Because for some reason, Intel still made Itanium chips for the niche of the niche market all the way to 2020. Credit to Intel I suppose - even when the platform died early, they didn’t leave the few people who bought in high and dry.
But even then, why would you care when Linux 6.1 from December 2022 is a SLTS release (Super LTS), with support until 2033…
Given we have old binaries on old Linux installs on QEMU, couldn't say myself. It's nice to run old hardware, but at a certain point it's not power efficient anyway. Securely running things on the old hardware is about the only thing I can think.
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[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 34.3 ms ] threadBut even then, why would you care when Linux 6.1 from December 2022 is a SLTS release (Super LTS), with support until 2033…
I like using unloved old hardware and all, but there are better options in 2023