ARM has their 'Server Base Boot Requirement' for server systems to boot from UEFI but, as you point out, their client situation is crazy fragmented.
Early adoption of UEFI by the RISC-V community (on RISC-V GitHub page & initial support landing in Linux kernel 5.10) will be very interesting to watch, particularly later this month when SiFive demos the first 'RISC-V PC'.
2020-[early]2021 is a particularly poor time to build a "future-resistant" PC. Intel has yet to ship complete systems with PCIe 4.0 support, and both Intel and AMD are expected to deliver DDR5 & USB 4.0 (Thunderbolt 3 compatible, if external I/O is a concern) platforms in late 2021 & early 2022 respectively. AMD is on its last full processor generation for its socket AM4 (perhaps we'll see a Zen 3+ in 2021, which would mean 3 full generations and 2 half-generations on the same socket), and Intel rarely supports a socket for more than 2 generations.
If going with Intel, late 2021 is the best "future-resistant" move, with early 2021 bringing only Rocket Lake-S processors (11th gen, finally moving away from the then almost 6-year-old Skylake architecture, but still on 14nm), with PCIe 4.0 but still no DDR5. Late 2021 will bring Alder Lake-S processors (12th gen & finally on 10nm SF) on a platform that will include PCIe 5.0, DDR5 & USB 4.0.
If going with AMD, early 2022 is the best "future-resistant" move, with Zen 4 processors on the [likely to be long-lived] AM5 platform bringing DDR5, USB 4.0 and likely PCIe 5.0.
Yes, Wine really is coming along nicely. It's been a very long hard fight, but an amazing range of things work, and it's just going to keep getting better.
Note that Wine has a sponsor - CodeWeavers - and we have collectively dumped at least $20 Million on Wine through the years. Wine is hard.
We do all of that that $59.95 at a time, with the support of people who understand what we do and who choose to support us. I think this is amazing and powerful and wonderful, and I am deeply grateful to everyone who does support us.
I just wish more people knew the details and understood why PlayOnLinux and stock Wine work so well these days. My ducky demise will not be in vain if just one more person discovers CrossOver goodness
Cheers,
Jeremy
We are drowning in information but starved for knowledge. -- John Naisbitt, Megatrends