Linus Torvalds Announces Linux 5.19 Kernel Release, With Major Apple Silicon Support Upgrade
Linus Torvalds has announced the latest version of his Linux kernel, 5.19, but he might have upstaged his own release with how he announced it: from an Apple Silicon-powered Macbook Air laptop running Asahi Linux.
What’s New in Linux 5.19?
The new release has a number of under-the-hood improvements, including support for theLoongson “LoongArch” CPU architecture and AMD’s Secured Nested Paging feature, according to9to5Linux.
As packed with new features and bug fixes as the new kernel is, it will likely be upstaged by how Torvalds announced it. While he’s been known to favor Fedora on Intel Hardware, Torvalds wrote the message announcing it tothe kernel’s mailing listfrom a MacBook Air based on Apple Silicon:

On a personal note, the most interesting part here is that I did the release (and am writing this) on an arm64 laptop. It’s something I’ve been waiting for for a loong time, and it’s finally reality, thanks to the Asahi team. We’ve had arm64 hardware around running Linux for a long time, but none of it has really been usable as a development platform until now.
Apple Silicon is the name given toApple’s in-house ARM chips powering its latest computers.
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Not Linus' First Time on a Mac
In the message, Torvalds mentioned that this was the third time he’d used a Mac, the first being a PowerPC-based machine and later an earlier MacBook Air. Torvalds said he has used the new laptop less for serious work than test boots and builds, as well as release tagging. He intends to use the device more extensively as a travel laptop.
What About Linux on Intel?
Intel hardware has been Linux’s bread and butter since Torvalds announce his new kernel on a Usenet post in late 1991 (which has been preserved onLearn Linux). A Unix-like system running on cheap Intel chips proved irresistible to programmers all over the world who contributed changes over the internet. It is this widespread collaboration that enabled the kernel to branch out to radically different processor architectures.
While there’s excitement about Linux on ARM, the ubiquity of x86 and x86-64 chips means that Linux on these architectures will be around for a long time.

You Can Try Linux 5.19 if You Want To
While it’s best to let a distribution update the Linux kernel through the package manager, it’s relatively easy to download, install, and compile the new kernel for users who really want to try it out.
Compiling your own Linux kernel is one of those geeky, technical things, right? We’ve already covered a few reasons why you might want to do this – now is the time to try it yourself!

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