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Most Linux distributions have left 32-bit x86 behind, but there are still a few great options for your old PC.
Canonical engineer Dimitri John Ledkov announced on Wednesday that Ubuntu does not plan to offer 32-bit ISO installation images for its new OS version starting with the next release — Ubuntu 17. ...
32-bit software should be functionally obsolete, but it turns out to live on in a 64-bit computing world. So, Canonical is putting 32-bit libraries back in to its next Ubuntu Linux releases.
Arch Linux is just the first to stop offering a 32-bit (or i686) version; expect other mainstream Linux desktop distributions to follow suit.
In a nutshell, you won’t be able to download an official 32-bit disk image of Ubuntu 17.10 or later. That doesn’t mean you won’t be able to run new versions of Ubuntu on machines with older ...
Software Operating Systems Linux Developers of Linux distro Fedora propose dropping 32-bit support entirely, but it's being claimed that the change 'would kill off projects like Bazzite entirely' News ...
Gamers Rise Up So if there’s no extensive back catalog of 32-bit Linux software to worry about, then who really needs multilib support?
Google's killing Chrome support for 32-bit Linux machines, but don't worry: You have options.
With the next version of Fedora, support for the obsolete 32-bit version Linux will be dropped.
With the announcement of LibreOffice 6.3 Beta 1, the open source office suite has also stopped providing 32-bit binaries for the Linux platform, although 32-bit compatibility has not yet been removed.