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| From | Christopher Huhn <C.Huhn@gsi.de> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | linux.debian.ports.alpha |
| Subject | Re: Planned obsolescence ? (*BSD, Rust) |
| Date | 2025-11-04 13:10 +0100 |
| Message-ID | <LNo1j-aoxO-1@gated-at.bofh.it> (permalink) |
| References | (4 earlier) <LKSyB-8E97-3@gated-at.bofh.it> <LMOqR-a04G-1@gated-at.bofh.it> <LNa82-af3m-5@gated-at.bofh.it> <LNa82-af3m-3@gated-at.bofh.it> <LNc09-agjv-3@gated-at.bofh.it> |
| Organization | GSI |
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Am 03.11.25 um 23:20 schrieb Jan-Daniel Kaplanski: >> Yes, 20 year old hardware is looking ancient and retro. > To specify, I was refering to x86-64-v1 hw when I said "reasonably large > amount of users". As I wrote already, that hw is still in mainstream use > in the form of used Core2Duo-era office PCs that gained a second life as > someone's home PC. > >> There is no practical reason to use Linux on any of those [...] > Except for homelabers, in enterprise environments (legacy software!) or > lab environments (specialised hardware peripherals), etc. FYI: CERN has started to look into replacing RHEL with Debian on the Front End Computers of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) especially *because* ~ 50% of the installed hardware does only provide support for x86_64-v1 and cannot be operated with RHEL9 and above. This hardware is essential for keeping the LHC running (at least until 2035?) and operating it with RHEL 7 until then is apparently not feasible. See https://indico.cern.ch/event/1477299/contributions/6363918/attachments/3044399/5378883/20250403-HEPiX-cern-els7.pdf (esp. slide 7 and slide 34) So dropping x86_64-v1 would be a bummer for them – and probably also for Debian? Best Christopher
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Re: Planned obsolescence ? (*BSD, Rust) Christopher Huhn <C.Huhn@gsi.de> - 2025-11-04 13:10 +0100
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