| What you should (and shouldn't) expect from 64-bit Linux |
| Source: Linux.com - Posted by Vincenzo Ciaglia | ||
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For starters, you should know that there are essentially no proprietary applications for a 64-bit Linux desktop. Google, Adobe, iD, Skype, and the rest of the independent software vendors (ISV) who release Linux binaries of their apps by and large do so solely for 32-bit Intel architecture only. Free software is a little trickier on a 64-bit Linux box, too. Now, I'm not talking about faulty distribution-supplied packages; the vendors that supply 64-bit versions of their distro generally live up to the words supported platform (although cutting-edge stuff like Compiz comes to i386 first).
Read this full article at Linux.com
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