On Tue, 22 Oct 2002 23:02:52 -0500
"Mike Chambers" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

# Yes I know that.  What I meant was, in reality, most packages (except
# like mentioned above) will run on just about any
# distro/system/architecture.  So why even have i386 in the name, when
# it almost doesn't matter (again except things like kernel, glibc and
# such that architecture does matter)?

Because a binary x86 executable is not valid for say a SPARC platform,
or ALPHA, or even ia64.  'noarch' means that it'll work across every
arch, sparc/alpha/x86/etc... .i386 means that it'll work across all x86
compatible archs.. see the point?

-- 
Jesse Keating
j2Solutions.net
Mondo DevTeam (www.mondorescue.org)

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