I demand that Anthony Towns may or may not have written..."Linux desktop box" comes to mind...Put them behind a firewall on a trusted LAN, use them to develop software for arm chips, and then just follow unstable or run non-security-supported snapshots. Apart from writing software for embedded arm things, I can't see the value
But why would you spend over 1000 pounds on an arm Linux desktop box instead of a few hundred pounds on a random i386 desktop box?
A reasonable answer is because you're developing for arm's for embedded applications; but if so, what's the big deal with using unstable or snapshots, and running your public servers on other boxes?
-- and if an arch is just going to be used for development, does it really need all the support we give stable in order to make it useful for servers and such?Probably not, but ISTM that you'll first have to ascertain that it *is* only being used for development before you can say that that support definitely isn't needed.
Uh, you've got that round the wrong way: you don't do something because you can't say support definitely isn't needed, you do something because you *can* say support definitely *is* needed.
If so, why? If not, what level of support does it need, that goes beyond "unstable + snapshotting facility", and why? Debian developers [...]You're focusing too much on development here. There are users too, you know... :-)
Haven't seen any evidence of it -- developers and vendors, yes, users, or uses, no...
Cheers, aj
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