appiah4 wrote on Yesterday, 13:32:
At the end of the day, the use case for modern linux kernels on i386/i486 hardware is probably next to nonexistant. I really doubt anyone here could find a viable use case aside from FAFO experimentation.
Probably true. On other hand, if not for sake of old hardware, then what's Linux actually good for? It's not the only *nix system out there is.
All my life, I saw the main use case of Linux to rescue/recycle old hardware.
It's cheap from a license standpoint and has good legacy support.
So what's exactly left if older CPUs are being dropped from support every once in a year now? 🤷♂️
Does the use of current kernal releases comes to an halt or does it slow down?
Do older Linux kernels get more attention (use, bugfixes, new features), thus?
I'm not sure if such a development would be better for Linux's future.
PS: What if developers eventually decide that all BIOS-only PCs are obsolete in general?
Or that newer Linux kernals nolonger run on PCs without TPM functionality?
At which point do they draw the line? 🤷♂️
Because in the end, this won't be different to Windows development.
New PCs can't run 32-Bit OSes anymore that rely on BIOS/CSM (Win 98SE, XP).
By definition, these 32-Bit platforms are obsolete, after all.
By contrast, Linux still can boot here, for the moment. It can boot via UEFI/BIOS, both in 32-Bit/64-Bit editions.
Edit: Then there's another, more philosophical question here.
The question whether or not numbers play a role (aka market share thinking).
At which point wrong becomes right? Or vice versa?
Is the leading force being dedication/principles or market share?
That's important, I think. Because market share leads to commercial thinking, rather than to altruistic or social thinking.
Imagine, a new Linux kernel was akin to a cure for a second.
Wouldn't this mean that dropping CPU support (for a minority) would be same as not giving a minority of patients their cure?
The dropping of the 486 "because of numbers" is akin to not producing a cure for dying people,
because they're "just" a minority of low number.
In real life, that's how economic thinking decides between life and death.
If not enough (wealthy) people are infected by a disease, then it's commercial not worth it to start production of a cure.
You guys may think this is overreacting, but wasn't the Open Source being lead by principles, originally?
How does economic/marketshare thinking fits in here?
My Raspberry Pi 1 is 15 years old, too.
When does Linux kernel drop support for old ARM processors, too?
How many Raspberry Pi 1 (in numbers) must exactly be in use to keep support alive?
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In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
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