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I agree that the numbers may be a little misleading, but merely meant to emphasize that although <= 16-bit processors may not be that glamorous, they are still represent the workhorses of the industry, and although may not be appropriate to host OS's such as Unix/Linux, are significant enough, and benefit from cross compiler support on such platforms that they should not be disregarded as being insignificant. (and somewhat paradoxically, may actually help GCC maintain it's target neutral architecture support, to the benefit of all).
But GCC fully supports most of these chips, and always has. I do not understand what your point is here. All we noted was that you could not *host* the gcc compiler on such chips, something which you agree is not appropriate.
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