usion still has the i386 listed on its main page, so
you should be able to get repo files from there.
> I feel as if now, with Fedora 26/i386 moving to fedora-secondary,
> installation became much more complicated.
I understand. Unfortunately, we x86 users are a small part of the
communi
ora. Memory usage is normally in the 75M range. Fedora
is still a good a distro for little servers, despite the minimum spec
creep.
jeff
--
Jeff Backus
jeff.bac...@gmail.com
http://github.com/jsbackus
___
users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraprojec
you an i686 user? Do you want to continue to have the latest,
shiniest Fedora on your hardware? Then please come join us. The rest
of the community will give us the space and the positive vibes to
continue that support. We just need to help support the parts of
Fedora that are important to us.
your 2ยข worth. One of the reasons this issue has
come up is because it is quite difficult to quantify how popular a
feature is within Fedora. The more people who are (positively) vocal
about the parts of Fedora that are important to them, the more desire
there is within the community to suppo
question. If there isn't
enough interest within the community to actually support i686, or any
feature for that matter, then it makes sense to move on. One of the
great things about the Fedora community is that it quite supportive of
such things - if there is enough interest to drive it.
jeff
othing but x64 machines)just my two cents. Also I'll
> be passing this link on to those who might be able to contribute. I might
> even find an old PC and try to help out myselfanything for the
> "Fedorians" that make my computing life easier and more pleasant!)
Gr
x...@lists.fedoraproject.org
https://lists.fedoraproject.org/admin/lists/x86.lists.fedoraproject.org/
We're also holding an organizational meeting on IRC in #fedora-meeting-2 on
September 6th at 1900 UTC. We'd love to see you there!
jeff
--
Jeff Backus
jeff.bac...@gmail.com
ht