@ frank@molenaars.eu,
This kernel requires an x86-64 CPU, but only detected an i686 CPU.
Unable to boot – please use a kernel appropriate for your CPU. ....uw citaat uit jou bericht:
Gevonden verschil tussen i386 en i686:
i386 and i686 are both part of the x86 family of processors. They just refer to the specific age of the processor platform. i386 is an older platform (early 90s?) used back when 386 processors were used in machines. Then this was upgraded to 486 processors, which was the same basic instruction set as 386 just faster and newer. 586 was another upgraded and was when the term Pentium started floating around. Eventually all of these got encapsulated into the x86 architecture name. i686 just refers to the 6th generation of x86 architecture.
For all intents and purposes i386 and i686 are the same thing, just that i686 is a lot newer. They will have some additional instruction sets, but will be backwards compatible with i386. I would venture a guess that all of the processes you find today that use x86 would be classified as i686 processors.
x86 refers to a processor family. x86_64 is different than x86 (it is the 64 bit brother of x86). There are also Alpha processors, Sparc, ARM, PPC. These all refer to different processor families.
If you are installing an OS and a CPU is from the x86_64 processor family, then you cannot install an ARM based OS on that hardware.
Ook het verschil tussen i686 en X86_64:
i686 is the 32-bit version, and x86_64 is the 64-bit version of the OS.
The 64-bit version will scale with memory better, particularly for workloads like large databases which need to use lots of ram in the same process. Do not consider running a (significant) database server on a 32-bit machine.
However, for most other things the 32-bit version is ok. 32-bit code uses up less memory, so you'll have more for other things. The limit on the memory the OS can use is not different, just the memory per process.
So it really depends what you want to use it for. If you're planning on developing software for large servers, or running large servers, use 64-bit. Otherwise use 32.
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Heb je ook eens gecheckt of de Windows-versie 32 of 64-bit is ? Het zou vreemd zijn dat het een 64-bit versie zou wezen.
Je kan géén 64-bit versie van een 'Linux-gestuurd besturingssysteem' op deze computer installeren. Selecteer en kopieer de tekst, en 'plak' in jou bericht hier.
Je zal, helaas, een nieuwe .iso --maar dan een 32-bit versie --moeten branden op uw USB-stick --waarmee je dan wel zult kunnen booten en installeren.
Om te helpen...
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spievensterke.