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Chebucto Regional Softball Club

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  3. Steam ends 32-bit operating system support in 2026
A forum for discussing and organizing recreational softball and baseball games and leagues in the greater Halifax area.

Steam ends 32-bit operating system support in 2026

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    isolox@lemmy.world
    wrote last edited by
    #3
    Coolio, can we get the steam client to 64 bit as well?
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      wrote last edited by
      #4
      Will this make steam x86_64 (instead of x86)???
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        wrote last edited by
        #5
        > 64-bit only Except thr client.
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          Guest
          wrote last edited by
          #6
          The first x86-64 processor came out in 2003. Technology sure does move fast.
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          • I isolox@lemmy.world
            Coolio, can we get the steam client to 64 bit as well?
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            Guest
            wrote last edited by
            #7
            IIRC this has been announced as well couple of months ago.
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            • ? Guest
              The first x86-64 processor came out in 2003. Technology sure does move fast.
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              quetzalcutlass@lemmy.world
              wrote last edited by
              #8
              And when 64-bit support first came to Windows, Microsoft artificially limited the amount of RAM you could use unless you shelled out for the much more expensive editions. On Vista you were arbitrarily limited to 8 gigs with the basic edition, 16 with premium, and even the business editions had a limit of 128 gigs, a tiny fraction of the addressable space under a 64 bit architecture. Even now there's a limit, though it's insanely high (over a terabyte) and you're unlikely to ever see it unless you're running a server on Windows instead of Windows Server (still limited, but in the dozens of terabytes) or Linux (which has a "limit" in the petabytes).
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              • Q quetzalcutlass@lemmy.world
                And when 64-bit support first came to Windows, Microsoft artificially limited the amount of RAM you could use unless you shelled out for the much more expensive editions. On Vista you were arbitrarily limited to 8 gigs with the basic edition, 16 with premium, and even the business editions had a limit of 128 gigs, a tiny fraction of the addressable space under a 64 bit architecture. Even now there's a limit, though it's insanely high (over a terabyte) and you're unlikely to ever see it unless you're running a server on Windows instead of Windows Server (still limited, but in the dozens of terabytes) or Linux (which has a "limit" in the petabytes).
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                wrote last edited by
                #9
                Eh, not that big of a deal. The exact same order where I got the 3200+ also had a stick of DDR 400 at all of 256MB. I don't think dual-channel memory was even a thing yet, or I'm sure I would have gone that route. That 8GB limit was a long time off.
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                • ? Guest
                  IIRC this has been announced as well couple of months ago.
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                  isolox@lemmy.world
                  wrote last edited by
                  #10
                  Do you have a link to the announcement? I can't find it online 😞
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                    wrote last edited by
                    #11
                    I now feel sorry for that Fedora dev/maintainer that got thrown over the coals earlier this year for suggesting Fedora drop 32bit now that everyone seems to be, indeed, dropping 32bit.
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                    • ? Guest
                      I now feel sorry for that Fedora dev/maintainer that got thrown over the coals earlier this year for suggesting Fedora drop 32bit now that everyone seems to be, indeed, dropping 32bit.
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                      wrote last edited by
                      #12
                      This is a completely different thing, Steam is dropping support for 32bit *operating systems*. Fedora hasn't had a 32bit release since version 31. What that proposal was about was dropping 32bit *packages*, which would break old 32bit games (and Steam itself, as it relies on a lot of 32bit libraries as well).
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                      • ? Guest
                        I now feel sorry for that Fedora dev/maintainer that got thrown over the coals earlier this year for suggesting Fedora drop 32bit now that everyone seems to be, indeed, dropping 32bit.
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                        wrote last edited by
                        #13
                        Pretty sure it's just that Steam will no longer function on 32 bit machines, not that it will no longer be able to launch 32 bit binaries. The latter would make it impossible to run your old games. The fedora proposal would have running 32 bit libraries on 64 bit systems impossible as well, as it included dropping multilib.
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                          Owl
                          wrote last edited by
                          #14
                          Isn't steam a full 32 bit program ?
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