Listen, I’m convinced the next kernel will finally fix the bug that in rare circumstances causes my potato to spontaneously mash itself and start whistling dixie.
… or maybe I’m confusing my potato with my brain again.
The beauty of it, in a way, is that if someone really relies on support for that, there might be way to fork the kernel to keep supporting it. It might be a big initial task, but then again, maybe not. Support was there up until very recently, and if you have such specific requirements, you might have the skill/resources to just maintain it. It’s not like you’d have to start from scratch.
… aaas long your potato has a processor better than a 486 anyway.
… aaand you’re trying to run the newest kernel on it for some reason.
Listen, I’m convinced the next kernel will finally fix the bug that in rare circumstances causes my potato to spontaneously mash itself and start whistling dixie.
… or maybe I’m confusing my potato with my brain again.
The beauty of it, in a way, is that if someone really relies on support for that, there might be way to fork the kernel to keep supporting it. It might be a big initial task, but then again, maybe not. Support was there up until very recently, and if you have such specific requirements, you might have the skill/resources to just maintain it. It’s not like you’d have to start from scratch.
Steep requirements. Linux has changed :(