If you have ever studied the early history of the GNU/Linux operating system in its many forms, you’ll have read that [Linus Torvalds] developed his first kernel for his Intel 386-based computer.
Referenzen: https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2011-0861.html updates/i386/RPMS/mod_dav_svn-1.1.4-4.el4_8.i386.rpm updates/i386/RPMS/subversion-1.1.4-4.el4_8.i386.rpm ...
Referenzen: https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2011-1219.html updates/i386/RPMS/samba-3.0.33-0.34.el4.i386.rpm updates/i386/RPMS/samba-client-3.0.33-0.34.el4.i386.rpm ...
In this article, I've decided to follow up on a topic I wrote about not in my column directly, but as a feature article called "PXE Magic" in the April 2008 issue. In that article, I talk about how to ...
Linux and the i386 have something of an intertwined history. Intel first released the i386 processor back in 1985, and Linux's source code was first released back in 1991, after Linus Torvalds ...
It is just for speed/performance purposes...<BR><BR>As far as I know, programs compiled on/with i386 and or i486 will work with any i586 or i686 systems (Thanks to Intel's promise of backwards ...