. But it's not compatible with Libreboot, sadly.
What motherboard to you use?
You see, Coreboot is a libre project. All of the code they write is under a
free license. Despite that, most of the boards supported by Coreboot still
require some proprietary, nonfree programs to boot the system. Libreboot is a
distro of Coreboot that removes all the proprietary code in Core
I don't wish to buy an already made system because I have a wonderful case
I'm ready to use.
pizzaiolo - i'm confused, "free version," is coreboot software?
Please note that Coreboot contains proprietary blobs. For a free version of
Coreboot, I recommend Libreboot:
http://libreboot.org/docs/hcl/index.html#supported_list
It will be a hard task because the manufacturers don't give you enough info.
They use the exact same name for different hardware internally...
If you wish your system to work guaranteedly, there are already assembled
systems available https://www.gnu.org/links/companies.html
Upon further review, the information on that site and
http://www.coreboot.org/Supported_Motherboards#Desktops_.2F_Workstations is
outdated. Please help, I really want to try trisquel and I'm ready to build.
Upon further review, the information on that site and
http://www.coreboot.org/Supported_Motherboards#Desktops_.2F_Workstations is
outdated. Please help, I really want to try trisquel and I'm ready to build.
Thank you, that site is helpful but nothing about motherboards.
No, you're not being too cautious. I've never built my own so I have no first
hand experience, but you can probably find the info you're looking for here:
https://www.h-node.org/
It shouldn't be particularly expensive if you do your research. My Lenovo X60
cost me $20 on eBay and meets most
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