>> I'm wondering if that's the confusion here. YES >>They use the old naming convention >>(which admittedly is still in use in some parts of a certain company that >>supports Fedora[1]) of "amd64" to describe their 64-bit kernel ... On Friday, 7 February 2014, 15:26, Prarit Bhargava <prarit@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: On 02/07/2014 10:19 AM, Jarod Wilson wrote: > Haven't looked in some time, but last I knew, they don't ship both an amd > and an intel kernel. They ship an "i386" kernel, which works for all x86 > cpus, amd and intel alike, and they ship an "amd64" kernel, which works > for all x86_64 cpus, amd and intel alike. This is the exact same thing as > us shipping i386 and x86_64 packages, just slightly different naming (AMD > originated the platform, Debian named their 64-bit packages accordingly). > I'm wondering if that's the confusion here. They use the old naming convention (which admittedly is still in use in some parts of a certain company that supports Fedora[1]) of "amd64" to describe their 64-bit kernel ... P. [1] I've tried getting us to move to "x86" and "x86 32 bit". I've _tried_. /me weeps. _______________________________________________ kernel mailing list kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/kernel _______________________________________________ kernel mailing list kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/kernel