this post was submitted on 01 Apr 2026
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It shouldn't be hard by 2030 I imagine; particularly if you primarily or exclusively use open source software. The RVA23 chips announced I usually see people comment them as having synthetic benchmark scores at about the Apple M1 level. I regularly use a laptop with a Skylake dual core in it and a Raspberry Pi 5 run off a microsd rather than a m.2 NVME hat. With that in mind, if RISC-V designs don't get any better than that in the next 4 years, they'll still be better than hardware that I will still be using. I still use a Raspberry Pi 3. At work every now and then I'll throw a gitlab runner on a 10 year old desktop to have another thing building when things are busy
There are RISC-V developer boards today with PCI-E slots that you can throw in pretty much any AMD graphics card. The big distributions Debian, Fedora, Ubuntu, Red Hat - they all support risc-v. felix86 is equivalent to box64 and FEX for x86 to ARM:
https://felix86.com/felix86-26-04/
Software support is solid already today. It's hardware availability for the announced RVA23 designs that's not mature yet. 4 more years and I imagine in most cases the experience of Linux on RISC-V hardware not being much different than on ARM or x86 hardware