"The popularity of ARM architectures continues to grow and is expected to expand its applications beyond the mobile and micro-embedded devices currently occupied. In the next few years, we will probably see ARM servers and desktop machines. In the past few years, Fedora has at least partially supported the ARM architecture, but always treats ARM as a sub-architecture, that means the release lags behind two major architectures (32-bit and 64-bit x86 ). However, a recent meeting discussed the idea of upgrading the ARM into a major support architecture.
"The popularity of ARM architectures continues to grow and is expected to expand its applications beyond the mobile and micro-embedded devices currently occupied. In the next few years, we will probably see ARM servers and desktop machines. In the past few years, Fedora has at least partially supported the ARM architecture, but always treats ARM as a sub-architecture, that means the release lags behind two major architectures (32-bit and 64-bit x86 ). However, a recent meeting discussed the idea of 'upgrade' the main support architecture. However, so far, there has been a lot of resistance to this idea ."