On Sat, Dec 14, 2013 at 4:34 PM, Reindl Harald <h.reindl at thelounge.net> wrote: > > > Am 14.12.2013 23:30, schrieb Les Mikesell: >> On Thu, Dec 12, 2013 at 3:35 PM, SilverTip257 <silvertip257 at gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> In a way it's a shame... >>> At the same time I can see why RH is going x86_64 only ... much hardware in >>> data centers is 64bit capable and running 64bit OSes. >> >> This will probably be painful for people using LTSP to boot older thin >> clients even if they have a hefty server > > how should it be painful for anybody? > > * physical machine: use RHEL5/6, it is still supported > * server: user virtualization for a RHEL5/6 guest LTSP (Linux Terminal Server Project) isn't virtualization, it is network booting an assortment of desktops that can act as thin clients to your hefty server or run local apps over an NFS mount from the server. While there are ways to boot a different kernel on the clients, LTSP wants to boot the same one the server uses. And it is used in classrooms, etc. > in 2013/2014 there is no valid need for support 32bit > on a recent operating system while mosts users kicked > this legacy hardware 5-6 years ago for many reasons Sure if you buy a new server today you'd get 64 bit. But seriously, how many things do you do on you desktop that you couldn't do back when everything was 32 bit? And what can't you do with a 32bit X session running remote apps from a 64-bit server? So there is no reason to replace those boxes and either lagging behind in software or switching to a more accommodating Linux distribution will be painful. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell at gmail.com