Date: Sun, 23 Aug 2015 08:54:58 -0453.75 From: "William A. Mahaffey III" <w...@hiwaay.net> Message-ID: <55d9cf68.7070...@hiwaay.net>
| 'uname -a' at a CLI on the host will tell you 32-bit or 64-bit, just FYI Yes, I know ... Linux eos.noi.kre.to 3.13.0-62-generic #102-Ubuntu SMP Tue Aug 11 14:28:35 UTC 2015 i686 i686 i686 GNU/Linux which doesn't actually say "32 bit" but I'm sure that's what the "i686" really means - but I knew that anyway, I know I installed a 32 bit system, the question was whether that is what I should have done. It doesn't really matter now, this works entirely well enough while I wait for NetBSD to catch up (X drivers are so far out of my experience that there's not much I can do to help) so I'm not going to change it .. even if enough time passes that this laptop gets replaced before it ever really runs native NetBSD (it has of course done that already ... just without X, so not usefully). I suspect that the Linux web page advice may have been written back in the days when Intel processors didn't support 64 bit mode, and the only people who would want the 64 bit kernel were those with AMD processors - which would also run x86 kernels of course, so just advising everyone who isn't certain to use the x86 kernel was probably an intelligent thing to do. That might no longer be so reasonable, but I don't know - knowing nothing about linux, I don't know what the trade-offs are in choosing which system to pick. It also might have changed by now, all this happened a couple of years ago. kre