Reply 80 of 83, by Jo22
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appiah4 wrote on Yesterday, 11:22:Jo22 wrote on 2025-05-08, 20:40:If Linux becomes an OS that targets modern hardware all the time, then what's the purpose of it? 😟
I'm trying not to start sounding like that "Um Ahktually" linux nerd, but this question tells me you don't really 'get' linux..
Hey, that's the kind of Linux I grew up with! 🙂
Linux used to be the savior for old and forgotten hardware.
Hardware being abandoned by society. It used to be the unix for the poor.
It was this aspect of Linux that I respected.
Since Linux Foundation has no proper roadline for abandoning architectures,
it's to no surprise if someone like me has to wonder where it eventually leads to.
Now the i486 architecture is being dropped, what is going to be dropped next year(s)?
And how does this removal affect, say, external modules that can be loaded?
Are kernel entry points being removed for classic "drivers" that could be loaded via modprobe?
Such changes have the bad habbit of affecting parts of the ecosystem that are not being taken into account first.
Also, is the whole thing related to Rust?
Are parts of the kernel being "thrown out" to make transitioning easier?
It's unlikely, but who knows? I don’t see a clear roadmap here.
To me, the tower PC in the sample picture used to be a typical Linux era PC,
noticeable by the AT case and "good" network card with BNC connector.
Sample picture is borrowed from Wikipedia, for license reaons.
Edit: The one thing that wasn't "cheap" or period-correct about Linux used to be memory consumption.
Linux required three or four time the RAM expansion of a DOS, Windows or OS/2 installation.
It probably gave birth to the first hot-rod PCs among private users.
Say, a i486 with 64 MB of RAM or a Pentium 75 with 256MB of RAM.
Unusual configurations for desktop OSes of the time, but not exactly weird for server systems.
Edit: I'm not making things up, btw. The reputation of Linux used to be like that where I live.
Here for example, is an quote of an older news article, titled "rescue from the junkyard".
Linux is actually the only solution for users who have older computers and don't want to scrap them or upgrade them technically - unless they stop using their device to access the Internet in the future and only use it as a better typewriter.
[Machine translation]
Source: https://www.fr.de/kultur/rettung-schrottplatz-11228248.html
"Time, it seems, doesn't flow. For some it's fast, for some it's slow.
In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
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