Originally posted by DanL
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Mesa Considers Raising CPU Support Baseline
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Originally posted by FPScholten View Post
Simply stated, there are lots of industrial systems, that are build into large objects like buildings running things like heating/cooling, power distribution, ventilation etc. Those are not easily replaced, were meant to last decades or longer and use some sort of display for interaction. The software on those can be upgraded, but replacing the hardware is usually almost impossible unless you replace the entire building installation.
Why would industrial systems need the latest MESA, if they need MESA at all? Isn't it good enough to freeze an old MESA stage and continue only security fixes for it for support such old systems? Any new software, that would require new MESA will not run on that old hardware anyways.
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So the takeaway from this thread is than no one reads the articles themselves.
They are discussing "Default compiler flags". you want new mesa on older hardware? Not a problem, just recompile. The odd bug might appear, but hey, shit happens, right?
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Some have also suggested enabling SSE3 / SSSE3 by default for Mesa builds while at it and would still allow for hardware 10~15 years old to still run fine with Mesa's default builds.
What I am worried about is the idea that they are making a policy decision that your new PC will only be supported for 3 years and then it will be declared obsolete and no longer supported. In a world of hardware shortages and green messages every where it doesn't make sense. Perhaps some one can post some data showing the massive benefits these changes will make that will justify putting us all on a constantly faster upgrade path. On the flip side the hardware manufacturers should stop selling systems that are going to be obsoleted in just a few years.
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Originally posted by TemplarGR View PostI protest this change. I own a Pentium 2 and an old Nvidia TNT card and i want to still use the latest MESA on my hardware. I don't want to change the compile flags and i don't want to use a distro made for old machines or be stuck in MESA 21.1, there are so many features i could be using, so many optimizations and bug fixes! I thought Linux was made for old computers, wasn't it? I hate you people for excluding such fine hardware from working, this is outrageous. I am going back to Windows XP SP3 that could barely run on my machine anyway.
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Originally posted by skeevy420 View Post............. obviously old hardware..............
Those of us who are using blisteringly old ancient Intel 8080(/sarc) hardware see these comments being made, I don't know why those of you using nebulously useless phrases never see it.
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Originally posted by commodore256 View PostI feel Linux should run on hardware older than 20 years because patents last 20 years. You think technology moves fast? Imagine how much faster it would move if patents didn't exist. If I could support a contemporary hardware vendor that only uses patent expired technology, I would, but my performance baseline for general computing is like a workstation from 2013 with support for h265.
So 16 years of patents left to go with the h265 codecs, but by then h268 will be out and would probably revolutionize everything again and increasing the baseline.
Technology only moves fast enough for expired patents to be almost worthless.
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