At the time it was in no way certain that x86 was long for the world, let alone that it would take the world by storm and eat almost every other CPU architecture.
The OS-level was much more CPU agnostic at the time and programs would aim for an OS rather than an OS/CPU combo.
Linux preserved that for much, much longer than many others (the only other big name was NeXT into MacOS).
Now with ARM finally "catching up" we see it growing again; nothing is new.
The OS-level was much more CPU agnostic at the time and programs would aim for an OS rather than an OS/CPU combo.
Linux preserved that for much, much longer than many others (the only other big name was NeXT into MacOS).
Now with ARM finally "catching up" we see it growing again; nothing is new.