- It says a lot about linux that them dropping support for an over 20 year old CPU is a big anouncement - It’s apparently the Pentium 1 and older, so those chips were discontinued in 1999. Almost 26 years old. - Ditching i686 could be a problem for people running 32-bit stuff on modern hardware, though. I expect that’ll hang around for a while yet. - There were still new 486 compatible chips being released up until about 2010. - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vortex86 - They released a 486sx (no FPU) in 2007. 
- To be clear, you still still be able to run 32 bit binaries on a 64 bit kernel. So, there will be no more kernel support for Pentium (in 5 years or more) but you will still run i686 userland code. I do not see this changing for a very long time. 
 
 
- For.hardware that old you can probably just use an older kernel - Or a more old hardware friendly system like netBSD - NetBSD does not support 386 anymore either and I think NetBSD requires an FPU. With its x87 emulator, it may be that Linux has been more hardware friendly in this case. - Here is a Linux for 486 that runs in 8 MB (current kernel, same userland as Alpine Linux): https://github.com/marmolak/gray486linux/commits/master/ - There will still be LTS kernels supporting 486 in Linux until 2030 or later. The oldest kernel currently still getting updates at kernel.org is a version from 2019. - Outside the official kernel project, distros like Ubuntu and RHEL offer 10 years of support. So, they will be dropping security updates for these kernels for even longer. 
 
- No really as stuff stops getting security updates - You’re probably not using anything that old for serious work outside controlling industrial machines or something but even then you cam either air gap it or use a firewall 
 
 
- Great, now I’ll have up “”“upgrade”“” my 486 to W11, ffs. 
- What’s next? TPM requirement? /s 
- this is really it for strongbad and his compy 





