
Note 4 in the Security table doesn't make sense. The article for PC-BSD says it is x86-64, no longer x86. It says that the Computer architectures supported for PC-BSD, X86, is "only i686 CPU". Note 8 in the Technical information table is wrong.
#World of tanks 19.19 for mac server connection issues +2017 lag windows#
Guy Harris ( talk) 19:19, (UTC) Windows MTP So 1) the GNU/Linux line being out of date has nothing to do with Ubuntu in particular, it has to do with this article not getting enough updates in general and 2) if you want Ubuntu-specific information, go to comparison of Linux distributions. The article states that because nobody's bothered updating it.

And, yes, it's incorrect to state that it hasn't been updated since 2018 - or that the "current stable version" of the Linux kernel is 4.19 - because, at least according to, the current stable kernel is 5.16.4, which came out on "2020, May 20". The "Current stable version" column for GNU/Linux says "4.19 (kernel)", and the "Release date" column says "2018, October 22 (kernel)" that clearly indicates that the GNU/Linux row tracks only the kernel, not the other GNU and non-GNU components of GNU/Linux distributions.

