Ambrosia Software legacy continues with Decoder Ring

From what I can tell, the Mac (only?) version of DecoderRing is an Intel-native application that runs under Rosetta on Apple Silicon Macs. I wonder what will happen when we lose access to Rosetta given this news:

I don't really get Apple's stupid dumping of models that are only a few years old.

With some careful hacking, Windows 10 can run on almost anything dating back to the original Core2 Duos, and 32-bit versions of 8.1 can run on early P4s (I can prove it, too, because I've run it on my Northwood-based P4 PC).

Granted, Windows is a bloated mess, but jeez, if they can maintain backwards compatibility to the degree they do while still managing to support new hardware and software, why can't Apple?

Of course, all my griping won't change the situation.

However, a thought just occurred to me: What will happen when the first generation or two of AS Macs lose support? They're not like Intel Macs that can easily run Windows or Linux as more up to date alternatives, although, as I understand, there's a sort of half-baked Windows for ARM that is semi-compatible with AS, and there's at least a couple experimental Linux distros, so it's not entirely hopeless.

Hopefully this situation will improve in the future, preferably before it becomes a problem.

c
 
However, a thought just occurred to me: What will happen when the first generation or two of AS Macs lose support? They're not like Intel Macs that can easily run Windows or Linux as more up to date alternatives, although, as I understand, there's a sort of half-baked Windows for ARM that is semi-compatible with AS, and there's at least a couple experimental Linux distros, so it's not entirely hopeless.
They'll run Asahi Linux.

The bigger question in my mind is this: what will happen when the first generation of AS Macs have their built-in root certificates expire? AFAIK, they can't install updates without a valid root cert.

If they can boot to recovery, possibly the date can be rolled back and then Asahi Linux installed, but is that possible? Anyone willing to crank their date forward 25 years and see what breaks?
 
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