Publish:2012-8-19
ÉÏÒ³ to run. ARM just announced its first 64-bit design, but its not expected in systems until 2014. Being 32-bit-only also limits what 's already a fairly small pool of server software options. A version of Red Hat's Fedora Linux is available for 32-bit ARM processors, Keels said, and Canonical has said it will do a 32-bit version Ubuntu for ARM, he said. Those limitations mean that for most customers, more traditional x86 servers will remain the dominant platform for some time. "We aren't sloÏÂÒ³