Is there still anyone building apps for 32-bit Intel targets?
I’d assume all web servers are 64-bit nowadays.
And if you run an older Raspberry Pi, it would be ARM, not Intel.
If nobody uses it, we don’t need to build all plugins for it.
Is there still anyone building apps for 32-bit Intel targets?
I’d assume all web servers are 64-bit nowadays.
And if you run an older Raspberry Pi, it would be ARM, not Intel.
If nobody uses it, we don’t need to build all plugins for it.
Yes we do
Yes.
My question would be why ?
(Given that last 32 bit x86 instruction set CPU made was Pentium 4……..)
I was running Windows code due to legacy code; migrated such code this week due to a TLS1.3 problem, but all Windows OS running it was x64, running it on a x32 compatibility layer.
Intel x32 Linux code is very rare now, but ARM is not.
Perhaps people using old servers that work? and is hard for them to justify upgrade (or client won’t upgrade).
Yeah unfortunately for the people who thought they were saving a few bucks, we now have a RAM “crisis” and so when they’re forced to upgrade it will be even more costly.