Lee Thomas Stephen <lee.i...@gmail.com> writes:
> I posted this message because the kernel, starting with RHEL 9.5,
> warns during boot that a future major release (RHEL 10?) will probably
> not support my CPU.

RHEL 10 is going to require you to have... a ten year old or younger
computer.  If your computer is older than 10 years, stay on RHEL 9 until
you can upgrade, or use Fedora.  Most enterprise folk upgrade their
hardware much more often than that, and supporting x86-64-v3 offers many
performance upgrades.

https://developers.redhat.com/articles/2024/01/02/exploring-x86-64-v3-red-hat-enterprise-linux-10

Pro tip - RHEL doesn't support 32-bit systems any more either.  Time to
upgrade!  ;-)

> MS keeps changing things so that the new version runs well if you buy
> a new OEM computer or device.
> This means RHEL is also trying out the MS strategy.

Not at all.  You're just not the target customer if your hardware is
ancient.
-- 
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