AMD pulls a bait-and-switch on Linux users with Vivado licensing changes
3 hours ago
- #Linux Support
- #Licensing Changes
- #AMD
- AMD is shifting its Vivado design suite from a free Standard Edition on both Windows and Linux to a tiered licensing model starting with the 2026.1 release.
- The new free Basic tier is restricted to Windows only, while Linux support is locked behind the paid Core tier, which costs $1,200-$1,800 per year.
- AMD framed the change as a move toward more flexible licensing and emphasized that only the annual license renewal process is changing for free-tier users.
- Forum moderator Anatoli Curran warned users about behavior before addressing concerns, suggesting they stick with Vivado 2025.2 if unwilling to pay, though it will lose official support later.
- When questioned about locking Linux behind a paywall despite many users on Windows, AMD's response was PR-focused, stating that paid tiers support both platforms and the Basic tier is for entry-level needs.
- The move disproportionately impacts students, hardware tinkerers, and academic researchers who rely on native Linux workflows, potentially affecting future engineering and procurement decisions.
- AMD has not issued an official statement, leading to growing community backlash and discussions on forums like Hacker News.