No.

You are AGAIN assuming what I am talking about.

I know the difference between a 32-bit processor and a 64-bit processor.

If you're not going to answer my question, kindly don't answer at all.

--J

> On Jan 12, 2024, at 21:40, YunQiang Su <wzss...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> rhys <r...@neoquasar.org> 于2024年1月13日周六 11:27写道:
>> 
>> Let me try again, following up on the previous thread, but removing most of 
>> the irrelevant history.
>> 
>> If I have a 32-bit Intel system that is currently supported on bookworm 
>> (currently running bullseye, but I can upgrade it), is that of use to anyone 
>> as a native build platform for 32-bit binary packages for Debian?
>> 
> You are yet another person who is confused by the name "i386" vs "amd64".
> AMD64 is just the named due to that X86 is extended to X86-64 by AMD *first*.
> It means that "Intel 64" or "EM64T" is almost same with "AMD64".
> 
> So, you, the Intel CPU user,  should use "AMD64", if you don't clearly
> know that your
> Intel CPU is 32bit only.
> 
> For more clear, for Debian, "AMD64" is equal to X86-64.
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X86-64
> 
> -- 
> YunQiang Su

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