We live in a 64-bit world. Most of us are running modern CPUs, and if you download a Linux ISO today, chances are the “x86_64” version is the only one you’ll look at. But every so often, you dig into the bottom of a closet, pull out an old netbook, or try to revive a legacy industrial PC, and you hit a wall.
Mainstream Linux distributions have either dropped 32-bit support entirely (Ubuntu, Fedora, Arch) or relegated it to a "legacy" status (Debian). Consequently, the last major update to the official Boot-Repair-Disk 32-bit ISO was several years ago. boot-repair-disk-32bit.iso
If you are restoring a retro gaming PC, maintaining a thin client at a factory, or trying to get Linux on that cheap laptop your aunt gave you in 2008—this ISO is the skeleton key. We live in a 64-bit world
Do you still have a 32-bit machine running in production? Let us know in the comments why you haven't retired it yet. Do you still have a 32-bit machine running in production
|