I educate people about free software and help them with migrations from proprietary OSes to free ones, and one of the main arguments for free software deployment that I often use when communicating with someone asking me what to do with an old computer is that their hardware is still supported by free operating systems and can continue to be safely operated for many years. I've already done a triple digit number of migrations/installations and would like to continue doing so until something stops me.
Please do not underestimate the number of people still using old hardware (even i686). Especially people from poor countries and hardware enthusiasts, whose groups are growing more and more in these years and who help keeping free software alive, would be affected by bad decisions. It is not even a month since I helped a friend migrate his 32-bit Sony Vaio laptop to Debian 12. After replacing the hard drive with an SSD, the laptop came to life incredibly and became usable again, and not only for office work. And it is precisely the support of old hardware that brings more and more new people to the world of Linux and free software after the unfortunate decisions of Microsoft, and that is a label free software cannot afford to lose.
This has the potential to disrupt the favorable trend of people moving away from proprietary systems. I kindly ask you for reconsideration.
I believe that a lot of software has gradually reached a point where its demands, given the features it offers, are no longer growing as much as they used to, and so if we don't waste resources by making the resulting binary code inefficient, the old hardware will continue to be sufficient for many scenarios (and for many years to come).
Thank you.
Regards,
Jaromir
Hi All,
Romain Dolbeau wrote:
> Debian is (at least up to now) the Linux distribution one could rely
> on to support hardware as long as its actual life without forcing
> users to upgrade. I have ~2007 (Penryn) systems still in use that were
> deployed with Debian when new, and I'm sure I'm not the only one. If
> it ain't broke, don't fix it, just upgrade Debian:-)
>
> Debian isn't Microsoft. Debian isn't Apple. Debian isn't Google.
> Please don't learn the wrong lessons from them. Planned obsolescence
> is bad, not good.
I stand to Romain. Long-term support also means less electronic waste,
less consumism.
10 years might be for a laptop - although a good number now shows 20
years can be done if they were a lucky model, but certain embedded
boards, servers are still working very well. Think about ThinkPad T
series, PowerMac G3 & G4, Sun UltraSPARC system.
Of course, certain pieces of software may be not useful with limited RAM
or single-core CPUs, but others to perfectly fine.
Main issue is of course Kernel, toolchain and for laptops &
workstations, video card support.