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This could be great for people on old hardware, because it reduces installation times drastically.
But old computers also benefit the most from custom, highly optimized compilation, so I don’t really see the point of this move.
I see it as just another option. There are some packages that are annoying to compile (and don’t yield much performance gain from doing so) that can now just be pulled from the binary cache. The old way was to have specific -bin packages, but that is a bit arbitrary and presumably this is a bit more scalable.
This could be great for people on old hardware, because it reduces installation times drastically. But old computers also benefit the most from custom, highly optimized compilation, so I don’t really see the point of this move.
Not compiling everything, just a few pieces of software you want with different flags.
Always thought that the point of Gentoo is customization, not optimization. Hence “gen” in the name.
My laptop is not old, but this makes using Gentoo theoretically possible for me - installing stuff will be faster.
I see it as just another option. There are some packages that are annoying to compile (and don’t yield much performance gain from doing so) that can now just be pulled from the binary cache. The old way was to have specific
-bin
packages, but that is a bit arbitrary and presumably this is a bit more scalable.