GhostBSD has had many changes over the years. When GhostBSD was first released, it was based on FreeBSD. In 2018, the developers decided they would switch it up and rebase the OS on TrueOS. Then, in 2020, TrueOS called it quits, and GhostBSD decided to migrate back to FreeBSD.
Samat, who's responsible for Android's implementation across mobile, wearables, XR, TV, and auto, added that he's "interested in how people are using their laptops these days," suggesting he may be adding a new string to his bow.
It's not the first time Torvalds has suggested dropping support for 32-bit processors and relieving kernel developers from implementing archaic emulation and work-around solutions.