Including that “old computer,” you had thrown away a few years ago. It’s unfortunate we forget sometimes it also means people running obsolete hardware. It was a premise of the open source movement to make software accessible to everyone everywhere. But, to quote a mail I received recently from Peter Tribble, author of Tribblix: “ in the developed world we assume that we can replace things in some parts of the developing world older IA-32 systems are still the norm, with 64-bit being rare.” If you have the opportunity to switch to 64 bits, do it. Not mentioning their price has considerably decreased in just a few years. ![]() Indeed, computers based on x86_64 hardware (x86-64) are superior in every way to their 32-bits counterpart: they are more powerful, run faster, are more compact, and more energy efficient. Or, to be accurate, they drop support for the Intel x86 32-bit architecture ( IA-32). One after the other, Linux distributions are dropping 32-bit support.
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