Hello, Ubuntu has an i386 port which is fully supported.
There a bunch of 3rd party applications that rely on the Multi-Arch technology to support/use i386 binaries on amd64 (e.g. Skype from the partner archive). BTW, can we ask Microsoft to publish native amd64 binaries, rather than those that rely on multi-arch i386? Also, does Valve Steam product rely on i386 multiarch binaries? or is it fully amd64? (and e.g. downloads/bundles/ships any required i386 binaries that it needs)? And Netflix - does that run on amd64-only without i386 multiarch? However, it seems to me that this is done specifically on otherwise full amd64 installations. My guess is that: all currently shipped hardware, with enough support to run full Unity (7) Desktop, is amd64. Tested with amd64 kernel, and amd64 graphics drivers. And hardware validation is done on amd64 too. In 2016, people with i386-only hardware are unlikely to be capable to run Unity 7 Desktop, and probably run other Ubuntu variants. I guess there are some accidental i386 users, e.g. those that have installed i386 variant on amd64 hardware. Does it still make sense to build ubuntu-desktop-i386.iso? Validate it? Test it on amd64 hardware? Ship it? To me this seems like a futile effort. Imho, we should only test the relevant multiarch i386 pieces that are there to support 3rd-party, i386-only apps on amd64 desktop. This is specifically about building, validating and shipping ubuntu-desktop-i386.iso, specifically for the Ubuntu Desktop flavour. Which I am suggesting should be dropped. Without any other changes to the archive and/or publishing i386 binaries. -- Regards, Dimitri. -- ubuntu-devel mailing list ubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel